Archive for the ‘media’ Category

Shine on

Posted: March 17, 2008 in Bermuda, bermuda politics, media

 

You wouldn’t know it from the rain we’ve been lashed with today, but it’s the start of Sunshine Week. The Gazette is stepping up its Right  To Know public access to information campaign by adopting the Sunshine Week – Your Right To Know drive launched by the American Society of Newspaper Editors in 2002.

According to the organisation’s website:

Though spearheaded by journalists, Sunshine Week is about the public’s right to know what its government is doing, and why. Sunshine Week seeks to enlighten and empower people to play an active role in their government at all levels, and to give them access to information that makes their lives better and their communities stronger.      

Premier Dr. Ewart Brown told the Gazette he welcomed Sunshine Week in principle and insisted that a public information act “has been promised by this Government and it will be delivered” but added it was “not because of a newspaper campaign but because we talked to our constituents and they have shown a desire for greater access to information. After all, we serve Bermudians first, not newspaper reporters”.

The Gazette is asking people to support the campaign by wearing something yellow on Thursday. Now this is not a colour normally found in the extensive  Breezeblog wardrobe but as I shall be in Denver en route to the ski slopes of Breckenridge, Colorado that day, no one will know me there so I’ll forgo fashion for a good cause.Must be able to find a yellow cowboy hat or something equally ridiculous in Wal-Mart …

Bad news, good news

Posted: March 17, 2008 in internet, media

The state of the American news media is “more troubled” than a year ago, according to the annual State of the News Media Report from the Project For Excellence in Journalism. And online alternatives and bloggers aren’t as influential as some people think. Despite the web’s potential for depth – and the fact that more people are going online for news than ever – the report says news isn’t as democratised as some would believe: 

Even with so many new sources, more people now consume what old media newsrooms produce, particularly from print, than before. Online, for instance, the top 10 news Web sites, drawing mostly from old brands, are more of an oligarchy, commanding a larger share of audience, than in the legacy media. The verdict on citizen media for now suggests limitations. And research shows blogs and public affairs Web sites attract a smaller audience than expected and are produced by people with even more elite backgrounds than journalists. 

 

However, the report notes the nature of news reporting on the net is changing significantly thanks to the influence of “citizen media”:

More media sites are taking the reader away from the “walled garden” – their own content – linking to once-taboo outside sources or even inviting in third-party content, allowing hunting-and-gathering consumers to act more directly on their preferences rather than being led to them.

Citizen media are also growing in ways unmistakable and engaging . Web sites run by citizen journalists are multiplying – rapidly approaching 1,500 heading into 2008 – offering stories, blogs and videos. And that trend is considered a healthy one by professional journalists, who call on citizens more frequently to inform their reporting.

The journalism of the future increasingly appears to be a hybrid that takes advantage of the technology rather than fights it. But the questions of who will pay and how they will do it seem more pressing than ever..  

Sun sports new blog

Posted: February 26, 2008 in Bermuda, football, internet, media

You read it here first … the Bermuda Sun has launched a fine new sports blog, TalkSport. Sports writer James Whittaker told me: “There seems to be a real appetite for talking about sports in Bermuda right now. There’s already a ton of blogs for news junkies and we wanted to launch a similar kind of forum for sports fans. As well as blogs from our writers we hope to include stuff from our columnists like Lionel Cann and Fred Barritt and guest bloggers such as yourself and Nick Jones.”

Good luck, lads – and welcome to the Bermuda blogosphere!