Archive for 'Future of Journalism'
The Sunset Park also rises: Lessons of a newbie blogger

The Sunset Park also rises: Lessons of a newbie blogger

Posted 02 March 2010 | By Lisa Riordan Seville | Categories: Future of Journalism, Hyperlocal, blogging | No Comments

So you want to start a blog?
I’ve learned quite a bit since starting Sunset Park Chronicled six months ago. Certain questions that plague the startup entrepreneurial journalist or blogger were easy to answer. It was a “hyperlocal” blog, so I had an audience—the neighborhood. Few news outlets cover this part of Brooklyn, and there is [...]

Visualizing Story Structure: What Hollywood Can Teach Us

Visualizing Story Structure: What Hollywood Can Teach Us

Posted 23 February 2010 | By Russell Chun | Categories: Data Visualization, Future of Journalism, General, Multimedia Storytelling, Video | No Comments

Visualizing data often makes good stories. I wondered how stories themselves could provide data for visualizations. You often hear of the ideal graph of story structure–the classic three-part profile with an introduction to the conflict leading to a climax, and ending with the resolution. This structure would be represented by a slow-rising hill ending [...]

CUNY Journalism School takes the lead on The Local

CUNY Journalism School takes the lead on The Local

Posted 19 February 2010 | By Sandeep Junnarkar | Categories: Business Models, Future of Journalism, General, Multimedia Storytelling, Tutorials | No Comments

The CUNY Graduate School of Journalism recently assumed the editorial leadership NYTimes.com’s The Local community web site, which covers the Brooklyn neighborhoods of Fort Greene and Clinton Hill.
The plan is to build on The Times’ work, which first launched in the spring 2009, and to make it more scalable, generating greater [...]

The digital future of foreign reporting

The digital future of foreign reporting

Posted 03 February 2010 | By Lonnie Isabel | Categories: Future of Journalism, Multimedia Storytelling | 1 Comment

Most of so-called mainstream media has sharply reduced or outright eliminated its foreign newsgathering operations in the past five years. But in the supposed ashes of the crash burning of foreign reporting some see a bright future.

Arianna Huffington on Journalism: Commencement 2009

Arianna Huffington on Journalism: Commencement 2009

Posted 22 December 2009 | By John Smock | Categories: Future of Journalism, General | No Comments

In her 13-minute commencement address to the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism Class of 2009, Arianna Huffington, the outspoken editor-and-chief of the Huffington Post, told the graduates that the eternal truths of journalism including the need to speak truth to power remain as important in the era of Twitter and Facebook as at any time in the past.

Media’s Fall and Rise

Media’s Fall and Rise

Posted 08 December 2009 | By Barbara Raab | Categories: Business Models, Future of Journalism, General | 2 Comments

“Read this,” I instructed several CUNY J-School students in a recent email. “Read every word of it. He’s talking about you.” I had provided a link to David Carr’s latest Media Equation column, “The Fall and Rise of Media.”

Crowdfunding: Anatomy and aftermath of one trash-y story

Crowdfunding: Anatomy and aftermath of one trash-y story

Posted 08 December 2009 | By Barbara Raab | Categories: Business Models, Crowdfunding, Future of Journalism, Web Tools | 1 Comment

Crowdfunding, while not a tool in the technical sense, may turn out to be an indispensable business tool in the new ecosystem of journalism. While the idea of getting many people to donate small amounts of cash to fund a project is not new — charities do it, political campaigns do it — some forward-thinking journalists and entrepreneurs are starting to apply the same crowdfunding concept to the news.