journalism

10 Mar

All the Aggregation That’s Fit to Aggregate

in aggregation, journalism

In his editorial today, All the Aggregation That’s Fit to Aggregate, Bill Keller, Executive Editor of The New York Times, had this to say about AOL's acquisition of The Huffinton Post: 

Last month, when AOL bought The Huffington Post for $315 million, it was portrayed as a sign that AOL is moving into the business of creating stuff — what we used to call writing or reporting or journalism but we now call “content.” Buying an aggregator and calling it a content play is a little like a company’s announcing plans to improve its cash position by hiring a counterfeiter.

Ariana Huffington, of course, responded later today. Quite a heated discussion, an interesting one given Huffington's success at building "a journalistic hybrid combining the best aspects of traditional print newspapers with the best of what the Web brings to the table" (her words).

11 Nov

Creative Writing and Comp Jobs (Tenure-Track) at Seton Hill University

in comp/rhet, composition, creative writing, editing, higher education, hiring & job listings, journalism, mfa, mystery, popular fiction, publishing, rhetoric, suspense

English:

Seton Hill University seeks published novelist of popular fiction (preferably mystery/suspense), to teach and to mentor novel-length theses in the graduate low-residency Writing Popular Fiction program (half-load), and to teach undergraduate courses in creative writing and first-year composition.

Candidates should hold a Ph.D. in English, MFA considered. Background in journalism, publishing, and/or editing a plus. Teaching experience/potential at undergraduate level desirable.

Composition:

19 Apr

Blog Posts E-mails from Infocom Network Hard Drive; Ethical Issues are Raised; Text Adventure Nerds Get Excited

in archives, blogging, copyright, e-mail, ethics, games, intellectual property, interactive fiction, journalism, rhetoric, text adventure, weblogs

Imagine that -- unfolding in real time -- you find a perfect real-world example that, with eerie clarity, embodies almost all the concepts you've devoted yourself to teaching and studying in the past ten or so years.

17 Jan

Commerce is reshaping journalism online

in advertising, google, journalism, newspapers, seo, web writing

The Editor's Weblog features an interesting post today about the way print publications (newspapers, specifically) are teaching their writers how to write articles so that they are optimized for search engine rankings on Google's news page:

UK newspapers are teaching their reporters how to write articles. How so? By writing in ways that show up at the top of search results from Google and other search engines. This is a look at how the online news portal oligarchy is concretely changing journalism.

The Times of London is training journalists in making their articles show up at the top of Google’s unpaid search results. "You make sure key phrases and topic words are embedded in the top paragraph and headlines," says Zach Leonard, the Times’ digital-media publisher

This isn't exactly news, as businesses of all stripes have jumped on the blogging bandwagon as a way of attracting potential customers to their sites; although, it does seem to suggest that editors are far more willing to blur the line between editorial and advertising than they once were. Online news sites generate additional revenue (for the parent print publication) through the sale of banner and textual ads, and by actively altering the way an article is written to be ranked higher on a search engine listing seems to have more to do with increasing site traffic, and thereby increasing ad impressions, than it does with the quality of the article itself.