Media observer offers 'powers-ful' advice to 'citizen journalists'

uploaded by Susan Jones August 3, 2007 at 06:40 pm
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Media observer offers 'powers-ful' advice to 'citizen journalists' by Susan Jones

William Powers, a weekly columnist for National Journal in the USA, wrote a piece this week titled "Crowd Control," and it's about citizen journalism. Powers makes some good points worth remembering and taking into account. Feel free to discuss here.

EXCERPT: "Look out, world -- here comes citizen journalism. If you watched the recent CNN/YouTube Democratic presidential debate, you know what I'm talking about. Instead of professional journalists, real people craft the news, from asking the questions to shooting the videos to writing the stories. Rather than the opponents they are made out to be, citizen journalists and mainstreamers look more and more like symbiotic partners."

"Here's how it works: Next time you see news happening -- say, a jumbo jetliner crashes in your neighborhood, or you overhear a presidential candidate plotting dirty campaign tricks -- race to your keyboard and tap out a story. Throw in an image snapped with your mobile phone, upload it all to the Net, and -- voila! -- you're a journalist. Who needs the pros?"

This week came word that a Vancouver, B.C.-based citizen-journalism service called NowPublic.com has received US$10.6 million in new financing. That may look puny next to the US$5 billion that Rupert Murdoch is paying for Dow Jones, but in the relatively new world of "crowd-powered media," which is how NowPublic describes itself, US$10.6 million is big potatoes."

"To get a feel for what kind of news this crowd-powered juggernaut will be breaking, I joined NowPublic this week. I visited the site repeatedly over a few days when there were plenty of major stories to cover. The war in Iraq. Murdoch taking over The Wall Street Journal. The longest-serving Republican U.S. senator, Ted Stevens of Alaska, under federal investigation....

...Yet more often than not, the top news on the NowPublic front page was about transportation mishaps. "A Passenger Dead at Caracas Metro Crash" was the lead story for much of one day. The next morning, it was a fatal one-car crash outside Boston. That afternoon, the lead was a bridge near Sacramento that collapsed on a truck, pinning the driver."

"Evidently, the vast discerning crowd that is about to revolutionize journalism sometimes believes that smallish train and road accidents are the biggest news on the planet. The Murdoch/Dow Jones story did make the front-page rotation, and there were non-accident stories, including Typhoon Usagi, at the top on subsequent days. Other NowPublic fare included first-person travelogues, baby pictures, and frequent news-of-the-weird items."

"Indeed, rather than the opponents they are made out to be, citizen journalists and mainstreamers look more and more like symbiotic partners. As the BBC showed a few years ago when it used citizen journalists brilliantly to cover the London subway bombings, and as the mesmerizing CNN/YouTube debate confirmed, crowd-powered news is most effective and useful when it has been filtered and selected by more-experienced journalists."

"Crowds aren't wise all by themselves -- they need editing, too,| Powers concludes.

FULL STORY HERE:
http://nationaljournal.com/powers.htm

 

(Susan Jones photo) 

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