Nuttiness about reporters voting
Submitted by yelvington on February 15, 2008 - 12:33pmIn regard to the nuttiness about whether reporters should vote, all I have to say is:
Is it OK to write about sex without first becoming a eunuch?
In regard to the nuttiness about whether reporters should vote, all I have to say is:
Is it OK to write about sex without first becoming a eunuch?
The grumbling by some Associated Press members has "gone public" and is nicely summarized by Forbes writer Louis Hau, who asks: "Do newspapers still need The Associated Press?
After months of testing, Drupal 6 was officially released today, and I've already upgraded. There are a number of improvements and enhancements that will be of interest to news sites.
One of them is core support for user-configurable workflow through an interesting system of triggers and actions. For example, I quickly created a set that sends me an email any time anyone posts a comment on my website so that I can review it.
If you haven't had a good reason to whack yourself in the forehead today, here's one: In Britain the notoriously luddite National Union of Journalists is arguing against the placement of plasma displays in the newsroom of the Independent showing what's live on the newspaper's website.
In my years as a reporter and copy editor, my least favorite tasks involved handling tragic stories reflecting the dark flaws of human nature. Another seemingly random act of violence happened last night in Kirkwood, Mo., a suburb of St. Louis: Six people killed by a man angry at his local city council.
This morning I learned that a former coworker, Connie Conroy (now Connie Karr), had just finished leading the Pledge of Allegiance when she was killed by Charles "Cookie" Thornton, a construction contractor who recently lost a federal lawsuit against the city.
In some ways, we're all multiple personalities based on context.
I am a different person in the context of my family (where, silly me, I imagine myself to be king), in the context of my wife's friends (who think I'm with the CIA because of my mysterious trips out of the country), and in my various professional roles.
So I can completely justify being in multiple social networks with multiple purposes.
But with the explosion of online social networking, I face a multiple-personality problem. How many social networks are too many?
For me, the Super Tuesday round of primaries has one clear, across-the-board winner: The New York Times. Why? Because nytimes.com took advantage of one great advantages of the online medium over broadcasting, offering a wealth of highly local detail through a very nice drill-down interactive graphical interface.
The #1 national newspaper managed to be very local, offering me data on how the vote in Columbia County, Ga., where I live, compared with the vote in other counties in Georgia.