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October 24, 2007 12:04 PM

In Harm's Way?

(AP Photo/Chris Carlson)
There’s a collision looming on the horizon of MediaLand – at the intersection of ‘citizen journalism’ and ‘branding’ – and a few recent items in the news bear it out.

As was the case yesterday and will be the case for days, the dominant story by far is the disastrous inferno in Southern California. One million residents are being evacuated for their own safety, and the images from the scene are heart-wrenching and hypnotic – including the videos supplied to media organs by citizens with handheld cameras or cellphones.

This morning on CNN, “CNN Newsroom” anchor Tony Harris showcased some video sent in by viewers – footage that CNN calls “i-reports” – adding “We should say it every time and we do, please, don't put yourself in harm's way to send us i-reports!”

Along similiar lines, the current New York Observer features an interesting sign-of-the-times-type piece about how mainstream reporters – and they don’t get more mainstream than the New York Times-- are trying to establish their names as ‘brands.’
At one time the whole appeal of the life of the young journalist was that you could happily slip into one world, and then slip out into another; to start out writing about the Vatican and find yourself, years later, reviewing restaurants. And if you were good enough, you got yourself a late-career sinecure that was the love of your life. First came the work, then came the brand…

It used to be okay for, say, salespeople or career coaches to establish Me Inc.

But in the past couple years, journalism seems to have steeled its palate for the rotten taste of personal marketing.
So some journalists are self-promoters. This is not news. We media consumers have grown accustomed to the camera-hungry Kent Brockman media types. But what about people who aspire to be journalists? They’re even more desperate for a ‘branding’ opportunity, wherever one might be.

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Tags:
Britney Spears ,
Tony Harris ,
Citizen Reporting ,
New York Observer ,
Brian Stelter
Topics:
4th Estate Debate
June 22, 2007 3:46 PM

Across The Media Universe: Tying Up The Week's Loose Ends Edition

(www.amandacongdon.com)
Bloggers Beware!: Brian Stelter – the recent college grad behind one of MediaLand’s favorite sites – was just hired by the New York Times to contribute to their online and print coverage of network news. Sweet gig, right? Not so fast, says Forbes, who says that working for The Man stunts bloggers' growth!
Recruiting from the blogosphere is not without its risks--for both sides. The acquisition of blogs by big media companies can alienate the very readers they're looking to pull in. Bloggers who join the mainstream press trade freedom for a steady paycheck but could get swallowed up by the larger media brand.
Wonkette founder Ana Marie Cox and ex-Rocketboom anchor Amanda Congdon are good examples. Now that they're at Time.com and ABC.com, respectively, neither enjoys the same high profile as during her original blogging gig. It's hard to shake the impression that the traditional media banners for which they now work have blunted their insurgent charm.
While we would’ve been interesting to see how Congdon could’ve developed as a web-type commentator vloggette, Ana Maria Cox probably got off the Wonkette bus just in time. She’d done all she could with her make-your-momma blush jokes and was ready for the big time.

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Tags:
Wonkette ,
MSNBC ,
TVNewser ,
Brian Stelter ,
Ana Marie Cox
Topics:
Across The Media Universe
June 2, 2006 4:45 PM

Barry Petersen On The New Calculus For Foreign Correspondents

(CBS)
Brian Stelter has a nice interview up with CBS News correspondent Barry Petersen, who has been based in Tokyo since 1995. Petersen has written a couple of dispatches for us on what it's like to be a foreign correspondent in China – you can read them here and here.

Stelter asked Petersen, "What is the state of foreign corresponding on network news, as you see it?"

"Better and worse," Petersen replied. He explained:

In the 'old' days the networks were much more aggressive about covering foreign news in areas like plane crashes, coups, floods. I consider this the 'worse' time. We chased around a lot doing stories that smelled like news but were not very relevant to either American policy or the lives or normal Americans.

Now the bar is higher. To get a foreign story on the air it needs to be interesting or relevant or compelling. We still cover some huge, breaking news stories such as the Asian tsunami.

But to get enterprise pieces on, especially from Asia, the stories must be that much more interesting.

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Tags:
Brian Stelter ,
Barry Petersen
Topics:
Mega-Media Trends
December 2, 2005 9:25 AM

Outside Voices: TVNewser To CBS News – Please Don’t ...

Each week we invite someone from outside PE to weigh in with their thoughts about CBS News and the media at large. This week, we turned to Brian Stelter, editor of TVNewser, a must-read blog covering television news. He’s been thinking about the changes happening at CBS News and offers his advice for the new leadership team. As always, the opinions expressed in “Outside Voices” are those of the author, not ours, and we seek a wide variety of voices. Here's Brian:



If I was writing this column for a cable news broadcast, I'd lead with a question. "Scare Tactics: Do cable news shows frighten viewers into thinking the nation is full of suspected terrorists, sex offenders, escaped inmates, political radicals, and airplanes with broken landing gear?"



The answer, obviously, is yes. And they're very good at it. Sometimes it's hard to find the real news in between the alerts about all the dangers, real and imagined, that viewers should stay tuned for.



Don't get me wrong. I'm not rejecting cable news. I get “Factor-ed” and enter the “Situation Room” and make “Mad Money” everyday, and I believe it has immense value, especially during periods of rolling breaking news coverage. During the hurricanes this fall, we needed cable news, because the broadcast outlets made the grave mistake of (mostly) sticking with regular programming.



But we don't need "Jamie Skeeters' controversial audio tapes" in the Natalee Holloway case, or "the Netflix of pornography," or "a college student in hot water over sex photo," or "two window washers go on a wild ride on loose scaffold." (Those were four of the segments scheduled for MSNBC's "Rita Cosby: Live & Direct" Thursday night.) So this column is a request to CBS News: As you imagine the next iteration of the evening news, don't turn to cable news for a template. You may want to make the “CBS Evening News” more entertaining or more compelling for younger viewers, but please don't do this at the expense of the news division's storied tradition.

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Tags:
Brian Stelter
Topics:
Outside Voices

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