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Muckraking in the 21st century

Posted by: | September 20, 2011 | No Comment |

While it is easy to assume that the term muckraking only refers to political reporters in the 1800’s, the act is still performed today. A new term has been coined.

Investigative journalism is a widespread act of exposure. Instead of reporting a feature story or even hard news, investigative reporters are in the business of getting down to the bottom of such issues as corruption, crime (of all kinds) and other issues that are generally kept hidden from the public.

The International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (or ICIJ) is an organization that has journalists all over the world. These reporters share information with each other using tools such as Facebook and Twitter to share information with each other and followers.

The organization claims to save news stations and outlets the trouble of having to send reporters on location by maintaining contact with reporters in over 50 countries. The ICIJ feels that they are providing “understaffed news media in developing nations access to public records” and giving them access to news that is beneficial to them.

The ICIJ states that they are always open to new story ideas. The cool thing is, they are based in Washington, DC. Their contact information is on their website. More information on their background and mission is below.

under: Comm 455, Uncategorized
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British contributions (and scandals)

Posted by: | September 19, 2011 | No Comment |

Great Britain has given us many things. The Spice Girls. David BeckhamPenicillin. But they have also given us great contributions to the world of journalism.

In 1624, the first newspaper ad was printed and just a couple of years later they printed the first correction that increased newspaper credibility.

With the end of the British Licensing Act in 1695, the British press was not only able to report news with more freedom but it also gave Americans a push to continue their own news reporting.

But they’ve also had their fair share of scandal, the most recent being the News of the World phone hacking scandal. The famous British newspaper recently came under fire when reports were released that phones of celebrities, politicans and even royalty were hacked into.

 

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Creepin at Starbucks

Posted by: | September 19, 2011 | No Comment |

A D.C. area Starbucks’ customer got more than he bargained for when he took his little girl to use the bathroom.

Family Sues Over Hidden Bathroom Camera Taking Pictures Of 5-Year-Old Girl In DC Starbucks | wusa9.com 

WASHINGTON (WUSA) — A five year old girl is now terrified to use the restroom after discovering a hidden camera taking her picture on the toilet in a DC Starbucks. Her parents are furious, suing Starbucks, in part because they say this kind of thing happens at Starbucks all too often.
This wasn’t the first time this has happened at a Starbucks, however.
‘I Was Fuming’: Man Describes Finding Hidden Camera In Starbucks Restroom 

August 12, 2011|By ALAINE GRIFFIN, agriffin@courant.com, The Hartford Courant WEST HARTFORD – – Rafael Zeligzon acknowledges that it’s unusual for someone to look underneath a public restroom sink. But Zeligzon, 57, known to his customers as “The Drain Medic,” does it for a living, spending his days unclogging sewers and drains throughout Greater Hartford.
In May, the same thing happened in a California Starbucks.
Cops: Man Hid Camera In Starbucks Bathroom, Filmed 45 Women And Children 

A California man placed a hidden camera inside a Starbucks bathroom and filmed dozens of unsuspecting women and children, according to police. The camera was disguised as a coat hook and affixed to a wall adjacent to a toilet for two days last month.

Twitter was alive with Starbucks’ related tweets.

http://twitter.com/IAmTashaLee/status/115926467577257984
http://twitter.com/cherollie/status/115954502443601920
http://twitter.com/LaBelMeJai/status/115923348428554240
http://twitter.com/PurduePetesGirl/status/115908040561143808
http://twitter.com/TBD/status/115779312195616768
Moral of the story: Next time you go for your half-caff, part-soy, cinnamon-pumpkin latte and need to use the bathroom, pop into McDonald’s.

under: Comm 455, Storify, Uncategorized
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Facebook and Twitter unite

Posted by: | September 19, 2011 | No Comment |

Social Media stalwarts allow statuses and tweets on each platform

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=isZa8_d94r4

 

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Cam Newton

Posted by: | September 19, 2011 | No Comment |

Although the Carolina Panthers have started the season 0-2, their #1 overall pick is already living up to his legend.

Cam Newton in two games has already thrown for over 850 yards. This has shattered rookie records and he is only the sixth player of any kind to throw for over 400 yards in two consecutive games. It’s a shame he got $13 million less than last years #1 pick Sam Bradford because of the lockout.

Oh yeah the lockout… Newton couldn’t even practice with teammates or even talk to coaches for a few months after getting drafted. That’s why I am amazed at the stats he is putting up.

Cam Newton first TD

Of course stats arent everything, Newton hasnt even won a game yet. That is the most important job of the quarterback, but when you get drafted #1 overall there’s a reason: the team is horrible. Even with Newton throwing for all these yards, the Panthers defense is still atrocious which is why they won only 2 games last year.

Newton worked with Panther QB Chris Weinke after being drafted and it is really showing. Nobody doubted Newton’s physical gifts — He is already big enough and fast enough for the game; the biggest problem most rookies have — but no one expected him to be able to throw the ball so well, something he didn’t do much of in college.

I am truly amazed with Newton’s accuracy already and he can only get better. That’s why I am predicting to see Newton in the Pro Bowl by his third season. Not only that he will be leading that horrid Panthers team to the playoffs sooner than you think.

 

under: Comm 455, Uncategorized
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The going rate is 20 dollars a gram for marijuana in the Mid Atlantic United States. What if I told you that in the early 1900s you could have held several ounces of the plant for pennies? That’s right folks. It’s a pot blog. However without starting a referendum on who has the right to use it I plan to uncover an interesting fact about the newspapers of the late 1800’s and early 1900’s…They were made from hemp! Much paper was made with the fiber until the early 1900’s when William Randolph Hearst put his newspaper, The New York Journal, into the fray that has raged since then until this very day.

Hearst was a wealthy businessman fresh from his great success commercializing the San Francisco Examiner and poised to start a circulation war with Joseph Pulitzer in New York. That very circulation war is the spark from which emerged the practice and term “Yellow Journalism”. However the real story, that any educated stoner will be happy to tell you, is that in the midst of this struggle Hearst ran countless examples of the sensationalist style he became known for AGAINST hemp. The fiber had proven itself to be more durable and cheap to produce into paper than regular wood pulp and was fast gaining popularity with many stationers.

To understand Hearst’s rush to take down the plant, you must first know this. That in order to more cheaply produce his own paper, Hearst had made huge investments into the timber industry. With the rise of cannabis fibers he stood to lose all of what he had gained. In response William Randolph Hearst did what he did best.

He ran a smear campaign. And a damn good one too. According to the stereotypes of the day Hearst contended that the “Drug” (one of the first references to marijuana as a drug) was a dark tool used by “Negroes, Hispanics, and Entertainers” and that the plant forced them into a bloodcraze in which it would be perfectly normal for a black man to rape a white woman and kill her whole family without thinking twice. I ask you, does that sound like any kind of pot you’ve smoked?

Hearst’s domino had fallen into another and another and another, snowballing America’s drug war and dictating government policy even into the present day. Eventually the pressure got so high on the government from Hearst’s own readers writing in to protect them from this killer drug that the government was forced to criminalize the growing, and then the sale, and finally the simple possession of marijuana. That kind of achievement could not have ever been possible with credibility but in the age of WIlliam Randolph Hearst, it only took a whim and a typewriter to change whatever needed changing.

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You may recall a recent story about a UCLA student who decided to sneak his way into Libya to join the rebels in their fight for freedom. There, 21-year-old Chris Jeon learned how to fire a weapon for the first time before soon being told to leave by the rebels that once welcomed him due to a realization that he was useless; a stint that would have been scoffed at by literary legend George Orwell.

You remember George Orwell, don’t you? He taught you all about totalitarianism and communism in the eighth grade with “Animal Farm,” and introduced you to dystopian fiction with his most notable work, “Nineteen Eighty-Four.” What you may not know is that in 1936, a young Orwell traveled to Spain to fight in the Spanish Civil War.

Read More…

under: Comm 455, Uncategorized
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The Terrorists could black out cities. They could launch nuclear missiles in their silos! They could…shut down Facebook? In recent months Americans have been seeing this story develop on national news shows in the thirty to forty five second increments the major networks give to the short frill pieces that we all seem to care so little about. This Guy Fawkes Day, says one large group of hackers, it’s all going down.

The group “Anonymous” has vowed that this year on the 5th of November they will down the social networking giant Facebook. This particular date was chosen in honor of Guy Fawkes Day. Popularized in the hit movie and graphic novel V for Vendetta. This holiday, celebrated mainly in the UK, commemorates the efforts of Guy Fawkes, an English Catholic, who in 1605 tried and failed to blow up the British Parliament. Since then the date has always somewhat stood for a personal willingness to change what one sees wrong with society.

The reasons for this cyber attack are a suspicion by this group that Facebook is providing social and private information to the government. They are calling for mass cooperation from anyone who “just wants to protect the freedom of information,” in their endeavor. But can “Anonymous” really take down one of the largest websites in the world?

A few of Facebook’s practices do worry some internet security specialists. A 6 character password (their only requirement) is a “30 second job” according to Mandeep Khera, an internet security analyst for a large firm. Hacking has not been flatlining of late, as any Facebook user who has been hacked could tell you. And there is no shortage of them. There were 11,000 hacked accounts in 2008 alone.

Amidst such threats can Mark Zuckerberg keep us safe? No doubt Zuckerberg commands a veritable army of internet support staff as well as some of the largest servers in the Eastern Hemisphere. With a large organized association at his front door, however, Facebook’s openness to new members and its ergonomic interface could be its downfall. Regardless of the outcome, Facebooks over 750 million active users will all have cause to “Remember, remember, the 5th of November”

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Raking up the muck

Posted by: | September 13, 2011 | No Comment |

In the late 1800’s, mostly cold hard facts were considered for news stories. At the turn of the century however, journalists were beginning to stray from objectivity. Finding the dirt of the story became more important than the where’s and they why’s.

The word muckraker was first coined by Theodore Roosevelt, who was president during this time. He derived the term from a 1678 publication called “Pilgrim’s Progress” by John Bunyan. Roosevelt referred to a character in the story that refused to look up from his muck-raking to receive a righteous crown.

“The Man with the Muck-rake, the man who could look no way but downward with the muck-rake in his hands; Who was offered a celestial crown for his muck-rake, but who would neither look up nor regard the crown he was offered, but continued to rake to himself the filth of the floor.” – from “Theodore Roosevelt: An Autobiography

Roosevelt used his new term to refer to investigative reporters that he had trouble with. He had issues in dealing with reporters that he felt were trying to find a negative spin to put on a story.

Okay. So why does this matter today? Does muckraking still exist?

I say yes. The television show/website TMZ is a prime example.

TMZ took a legitimate news story in the Casey Anthony Trial and found the muck in it. Instead of focusing on any of the facts of the trial, the criminal case or the evidence; TMZ reports Anthony’s beverage of choice once she’s acquitted. Muck.

under: Comm 455, Uncategorized
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Few things are as passionate, dangerous or consequential as a population’s will to overthrow its government. Even today, people are exercising their rights to speak up against oppressors by way of assembly through mass media. After all, what could go wrong with a little power of the press?


A French guillotine, circa 1794

In fact, history has also shown us that a lot can go wrong if certain powers are put in the wrong hands.

The American Revolution saw the effects of crusading newspapers in the late 18th century. Inspired by their neighbors across the pond, the French soon followed suit with the hopes that they, too, could use press to promote their secession from the monarchy.

What the French chose to underestimate was the people’s determination to succeed in bringing down the Old Regime.

Read More…

under: Comm 455, newspapers, Uncategorized
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Ben Franklin spreads the news

Posted by: | September 12, 2011 | No Comment |

In an expanding colony, news is crucial for further growth and expansion.

The Pennsylvania Gazette, one of the most popular sources of news in the the 1700s, provided readers with  thanks in part to the genius and gumption of Benjamin Franklin.

Franklin, a true Renaissance man in every sense of the word, would take a long-winded paper and turn it into the most read newspaper in the colonies.  However, his love for writing and printing was not a God-given; it was inherited.

As a youth in New England, Franklin was an avid reader, even though he dropped out of school at the age of 10. He then worked for his father for a brief stint as a blacksmith until at the age of 12 when he became an apprentice printer for his brother James.

As an apprentice to James, Franklin found a love for printing and was able to get more involved after James founded The New-England Courant, which was considered the first independent newspaper in the colonies. Franklin planned to write pieces for the publication but James refused his requests for submission.

Under the alias, Silence Dogood, a middle-aged widow, Franklin wrote letters to The Courant that were published and became major talking points in the town. In In his work, Franklin most often used pseudonyms, such as Silence Dogood for The Courant and Richard Saunders for Poor Richard’s Almanack. When James discovered that it was his brother writing the letters, he became furious with Benjamin. Franklin left his apprenticeship and his family for Philadelphia, Pa. at the age of 17.

Franklin’s passions for printing, reading and writing would prove essential in his endeavor to start up his own newspaper. In 1729, Franklin bought the The Universal Instructor in all Arts and Sciences: and Pennsylvania Gazette from Samuel Keimer and shortened the name to The Pennsylvania Gazette.

His expertise with printing along with reading and writing helped in the transformation of the Pennsylvania Gazette into the “best-looking, best-written, liveliest and most profitable newspaper in the colonies,” according to Mitchell Stephens’ A History of News. Franklin printed The Gazette and wrote pieces for the publication under different aliases.

Some of the most relevant pieces that were published in The Gazette included an account by Franklin on the kite experiment that he claimed to have performed himself. Also, the first political cartoon was published in America, known as the Join or Die cartoon, that stressed the importance of colonial unity.

The publication was discontinued in 1815, twenty-five years after the death of Ben Franklin. However, his legacy has lived on to the future generations.

Ben Franklin’s contributions to American journalism have been beneficial to newspaper printing, production and layout throughout the country’s history. His works will forever instill him as one of the most influential people in American history.

 

under: Comm 455, Uncategorized
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The velocity of news: a timeline.

Posted by: | September 12, 2011 | No Comment |

I attempted to create a timeline of the velocity of news.

This was not exactly an easy feat but three websites and three new accounts later I finally succeeded. Hopefully. Maybe.

The velocity of news: a timeline.

While creating this I noticed a couple of things. The velocity of news changed rapidly in periods of time and then completely stopped before picking up again. For example in 1471 word of mouth is still the method of choice but picks up speed due to “flying tales.” Then in 1644, the Manchus conquer China. It takes six years for this news to reach a Dutch newspaper. And then again, from 1702-1818, five (please refer to timeline for events) different occurrences happened that changed history and the velocity of news.

With the Internet and smartphones we find out news as it happens but this wasn’t always so. Enjoy the timeline to see how we reached the point we are at today!

Side note: The timeline may or may not work in Firefox but does work in both Google Chrome and Safari.

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