Wednesday, April 29, 2009

The Importance of Headlines

This week, we discussed headlines. I think headlines are the most important aspect of journalism a reporter needs to know. If you don’t have a good headline, people will not read your story. If people are not reading your stories, how could any reporter expect to move up in the world?

This brings me to my next point. I don’t know how professional papers do it, but why does the DI have the copy editors write the headlines? The reporter knows the story best. The reporter is one who went out and talked to sources. The reporter has a feel for the story that no one has. Shouldn’t the reporter be writing the headline? I think so.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Our Industry in 10 years

This week in lecture, we were asked where we see our industry in 10 years. I would like to add my two cents. Honestly, I feel newspapers will be no more in 10 years. All news, other than TV and radio, will be online. People will start having to pay to visit Web sites such as nytimes.com and chicagotribune.com. I also see protests outside of newspaper buildings begging them to print again.
This may seem like a bleak future, but with new times come new technology. Let’s face it; people are not paying for a newspaper anymore. They are going online, for free, where they can search for what they want to read. Old school people will not like it, but these are the times we are living. Better get use to a computer screen.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Understanding Diversity

This week I would like to talk about my conclusion from my research paper. I researched newsroom diversity. For the last 15 years, newsroom diversity has stayed relatively consistent at around 12 percent. Honestly, I feel that this number is fine.

Obviously, minorities will not agree with me. They will argue that in order to cover a diverse populace, you need a diverse newsroom. This is simply not true. Journalists are professionals. They need to master their craft. They need to be able to cover topics that don’t relate to them. The reporters themselves can and need to cover a diverse population.

Keith Woods, the diversity guru from Poynter, helped journalists with this problem when he came up with the equation E = w (y + c + f). E stands for excellence. W is the amount of work. C is your craft and f is your frames. Woods substitutes excellence for diversity because journalism is not about diversity. In “The Values and Craft of American Journalism,” Woods explains why he didn’t put D into the equation. He says that all journalists in a free press adhere to the same principles. “They stand for truth, accuracy, fairness, courage, precision, comprehensiveness, independence, giving voice to the voiceless, holding the powerful accountable, informing, educating, taking people where they can’t or wont go” (Woods 106).

Our job is bigger than diversity. Our responsibility is to the people. To fulfill our responsibility, we need to understand them. We need to get out of our comfort zones. We need to feel comfortable asking questions. These are the things the journalism industry should be concentrating on, especially in a time of economic uncertainty. These ideas, as Woods says, are “an ageless journalistic truth, not new math” (115).

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Writing Captions

Until this week, I never knew how hard it was to write captions. I honestly thought photographers had one of the easiest jobs in the world. All they have to do is take a picture and then describe it. Until you have actually written caption, you have no idea how hard that is.

How about writing lead-in captions? The photographers have to not only describe the picture in three words or less, but also have to grab the reader’s attention. It’s not like a headline where you can explain more in the lead. You have to do everything in three words or less. That is not easy. I almost feel lucky that I want to be a reporter and not a photographer.

I know no one except people in our class will be reading this, but this post is meant for people not in journalism. It is a call out to all those people who think being a photographer is so easy. Go to newspaper Web site and try to write a caption or two for stories you know nothing about. Try to write a caption in less than three words and then ask yourself; would people read this story? I am willing to bet you can’t do this as fast as you think. Good luck.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Our Industry

This week, the journalism industry took another big hit. Certain papers have decided to decrease their circulation or even go to online only. This is just another casualty of the economy. This is probably the third or fourth time this semester where we discussed a topic that makes me question why I am going into journalism. Why am I going into journalism? Is it because I have the need to know things? Is it because I want to be underpaid? Is it because I want to do sports writing? The fact is I am not sure. I'm sure I am not alone on this case.

It is hard for a 21-year-old to figure out what he is going to do with the rest of his life.
I think we need to discuss more positive issues in class. We should be talking about why journalism is such a great career. We should talk about how important our future jobs are. Let’s be optimistic for a change.