Illuminations Blog, JTM News

The Weekly Illumination — Issue 3

Welcome to the The Weekly Illumination, a JTM newsletter offering a quick look at the week in journalism with a focus on what’s working in today’s news ecology. The Illumination is a curated collection of stories about journalism innovation, notable job opportunities, grants and updates about Journalism that Matters.

The newsletter is distributed to e-mail subscribers, through the JTM Google Group, and posted to the Illuminations blog. In this week’s Illumination we’ll explore the future of journalism education, federal shield laws and the continuing evolution of social media.

“It is about male grooming, not Charles Manson.”

In what may be the best correction ever printed, the Sept. 1 edition of The New York Times writes, “An article last Sunday about the documentary maker Morgan Spurlock, who has a news film out on the boy band One Direction, misstated the subject of his 2012 movie ‘Mansome.’ It is about male grooming, not Charles Manson.”

What do we need from journalism?

JTM Board Member Peggy Holman published her first installment of a series she’s writing about the purpose of journalism, which is a culmination of the thirteen years she’s spent leading conversations with journalists through JTM and other avenues. Holman writes that journalism “engages, inspires, and activates us to be free and self-governing” in addition to informing us about our world.

TechCrunch Vs. The Awl

Elite Daily, a Web site that proclaims itself the “online destination for Generation Y,” has apparently ignited a feud between two other Web sites after TechCrunch published a superficial story about the portal in June. The next month, The Awl ran a scathing expose about Elite Daily, which included a link to the original story. TechCrunch then took down its story and has since published a new report that illuminates the shady practices uncovered by The Awl as well as Elite Daily’s response. Now the Awl has fired back with a new article under the headline “TechCrunch: Journalists or Startup Shills? You Decide.

The right to report

Two U.S. journalists are facing legal peril this week for their reporting. Barrett Brown, a reporter who focuses on intelligence contractors, is facing up to 100 years in prison. The government alleges that he threatened an FBI agent, obstructed justice and linked to a chat room where unlawful credit card information was allegedly posted. “By seeking to put Brown in prison for linking to publicly-available, factual information, the U.S. government sends an ominous message to journalists who wish to act responsibly by substantiating their reporting,” writes CPJ Internet Advocacy Coordinator Geoff King. Now, a federal judge has ordered a gag order barring Brown and his attorneys from speaking about the case.

Joe Hosey, a veteran reporter who was covering a murder trial outside of Chicago, does not qualify for protections under the state shield law, ruled Gerald Kinney. Kinney said he will compel Hosey to disclose who released confidential police documents, but the Chicago SPJ chapter has called on the judge to reconsider.

The Future of the New York Times

New York Times CEO Mark Thompson spoke at the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism this week. The Nieman Lab has a summary of his remarks.

Job(s) of the Week

The International Center for Journalists is hiring a Knight Fellow to work in Nigeria for the next 10 months. “The Fellow will work with other ICFJ Fellows both in Nigeria and elsewhere in Africa,  as well as local and international technologists, to ensure that our journalist partners produce health stories that engage audiences.”

Each week, The Illumination will include links to jobs, grants and fellowship opportunities. If you are hiring or know someone who is, send me an e-mail and I’ll gladly list it here. If you’re looking for a job, let me know what kind of work you are looking for and I’ll try to post anything I come across that could be a good fit.

Hangout Sept. 12 to Discuss Future of JTM

For over a decade JTM has hosted unconferences around the country.  We are now looking toward how we can grow as an organization.

Should we continue to focus on hosting physical gatherings? Should we move into online gatherings? Or should we take our energy and nonprofit status and launch a whole new initiative?

Please join usThursday Sept. 12 at 1PM Pacific Time (4PM Eastern) for a Hangout discussion on the future of JTM.

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What Do We Need from Journalism?

Given the pace of change today, we need journalism that helps us to navigate through uncertainty.

If the purpose of journalism is to support us in making sense of our world, providing the news and information we need to be free and self-governing, what does that tell us about stories that help us find our way in times of change? It calls for an expanded purposejournalism that not only informs, but also engages, inspires, and activates us to be free and self-governing.

Such journalism involves:

NewsEco-Journalism-purpose_med_res.jpgMy perspective comes from thirteen years of working with journalists through Journalism That Matters.  It is also influenced by consulting to organizations facing upheaval and as an author of two books on system change. I have seen that the stories we tell matter. They shape our actions.

As cultural storytellers, journalists influence our collective story.  In his groundbreaking work, The Image of the Future, social scientist Fred Polak tells us that cultures without a positive image of their future die within a generation.  Think about that.  Our future depends on positive images.  So cultural narratives – the stories we collectively tell ourselves – are more critical than most of us realize.

Likely unconsciously, most traditional media have approached their mission by telling stories that tend to keep our institutions stable.  They treat the functioning of our educational systems, political systems, healthcare systems, governance systems and other basic systems of society as a given.

When our institutions cease to serve us well, it shows up in the complexity of the issues we face and conflicts over how best to handle them. At such times, journalism that helps us to navigate through uncertainty can inspire and equip us — the public — to engage with complex challenges, taking charge of the well being of our communities and our democracies.

Such a focus raises some essential questions, like: Who decides what is newsworthy? And how?  And even: who decides whether our systems are meeting the needs of the people they are intended to serve?

In that light, consider how much journalistic storytelling uses conflict to make a story compelling. Even if it makes a good story, for many of us, it creates a sense of hopelessness.  Think about how differently you respond to a story about our education system failing and one about education innovations that are making a difference. One story leaves most of us in despair, believing there’s nothing we can do. The other can spark action, motivating us to get involved.

Inspiring and engaging stories don’t need to ignore conflict. They succeed by contextualizing them via big picture aspirations that provide positive images that inspire action.

Over the next few weeks, I’ll elaborate on these ideas in posts on an expanded purpose of journalism, and three principles: possibilityengagement, and diversity. The series ends with some suggestions on what you can do to support a re-vitalized, economically viable journalism that meets the needs of communities and democracies. As a companion piece, I’ll offer a draft functional map of the news and information ecosystem.

Got something to contribute?

A story? A question? A resource? In the spirit of JTM’s aspiration to be a go-to place for connecting people involved with the emerging news and information ecosystem, I invite you to join in. You can:

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Read the other posts in this series:

Illuminations Blog, JTM News

The Weekly Illumination – Issue 2

Welcome to the The Weekly Illumination, a JTM newsletter offering a quick look at the week in journalism with a focus on what’s working in today’s news ecology. The Illumination is a curated collection of stories about journalism innovation, notable job opportunities, grants and updates about Journalism that Matters.

The newsletter is distributed to e-mail subscribers, through the JTM Google Group, and posted to the Illuminations blog. In this week’s Illumination we’ll explore the future of journalism education, federal shield laws and the continuing evolution of social media.

On disclosure

In this week’s blog entry, we looked at when a reporter is obligated to disclose his or her relationship to the subject of the article. In the Aug. 30 edition of the New York Times the profile of a white nationalist is written by a black staffer. The writer, John Eligon, shared his thoughts on the experience over Facebookreports Jim Romenesko. Should the Times have disclosed Eligon’s race in the story?

Re-Imagining Journalism, two years later

Tom Grubisich interviewed JTM Board Member Mike Fancher for The New News, a column in Steet Fight Magazine. Fancher published the white paper Re-Imagining Journalism: Local News for a Networked World in 2011. Two years later, Grubisich caught up with Fancher to ask how things have changed.

Woodward and Bernstein go to J-School

Carl Bernstein is headed to Stony Brook University in the Fall, and Bob Woodward will be at Yale this Spring, reports Jim Romenesko.

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Columbia University is launching a program to breed unicorns at its Tow Center for Digital Journalism, reports the Nieman Lab. Nieman’s Adrienne LaFrance has coined the term to describe another mythical creature: a journalist who can code. Although the program sounds exciting, will journalism be able to hold onto these newly trained programmers or will they head to other industries where they can bring home enough money to live comfortably while paying of their student loans?

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PBS Media Shift continues to report on the state of journalism education as part of its Back to J-School series. This week two journalism professors wrote about how journalism schools must adapt to our digital environment. Cindy Royal, a digital media professor at Texas State University and a member of the 2013-2014 Knight Journalism Fellowship class at Stanford, writes about how schools must adopt a digital-first curriculum. And Gary Kebbel, a journalism professor at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, suggests that j-schools embrace a nimble approach focused on the latest developments and new experimentation.

Dianne, look what you did

Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s move to only protect some journalists under a proposed federal shield law, which I reported about in a recent blog post, has generated quite a reaction. The Society of Professional Journalists is now considering changing its name to the Society for Professional Journalism, a move that’s partly in response to Feinstein’s actions, reports Jim Romenesko. Numerous reporters, publications and press organizations have spoken out against the California senator’s proposal, including a compelling argument by Dell Cameron in Vice.

News organizations join citizens to open access

The Honolulu Civil Beat, an investigative news site co-founded by E-bay founder Pierre Omidyar, has launched the Civil Beat Law Center for the Public Interest to help groups and individuals access government records, reports Nieman Lab. The program is somewhat similar to the Center for Investigative Reporting’s initiative to create FOIA Machine, an automated tool that will assist people making public records requests. FOIA Machine is currently under development after a successful Kickstarter campaign raised more than $50,000, well beyond its $17,500 goal.

The Medium is the message

What is Medium? Hamish McKenzie suggests in Pandodaily that Medium, a new Web site from Ev Williams who helped create both Blogger and Twitter, has an identity crisis. Medium, and Buzzfeed, are trying to straddle the line between being a publication and an open-platform like Twitter. It’s time for these companies to make up their mind, says McKenzie.

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Meanwhile Twitter is becoming more conversational. A move that Om Malik says will translate into dollars and put the tech company one step closer to an IPO.

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The news that the Huffington Post would no longer allow anonymous comments generated headlines when it was announced last week. Details about the plan have since revealed that existing users will be grandfathered in and that an astonishing 75% of comments on the site are removed because they are spam or violate the company’s requirement for civil discourse.

Postmortem analysis

ESPN pulled out of its partnership with Frontline to produce a documentary on the numerous brain injuries that have resulted from football players careers in the NFL last week. Poynter’s Kelly Mcbride has now examined the articles leading up to the break-up to analyze why the collaboration fell apartLeague of Denial, the PBS documentary, is scheduled to premiere Oct. 8.

Job(s) of the Week

The Commercial Appeal is looking for an investigative reporter. “If you can drop into City Hall for a records-driven weekender on spending abuses while juggling an ambitious, long-term investigative project, we should talk,” says the job listing.

Each week, The Illumination will include links to jobs, grants and fellowship opportunities. If you are hiring or know someone who is, send me an e-mail and I’ll gladly list it here. If you’re looking for a job, let me know what kind of work you are looking for and I’ll try to post anything I come across that could be a good fit.

Hangout Sept. 12 to Discuss Future of JTM

For over a decade JTM has hosted unconferences around the country.  We are now looking toward how we can grow as an organization.

Should we continue to focus on hosting physical gatherings? Should we move into online gatherings? Or should we take our energy and nonprofit status and launch a whole new initiative?

Please join usThursday Sept. 12 at 1PM Pacific Time (4PM Eastern) for a Hangout discussion on the future of JTM.

Illuminations Blog, JTM News

To Disclose or Not Disclose, that is the Question

It’s been almost 15 years since Oh Yeon Ho, the founder of Korea’s OhMyNews declared, “Every citizen is a reporter.” But every reporter is also a citizen as well. ethics-3318b92458d24f66330e1992ad4794bbbc42c727-s6-c30

While citizen journalists are allowed to freely to engage with the world around them, professional journalists are often barred by their employer from participating in certain civic activities in order to prevent the appearance of bias. But even the New York Times 50 pages of ethical guidelines can’t address every ethical quandary.

Many people see transparency as the antidote to an unyielding battle to exterminate bias — both real and perceived — from reporting, but when should a reporter disclose his or her personal interest? And when can transparency get in the way of telling the story.

James Tully is a reporter and sports anchor for a CBS affiliate in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Last month Tully filed a report about e-cigarettes, an alternative way for people to ingest nicotine without exposing themselves to the carcinogens associated with burning tobacco. Also known as personal vaporizers, the devices use electricity to heat up a coil that vaporizes a liquid that is essentially the same thing used in fog machines, only smaller and laced with flavoring and nicotine.

Tully first reported on e-cigarettes in 2011 while working at a Fox affiliate in Tulsa, Oklahoma. At the time, Tully had a girlfriend who was an opera singer and didn’t like his tobacco habit.

“Girlfriends don’t like cigarettes,” Tully told me in a phone interview. “You understand how stressful things can be with deadlines. … Outside of the restaurant industry, I don’t know any other industry where people smoke this much.”

After his story aired on TV, Tully received an e-mail from someone in the e-cigarette business who offered to show him a bit more about the burgeoning industry. The man offered Tully a deal on the accouterments he’d need to get started and the reporter decided to give it a try.

“That was enough of an incentive,” said Tully. “Two-and-a-half — three — years later, I’m still using them because they are effective.”

With e-cigarettes now surging in popularity and governments at all levels exploring how the products should be regulated, Tully decided to pitch a story for his current station in Pennsylvania.

In his previous story at his old station — when Tully first discovered e-cigarettes — he didn’t disclose that he was a smoker, and he decided not to disclose that he uses e-cigs in his new story after discussing the issue with his producers.

“How important is it that I’m an e-cigarette user in this particular situation?” said Tully. “At which point do I need to make it about myself, if my research is accurate and I’m presenting both sides of the story. … There really wasn’t a situation where I felt that would’ve fit anyway.”

Tully has a point. Would his audience trust his reporting if he told them that he used to smoke cigarettes but now relies on vapor to get his nicotine fix, or would viewers second-guess his experts and suspect that Tully cherry-picked quotes to support his angle?

The Ethics AdviceLine for Journalists is a service provided by The Chicago Headline Club, an SPJ regional chapter, that’s available to any working journalist . I decided to ask the advice line if — in their professional opinion — Tully should have been more transparent in his reporting.

“That’s a huge conflict of interest,” said Lee Anne Peck, a professor who teaches journalism ethics at the University of Northern Colorado. Peck is one of four people who respond to the requests. The group is now building a Web site to publish advice culled from the hundreds of calls it has received since launching in 2001. “At first I thought, he should definitely disclose that very basic fact, but then I thought it’s almost like a free advertisement. … So what i came up with is that he should not have reported the story at all.”

Peck said that she didn’t think a smoker would need to disclose their cigarette usage while reporting on e-cigarettes, but someone who is actually using the product should hand the story off to a colleague.

“Which reporter would you rather have doing the story? Me or the person who was just handed the story from the assignment desk at 9 o’clock in the morning,” said Tully. “With this situation, me being an e-cigarette user helped me to understand it, helped me to have my facts straight.”

Peck disagreed.

“If he knows all this, why couldn’t he share that information with another reporter?” she said. “He should not have done the story, he’s too close it.”

In an almost inverse scenario, Michael Siegel a professor in the Department of Community Health Sciences at the Boston University School of Public Health and a well-known e-cigarette advocate, has accused a fellow professor of failing to disclose his financial ties to “Big Pharma” in a New York Times op/ed,  which Siegel says is a conflict of interest.  Both professors contributed essays for a “Room for Debate” editorial feature on whether “electronic cigarettes [are] really helping smokers quit or prolonging nicotine addiction.”

Siegel said that Andrew A. Strasser, an associate professor in the department of psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine, and Harold P. Wimmer, the national president and CEO of the American Lung Association denied readers the full story:

It turns out that the author of the commentary has received funding from a company which manufactures a competitive product to electronic cigarettes. Specifically, he has received research funding from Pfizer, the manufacturer of Chantix, a smoking cessation drug that stands to lose substantial sales if electronic cigarettes become increasingly popular. Therefore, this is a significant financial conflict of interest and I think it ought to have been disclosed in the article.

This is not the only commentary which failed to disclose a significant financial conflict of interest. The American Lung Association offered a commentary which urged smokers not to use electronic cigarettes to quit smoking. This is a devastating recommendation that, if followed, will result in increased smoking, disease, and death as thousands of smokers who would otherwise have quit smoking using e-cigarettes will instead continue smoking.

But the larger problem with the commentary is that it fails to disclose a significant financial conflict of interest: the American Lung Association has received millions of dollars of support from Big Pharma; specifically, from Pfizer.

It’s hard to say if the money from Pfizer changed either man’s perspective on e-cigarettes, or even if the disclosure of this information would have swayed readers opinions. But the accusation itself can be a powerful tool, whether or not someone has actually been unduly influenced.

bronner-headshot-articleInlineIn 2010, news broke that the son of New York Times Jerusalem bureau chief Ethan Bronner had joined the Israeli army. Although the decisions of Bronner’s adult son are separate from those of his father, readers sent hundreds of emails to Public Editor Clark Hoyt calling on Bronner to leave his post.

“Ethan has proved himself to be the most scrupulous of reporters,” said former Executive Editor Bill Keller at the time. “[We] see no reason to change his status as bureau chief.”

Hoyt agreed with Keller that Bronner’s reporting was superb, but concluded that the bureau chief should take a new position while his son is serving with the Israeli army. Ironically, Bronner took a stateside job with the Times sometime after his son left the army and moved to the US to attend college.

If every article Bronner wrote from the Middle East included a disclaimer that his son was serving in the Israeli army, then the validity of every article would have been called into question. While it’s certain that his son’s status shaped his reporting in some way, it’s unfair to assume that its impact would be more profound than that of any bias his replacement may happen to possess.

Transparency is important, but so is clarity, and news stories should generally not focus on the person telling the story. When Patch first launched, editors of each site uploaded lengthy bios that included their political and religious beliefs as well as their opinions about local hot-button issues. The company has since abandoned this approach.

Do you know of any publications that have an innovative or effective approach to transparency and disclosure? 

Should Tully have found someone else to report the e-cigarette story?

Does the New York Times have a responsibility to point out the conflict-of-interest alleged by Siegel?

What are some ethical dilemmas you’ve experienced and how did you resolve them?

JTM News

Re-Imagining Journalism, two years later

Today’s edition of The New News, a column in Steet Fight Magazine by Tom Grubisich, features an interview with JTM Board Member Mike Fancher.

In 2011, Fancher, the retired executive editor of The Seattle Times, partnered with the Knight Foundation and The Aspen Institute to publish Re-Imagining Journalism: Local News for a Networked World. Two years later, Grubisich caught up with Fancher to ask how things have changed.

The old paradigm of professional journalism was mostly limited to gathering, processing and distributing news. The essence of journalism for a networked world is experimentation, collaboration and public engagement. It involves:

•    Public, private and non-profit media networking together.
•    Established and emerging news organizations cooperating and co-creating content.
•    Journalism being done outside traditional places, including within civic organizations and institutions such as libraries and universities.
•    Partnerships between journalists and the people they are meant to serve.

I don’t see those actions happening nearly as fast as they need to.

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The old mission paradigm of journalism was giving people the information they need. I think the new mission paradigm is about helping them have, use and act on the information that will enhance their personal and civic lives.

I’m on the board of Journalism That Matters, and we call this journalism of, by and for the people. “For” is still necessary and vital, but journalists can do a lot to support the “of” and “by,” as well. My own drive is, “If someone wants to create or contribute journalism, how can I help?”

Read the full interview at StreetFightMag.com