Archive for March, 2007

Perception, media exposure and mass communications

March 31st, 2007 | Category: General, Communications Crafting

Read - The Mass in Mass Communication - Here> Hartmann and Dohle Journalism Research.pdf

Warning: The above model will be more digestible if you open the PDF file with a Psychology Degree

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Computer rage to revenue

March 29th, 2007 | Category: General

“When we put it out we did not know if anyone would like it; we just knew that it solved our problem,”

Web 2.0 Wonders 

Im now going to channel my daily rage to flashes of brilliance and innovation.

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Bono, blogging and bitch fights

March 28th, 2007 | Category: General

Follow up from 2 previous posts..

Read An Unwelcome guest

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The Media Equation

March 27th, 2007 | Category: Media Musings

Discussions that never used to leave the publisher’s office broke into the clear for all to see, often aided by various factions within the newspaper.

The Circular Firing Squad in California: NY Times read here

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March 26th, 2007 | Category: General

Media Bias

Thats all I have to say today.

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2 unrelated but equally interesting links

March 22nd, 2007 | Category: General

Shared RSS Feeds, social bookmarking. networks and news - all hooked up to blog from separate providers eg. del.ic.ious, Digg, BlogBridge…Now you can promote all of your media using a combination of these approaches from a single web platform- Genwi.
http://www.genwi.com/

Find out whether your company is a HIP (that’s Human Impact + Profit) company, and then find out where it falls on the “HIP Revenue” and “HIP Practices Rating” chart
Sensible Investing 2007- Take the Quiz 

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What Journalists are worried about

March 21st, 2007 | Category: General

By Bill Kovach, Tom Rosenstiel and Amy Mitchell

While their worries are changing, the problems that journalists see with their profession in many ways seem more intractable than they did a few years ago. Read more here

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State of the News Media 2007

March 21st, 2007 | Category: General, News & Views

PEJ has released their wonderful “State of the News Media” report for 2007.
http://www.stateofthemedia.org/2007/

This is a “bomb of knowledge on the media world” Amazingly comprehensive in in scope, backed up with quantitative research on all media channels - newspapers, online, TV, magazines, radio and ethnic media. trends? whats going up? whats going down? PEJ looks at the quality of the journalism, business models and shifts in make up and preferences of audiences.

“But the print newspaper is unquestionably ailing. Circulation is declining. Advertising is flat. As Warren Buffett said at his annual investor’s meeting in May 2006 newspapers appear to have entered a period of “protracted decline.”2

2. Quoted in Paul Ginocchio, “Warren Buffett Makes Some Dire Predictions for Sector,” Deutsche Bank Securities analyst’s report, May 25, 2006

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The cutting of Time, People and Fact: Newspaper vs. The Blog

March 20th, 2007 | Category: General

How old media can survive in a new world - great WSJ article here

Since everything has become web based, media has become incredibly competitive both time and content wise.
Quality of this content seems to be on the decline as a result- as long as you get it first, it doesnt need to be right. There doesnt appear to be as much critical thought, analysis or fact in articles now, particularly in newspapers, both hard copy and online. 

A factor behind this has to be the major epidemic in all media channels of job culling, this certainly cannot be helping the downfall of journalistic quality and accuracy. See headline here “TVNZ confirms number of job losses” 140 -160!!

“Everyone is wondering how they’re going to produce a quality service and a quality broadcast in doing that.”

With the less time to “go live” and less people to check fact, add background, fill gaps and add opinion people are alot less informed and a lot more misinformed. Its actually a very scary truth. Also, to a certain extent there are different agendas behind media channels and this is why people have and will increasingly turn to blogs for fact and opinion. Verbatim is not a good read.

People blog on things they are passionate about, enjoy researching and  especially, enjoy sharing information about to the masses. This medium is in my opinion a lot more reliable than traditional media. From  WSJ article above  “Mr. Swinand says papers shouldn’t just use their online sites to post the same stories readers can see in print. Some reporters should be allowed to craft blogs about their topic of expertise. Readers should be able to add comments and reaction to a story in an online community.”

Blog is only newspapers’ critical pal,” he wrote in the title of his piece.

“I don’t think blog can replace the functions of newspapers. At the most, it is is only a social platform — — enables people to converse over the internet, build a mutually trusted relationship and express their views without worries. This is like chatting with one’s friends in a pub. But blog is only pub-like small circle and not a media of mass communications, so how could it threatened the survival of newspapers? Blog is only newspapers’ critics and not an enemy.

I have once imagined: if today it’s only a blog world, and newspapers haven’t been invented yet, then as a entrepreneur, what do you think I would do? I will start a newspaper. Even if the internet brings in endless flow of information, people still need an editor to help them filter and digest information, to provide them with quality and convenience. That’s the function of a newspaper. Of course, I run a newspaper, I am certainly in saying that. That’s why everyone should take it with a pinch of salt.”

-”Hong Kong Media Tycoon” Jimmy Lai Chee-ying

“Quality and convenience?” Newspapers in current state in NZ?Disclaimer: We take no responsibility for factual basis of this article due to time and people constraints.

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Americans see media aiding moral decline

March 09th, 2007 | Category: General

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