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Explore the evolving relationship between citizens, the media and government. The news media bear a tremendous responsibility to keep their audiences well-informed and to keep authorities on the straight and narrow. But journalism itself is being redefined as more citizens take advantage of new technologies to become bloggers and video producers. Explore the love/hate relationship between governments and the press, and the competition among the growing number of news outlets to attract your interest and influence your thinking. Read More

 

Posted in: July 2008

You are currently viewing posts for the month of July in the year 2008.

  • More advice for journalists covering the Olympics

    The international news media discovered to their consternation July 29 that Chinese censorship of the Internet will not be taking an Olympic holiday. So any online research you’d like to do on sensitive topics like Tibet, Tiananman Square or the Falun Gong had best be done before getting on the plane to Beijing.

    But there is hope. U.S.-based Network World has some ideas to help you protect your access to information and hang on to information you’ve collected.

    Hints in the article, Top Ten Ways to protect your Data at the Beijing Olympics, range from the obvious – “Keep your laptops, PDAs and cell phones within sight at all times” – to encryption advice and links to anonymizer sites designed to hide your Internet activity.

    China’s Internet restrictions seem at odds with its pledge to allow free reporting during the Games. At the White House, press secretary Dana Perino said that Chinese Internet access has grown, but “China would be enhanced and continue to prosper if it allowed for more freedoms.”

    President Bush will be attending the opening ceremonies in Beijing, but Perino said he also plans to talk to Chinese leaders about human rights, democracy and Internet freedom.

    Do you have hints you’d like to share, or stories of bad experiences you can help others avoid? Please express them!

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  • Is The Daily Show news in disguise?

    The Daily Show, a wildly popular program on the U.S. Comedy Central network, offers an alternative to the mainstream news media – “alternative” because it lampoons the news rather than reports it.

    The show won television’s Peabody awards for its 2000 and 2004 U.S. elections coverage. By early 2008, its satirical newslike reports on public figures and current events were reaching an average audience of 1.8 million. Compare those figures to Fox News’ primetime Hannity & Colmes at 1.9 million and CNN’s highest-rated show, Election Center, at 1.2 million, and you’ll start to appreciate the comedy show’s hold on American audiences.

    The Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism (PEJ), which recently compared The Daily Show’s 2007 news content with that of mainstream news programs, concluded it “closely resembles the news agenda of a number of cable news programs as well as talk radio.”

    PEJ also found the show might have a purpose beyond political humor. “The Daily Show performs a function that is close to journalistic in nature – getting people to think critically about the public square,” in the tradition of American newspaper satirists Art Buchwald and H.L. Mencken.

    Like a news show, the program regularly lines up prominent elected officials for interviews, including presidential contenders Senators John McCain and Barack Obama, but any casual viewer quickly recognizes the main purpose of the show is comedy. Some major news stories are neglected, probably because host Jon Stewart and his crew couldn’t find anything funny to say about them.

    Stewart, who maintains his program is solely for entertainment, rejects any journalistic responsibility. After being attacked on CNN’s Crossfire in 2004 for not asking tough questions in his interview with presidential candidate John Kerry, he seemed bewildered the CNN hosts were “look[ing] to Comedy Central for their cues on integrity.” Stewart said news programs, which exist to present news, were presenting theater at a time when journalists needed to take their profession more seriously.

    Does the average viewer of The Daily Show know nothing about the global food crisis and everything about the “man-sized safe” in Vice President Cheney’s office? PEJ’s survey data suggest the show’s regular viewers are highly informed, perhaps the “most likely to score in the highest percentile on knowledge of current affairs.”

    Obviously, Comedy Central is not these viewers’ only source of news, but it certainly takes their knowledge to a new and funnier level: The Daily Show continues to bill itself as “even better than being informed.”

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  • Remembering Tony Snow

    Former White House Press Secretary Tony Snow’s July 17 funeral is reviving memories among journalists who worked with him, including your “Freedom of Expression” blogger, a former White House correspondent.

    When President Bush brought Snow into public service from his lucrative career at Fox News, I remember being concerned that a journalist from a conservative network was going to view the “liberal media” only in adversarial terms. But at the same time, there was also excitement that someone with many years in journalism would understand our need for information beyond the repetitive talking points on which his predecessor, Scott McClellan, relied.

    First impressions were reassuring and disarmingly funny. One of Snow’s first official acts was to return the morning informal press briefing known as the “gaggle” to its traditional home in the press secretary’s West Wing office. As his office became crammed to capacity and his desk was buried in a small mountain of stacked recording devices, he quickly realized why the gaggles had moved to the much larger briefing room. Snow’s reaction: “This is a mess!”

    I also appreciated Tony’s “bupkis list,” from a Yiddish term meaning “nothing.” When he didn’t know the answer, he didn’t fake it or dismiss the question. He’d turn to his staff and say “put it on the bupkis list” to be followed up on, an act I saw not only as personal modesty but also respect for our professional needs . Snow came directly from the news media with a special understanding of our need for answers.

    He had his critics, especially when he sparred with reporters as if he was still a news show host. Washington Post columnist Dan Froomkin described Snow’s briefing style in 2007 as an effort to “win the half hour.”

    From his first day at the White House, the cancer that eventually killed Snow lurked in the background. The press secretary, who had survived a prior occurrence, wore a yellow “live strong” bracelet. When a reporter asked about the bracelet during Snow’s first briefing, the jocular tone suddenly shifted and Snow had to take a moment to compose himself before answering.

    “[J]ust having gone through this last year … was the best thing that ever happened to me,” he said. “I lost a mother to cancer when I was 17, same type — same type, colon cancer. And what has happened in the field of cancer since then is a miracle.”

    As a cancer survivor “I feel every day is a blessing,” he said.

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  • Covering the Beijing Olympics? Don’t forget your survival guide.

    The Olympics might be the “ultimate choreographed event” according to Human Rights Watch, which estimates 25,000 journalists will be coming to China in August to cover the 2008 summer games.

    This longstanding critic of the Chinese government has published a “survival guide” for sports journalists who stray into sensitive topics or find themselves confused as to their rights or how to respond to being monitored by the authorities.

    One of the reasons many countries compete for the honor of hosting the games is their hope for prominent, positive media coverage. According to the Human Rights Watch guide, Olympics reporting “invariably includes coverage of the host country, its challenges, its policies, and the context in which the Games take place.” It anticipates “some of the most important stories will be found outside of sporting venues.”

    But covering China’s culture and society in a manner that meets the professional standards of journalism could prove challenging for reporters not used to the sort of restrictions the Chinese government imposes. The guide gives practical advice such as documents to carry and useful contacts inside the country. It also offers background on human rights issues and stresses the importance of protecting Chinese contacts.

    The release of the guide seems to underscore Human Rights Watch’s skepticism of assurances by Wang Wei, secretary-general of the Beijing Olympic Games Bid Committee, who promised the international media “complete freedom to report when they come to China” when the country made its Olympic bid in 2001.

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  • Press freedom organization preserves memory of slain Lebanese journalist

    More than three years after An-Nahar columnist Samir Kassir’s June 2, 2005, murder in Beirut — a crime still not solved — his friends and fellow journalists have created an organization that will monitor press freedom in the region, work to improve existing laws and offer assistance to journalists and bloggers under pressure in the Levant areas of the Middle East (Lebanon, Jordan, Syria and the Palestinian areas).

    SK Eyes, named for Kassir, began operations June 16 after compiling a database of violations against press freedoms and documenting relevant legal cases in the Levant. It hopes eventually to expand its reach, according to one of its founders, Elias Khoury.

    The organization plans to follow the example of Reporters Without Borders, which has hosted a seminar for the incoming researchers and journalists at SK Eyes.

    Nevertheless “it is fundamental that we have an Arab organization to defend the rights of the media and culture in the region and that we do not continue to count on foreign organization to defend us,” Khoury told the Arab Press Network June 27. “We must be responsible for our own causes.”

    SK Eyes plans advertising campaigns, nonviolent demonstrations, petitions and other activities to spread awareness of challenges to press freedom. But its efforts also will focus on legal defenses of journalists. The organization has been compiling relevant court cases and legal documents, including potential loopholes that can be used against the freedom of expression. It plans to pressure governments to appoint lawyers to defend arrested journalists.