Progress Pond

Citizen Journalism Going Maintsream & More on Media News Monday

Media News Monday!

Media News Monday is a compilation of media news from the past week posted on Monday. Media is an integral part of politics, and I think that it’s important to get to know media and media innovation in order to forecast future ways of campaigning, targeting voters, and disseminating information. If any of you are interested in campaigning, this weekly diary may help you with ideas.  It is also important to keep up with right wing corporate media (RWCM) news.  If you have any media news to add, please do so.  

Previous edition: Apr. 25, 2005
For more previous editions, search my diaries.  

Now for the news from the past week posted today, May 2, 2005:

Note: I’m going to put a %%% next to things that are more interesting or go into things more in-depth.

Citizen Journalism Going Mainstream
Colorado’s Rocky Mountain News will launch Mile-High Citizen Journalism %%% (Colorado Kossacks…get involved!)

Outrage of the Week

Last November, members of the Association of Public Television Stations met in Baltimore along with officials from the corporation and PBS. Mr. Tomlinson told them they should make sure their programming better reflected the Republican mandate.

Mr. Tomlinson said that his comment was made in jest and that he couldn’t imagine how people took his remarks at what he described as “a fun occasion” the wrong way. Others, though, were not amused.

Media Story of the Week
KR’s Baghdad Chief Says Journos Remain in Deep Danger

Featured Media Parody
Faux News: The Most Powerful Smell in News Gotta love parody.

Best Bush Press Conference Review
Dan Froomkin: Not Exactly Must-See TV Ah, but a must-read entry. %%%

Peter Jennings Letter to Supporters
Read it. Truly moving. Very sweet letter. %%%

People & the Press: Study of the Week
link %%%

A national survey conducted by the Missouri School of Journalism’s Center for Advanced Social Research has found that 85% detect bias in news reporting. Of those, 48% believe it is liberal bias, 30% conservative — and 12% both.

Almost two out of three said journalists too often invade people’s privacy. About three in four feel the news is too negative. The same number said reporters tend to favor one side over the other when covering political and social issues.

At the same time, however, nearly two in three call journalism credible. More than half rate newspapers and television news as trustworthy. And a robust 83% say it is vital for journalists to keep pushing for access to information when officials resist.

Media Personalities

RWCM Watch

State of the Media, Trends, Research Reports, Innovations

Ratings & Circulation:

White House Correspondents dinner 2005

Andrea Mitchell & Alan Greenspan

Donovan McNabb, Tom Brady (guests of ABCNews)

Dick Cheney

For more RWCM watch & Media News: Penndit’s News, Media News, and RWCM Watch Links. I get the advertising, public relations, targetting voters information, and media research from a variety of sources other than the links above.  

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Cross-posted here

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