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: May 23, 2005
For more previous editions, search my diaries.  

Now for the news from the past week posted today, May 30, 2005:

A sampling of Newsweek cartoons from the last two weeks:






Note: I’m going to put a %%% next to things that are more interesting or go into things more in-depth. Those links/stories that get singled out are obviously must-reads, so I don’t bother with the %%%.

Good RIDDANCE!
NYT Public Editor Daniel Okrent

Alert! Right Wing Nut Job Is New Producer at The Today Show
It ain’t pretty…Noah Oppenheim

CNN: World Report Conference
Info here for this conference which is happening in Atlanta this week

The Public & the Press: APPC Poll

The Ben Bradlee Rule
link “There was an old rule in journalism, and Ben Bradlee represented that at the Washington Post, if an unnamed source lies to a news organization, that source loses his anonymity, by definition, because he’s misled people.”

Question of the Week
Why hasn’t the press bothered to explore just why 57% of the public feel that the war was not worth it? Because it would then have to admit all of the things they did wrong in the lead up to the war.

Really Stupid Media Headlines
Those internet headlines writers must be bored.

Why Thoughtful Journalism Would Win Viewers
It’s because there’s so little of it. Alexandra Pelosi Could Have “Paid A Monkey” To Cover Presidential Campaigns

Media & Facts
link This is pretty much right on.

“there is much else the media can and should do to regain that trust. Perhaps the most obvious is, in the [New York Times credibility] committee’s words, ‘reducing factual errors.’ …I’ve long since lost track of the number of times that readers from all walks of life have told me, ‘Any time I read anything in the paper that I know anything about, it’s wrong.'”

Media Jeopardy
FAIR article

Media Personalities

RWCM Watch

State of the Media, Trends, Research Reports, Innovations

The studies posit a blog-buzz connection for some of the following reasons:

  1. The internet is a great place to roam for buzzworthy topics. All sorts of social and political communication occur online, from commercial advertising to educational symposia, concerted rabble-rousing to casual chewing the fat, technical databases to home-made cartoons.
  2. The blog as a net form is conducive to buzz. A blog is basically a web site consisting of a collection of entries in reverse chronological order. It is personal, accessible, spontaneous and open to discussion.
  3. Adjacency develops out of shared interests, as do audience followings. Internet users do not go to blogs out of obligation, nor do internet users see blog content as a consequence of someone else’s financial arrangement to have that content placed before them. Blogs are perused voluntarily, and returned to automatically or habitually.
  4. The A-list bloggers occupy key positions in the mediascape. Journalists, activists, and political decision-makers have learned to consult political blogs as a guide to what is going on in the rest of the internet.

Ratings, Circulation, & Ad Revenue Strength:

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 at Penndit.

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