9.24.2009
And the immediacy of the Internet grows
Mobile live streaming backpack for video...Who needs a live truck anymore?
Labels:
convergence,
gear,
online video,
TV
9.02.2009
Ami Vitale Interview
Ami has absolutely followed her own path to photojournalism. Here's an interesting interview with her about her work and style.
Labels:
documentary,
inspirational,
photojournalism,
quoted,
tips
8.29.2009
Choosing Thomas
Amazing work and story.
Labels:
inspirational,
journalism,
multimedia,
online video,
photojournalism
6.25.2009
Have the content & audience, the rest will fall into place
A post on the NYTimes photo blog LENS about a quarterly magazine that costs $25 an issue.
I've always thought that if you have a desired product that is of high quality that warrants a higher price it will work in the business sense. I bet this will work.
I've always thought that if you have a desired product that is of high quality that warrants a higher price it will work in the business sense. I bet this will work.
Labels:
business,
inspirational,
new audiences,
photojournalism
6.09.2009
Competing with FREE
Just another blog post discussing the issue of how newspapers are between a diamond and a very hard spot. As are many other "content producers." Found it in the wrath of links found inside this blog post on Time's website about "If the Journalism Business Fails, Who Pays for Journalism?"
There's a reason even MediaStorm has started doing commissioned work for the likes of Starbucks and now Global Governance Program.
There's a reason even MediaStorm has started doing commissioned work for the likes of Starbucks and now Global Governance Program.
Labels:
blogs,
internet,
journalism,
news biz,
newspapers
6.08.2009
Information wants to be free, still
Found this link via my All Things Digital RSS feed this morning. It coincided with a discussion taking place on Facebook between some journalists I know and used to work with about the broken business model of the newspaper industry.
They were talking about former Rocky Mountain News ME and CEO John Temple's blog post about all the aspects the industry has been going about in a contradictory sense. Saying all the right things about building for the future but in action just holding on to the past.
Then throw on the grease fire this other post is talking about with the broken advertising model and Jeff Jarvis' thought that advertising isn't even needed anymore by the now penny-pinching advertisers.
There's a lot to read over and digest in these three or four posts, but they can all be boiled down to this: Because the monetary models of enormous margins of yore are broken and the recent history of the industry executives saying one thing while doing the opposite, the newspaper industry is a terminal cancer patient receiving huge doses of chemotherapy.
I hate cancer with a dripping passion, but this is the best way I can think of explaining the situation. Let's hope this thing ends sooner, rather than later. What's next will not come about until the institutions of monopolistic media and control –who are at the will of shareholders and double digit margins– have finally succumbed to their own demise. Then we can start talking about where journalism in the digital media age will go and flourish.
They were talking about former Rocky Mountain News ME and CEO John Temple's blog post about all the aspects the industry has been going about in a contradictory sense. Saying all the right things about building for the future but in action just holding on to the past.
Then throw on the grease fire this other post is talking about with the broken advertising model and Jeff Jarvis' thought that advertising isn't even needed anymore by the now penny-pinching advertisers.
There's a lot to read over and digest in these three or four posts, but they can all be boiled down to this: Because the monetary models of enormous margins of yore are broken and the recent history of the industry executives saying one thing while doing the opposite, the newspaper industry is a terminal cancer patient receiving huge doses of chemotherapy.
I hate cancer with a dripping passion, but this is the best way I can think of explaining the situation. Let's hope this thing ends sooner, rather than later. What's next will not come about until the institutions of monopolistic media and control –who are at the will of shareholders and double digit margins– have finally succumbed to their own demise. Then we can start talking about where journalism in the digital media age will go and flourish.
Labels:
advertising,
blogs,
journalism,
news biz,
newspapers,
quoted
6.07.2009
Recounting photographing Tank Man
Twenty years ago a lone man stood motionless in front of a row of tanks in Tiananman Square in China. Here's a audio slideshow with Stuart Franklin recounting his iconic photograph. It's always good to hear from the photog about the background and what was going on as they work an image.
Labels:
inspirational,
multimedia,
photojournalism,
quoted
Jenkins is a very very smart guy on media users
If you don't know about how people are using media these days, you might as well make steam engines from the 19th century for the 21st. Learn some media literacy by watching this video.
Henry Jenkins on Transmedia - November 2009 from niko on Vimeo.
Labels:
convergence,
new audiences,
online video,
quoted,
social networking
An inside look at the sinking of The Rocky
Long story in the Denver trendy mag 5280. Pretty slow start on the read though...
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