1 / 23

By the people for the people.

By the people for the people. Or: What the hell is citizen journalism, and how do I do it?. What is citizen journalism. Wikipedia says:

peony
Télécharger la présentation

By the people for the people.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. By the people for the people. Or: What the hell is citizen journalism, and how do I do it?

  2. What is citizen journalism Wikipedia says: • Citizen journalism is the concept of members of the public ‘playing an active role in the process of collecting, reporting, analysing, and disseminating news and information.’ Is Wikipedia a reliable source? A perfect example of citizen journalism

  3. What you need to be a citizen journalist • A pen • A pad • A mobile phone (optional) • The internet (optional) • The internet • The internet has fuelled the rise of citizen journalism by making media more accessible.

  4. OhmyNews http://english.ohmynews.com/

  5. Wiki News http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/Main_Page

  6. Indy Media www.indymedia.org.au

  7. 360 News http://www.360ne.ws/

  8. The Guardian: Collaborative journalism http://mps-expenses.guardian.co.uk/

  9. What makes news? • News values: • Proximity • Impact • Conflict • Timeliness • Weirdness • Currency • The 5 W’s and the H: • Who • What • Where • When • Why • How

  10. What you need to know. Boring (but important) stuff • Attribution • Who did you talk to? • Objectivity • Objectivity vs. Subjectivity • Defamation • Can you prove it? • Ethics • Tense • Credibility

  11. How to tell a story • Most important stuff first • Always introduce sources/ talent • News – Short sharp style • Feature – Conversational but interesting

  12. How to find a story • Stay informed • Read the paper • Talk to people • Twitter • Notice boards • Magazines • Follow a crowd • Luck

  13. The impact of social media on citizen journalism • Blogs • Wordpress • Tumblr • Posterous – What I’ll be using today • Twitter • Citizen journalism websites Social media has given people an outlet

  14. How twitter can help • It’s a great way to advertise yourself • A great aggregator • Can be source of tip-offs • If you organise it correctly (lists ect) it’s a really easy way to access lots of different content.

  15. Twitter clients • A majority of twitter users don’t access the service through the website. • Find a client that suits how you use twitter • Clients: There are hundreds of different ones • Tweetie • Tweetdeck • Seesmic • Hootsuite

  16. The art of twitter • Don’t post rubbish, you’ll lose followers. • Keep it simple – You’ve only got 140 characters. • Don’t chase followers, respect them. • Keep your innocence. • Be different – or at least try. • Don’t try too hard • Don’t sell out to commercial competitions

  17. Multi-platform journalism • Journos will now head out alone and be expected to return with images, audio and video of their story. • The web provides us with a platform for these different types of media. • Use whatever medium you feel most comfortable in.

  18. From source to screen You can get your pictures, audio and video from your story to a blog in less than 10 minutes without a computer. • You will need • An e-mail capable mobile • A blog (I’m using a Posterous account)

  19. The best from the rest • There are a few quick things you can do to make your stuff stand out • Photos • Exposure • Rule of thirds • Audio • Good volume • No wind • Video • Still as possible • Have interviewee looking into empty space

  20. Don’t forget • Ask questions, a lot of questions. • Get people to spell their names. • People like bright colours and pictures. • Be objective. • Don’t defame anyone. • Don’t feel limited.

More Related