For those that still try to "practice" journalism and do so responsibly and ethically, this blog if for them.
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Journalethix
It’s a question not of money but what Americans value, and these days it seems it’s fluff. Americans pay gobs for cable and access to a lot of base programing, but when you ask them to pay for news content online, many scoff with outrage. But Bill Mitchell, in an article for The Poynter Institute makes a valid point considering The New York Times recently conducted a poll asking readers whether or not they would be willing to pay $5 a month for access to online content.
It’s about time reputable news organizations get paid for their work again. $5 a month is nothing for daily access to some of the best journalism in the world. And even if only $2.50 were charged, the subscriber would still save 50% compared to a print subscription, according to Mitchell’s report.
I hope the Times is successful, and I hope other papers follow soon. Good journalism is too vital to a democracy to continue to flounder financially.
Copyright David R. Norton 2009
Guidelines for Covering Michael Jackson’s Death, Other Celebrity StoriesPosted by Al Tompkins at 7:39 PM on Jun. 25, 2009My, how times have changed. When Elvis Presley died in 1977, “The CBS Evening News” didn’t even lead with the story. The first mention of Elvis’ death was not until six and a half minutes into the newscast that night. ……FULL STORY from Poynter.org.
Here’s a reprint of a comment I left on Dan Romensko’s Blog For the Poynter Institute: Posting Mug Shots is “A Bit Smarmy, Unseemly” for Legitimate News Orgs:
“I completely agree with Dan’s distinction. Mug shots published on police blotters are pictures of the “accused”, not the “convicted.” They don’t tell, as the blog suggests, “who broke the law,” only who is accused.
It’s an interesting dichotomy and a difficult conundrum. In the criminal justice system, one is innocent until proven guilty. As mug shots are the most unflattering depiction of a person in a humiliating predicament (sometimes- though usually not- undeserved), in the news media the accused are guilty until proven otherwise.
Still, when crimes are committed and suspects are arrested, the community absolutely has a right and need to know. However, are their alternatives to running mug shots that would be more ethical? And if a suspect is cleared of wrong doing, should the state make private those photographs and preclude them from being released to the public once a case is closed?
As far as I know, once a mug shot it taken, it is part of the public record, something that seems unfair if the person is acquitted. And even if past mug shots of acquitted persons are still publicly available, reputable news organizations should take the high road and refrain from printing them, despite a public WANT to know/see, which is quite different from a NEED. Mug shots sell, but if there are other available photos, perhaps newspapers could operate under the “innocent until proven guilty” doctrine and treat the accused with more dignity when able.”
Do you agree?
Copyright David R. Norton 2009