Monday, March 14, 2005



Mark Schaver provides another useful list (Amerikan bias): The most useful Web sites for reporters

The Blog, The Press, The Media: The blog next door
I think one of our real challenges today is finding ways to have debates about culture in public.

Politics is endlessly debated. So is sports. But where are the frank public conversations about art and about culture? Not just someone spouting an opinion. Not just another self-promotion or evangelical sermon. How do we get the public engaged in talking about art? We have to promote the conversations wherever we can.
To me, art is about wrestling with ideas, about engaging with creativity in a vigorous back-and-forth that leaves me changed in some way. I love that an encounter with really good art usually provokes more questions than answers and sends me out looking for more.


Is there a Better Case for the Arts? [The buzz among librarians and investigative journalists this week was the Choicepoint situation ChoicePoint to stop selling consumer information ; If this story is right, it's even scarier than the Choicepoint situation Hackers have gotten in to Accurint]
• · It only seems fair. I've written How to Save CNN How to save blogs from ourselves; Blogs provide the ultimate platform of one-to-many communication that encourages openness, honesty and integrity yet quickly punishes the use of the spin of old. Why Establishment figures enter the blogosphere
• · · Political Insider Jeremy Wallace ; Mover and Shaker in Politics Katherine Harris' blog
• · · · Incredible Blogs ; Google Mobile
• · · · · To help "grassroots" journalists, bloggers, students and other Web publishers without formal journalism training to write more accurate and informative content. Wikis on journalism ; Observer the First Sunday Newspaper has a Blog
• · · · · · Information and Research Services, Parliamentary Library (PDF file): The advent of the internet and mobile phones have made communication easier and quicker, but the change is not necessarily for the best. Do Australians have a legal right to privacy?; Russian Dolls