Saturday, June 04, 2005



I went off to college, learned a little something about thickening your skin and doing what you know in your gut is right ...
-Forrest Brown recalls his days as a teenaged hand-wringing nerd

Paul Farhi says that compared with the rest of the media industry, newspapers are doing no worse, and in some respects quite a bit better, than the competition -- including the Internet. The Washington Post newsman acknowledges it will take skill, vision and creativity for newspapers to survive, "but I'd bet on success sooner than I'd bet on failure. It may be that newspapers are dinosaurs. But then again, dinosaurs walked the earth for millions of years." Newspapers about to die? Don't bet on it, says WP's Farhi

The Blog, The Press, The Media: Feeding the beast: I'm not a victim of anything but my own shortcomings
Few in Australia (sic) are across the full details of the evidence but that hasn't prevented our media commentators from running their own trial of the Indonesian's justice system.

There has of course been good reporting on the Corby case, and most of it out of Bali but it's impact has been swamped by the trial by media conducted back in Australia. Much of this has been conducted on the premise that we know Schapelle is innocent, it's the Indonesians and their legal system that are in the dock. Ignorance has held no-one back. 2GB's Alan Jones has been an important player.


Media trial or kangaroo court? [Congressional Quarterly's A.B. Stoddard says Washington Post and CNN media reporter Howard Kurtz is the target of both fair criticism from industry peers and unfair criticism from some liberal bloggers, who question whether he's tilting toward the right now that he's married to a Republican. Stoddard's verdict: Kurtz appears to meet the burden of fair coverage — no one has found a pulled punch to date Everyone’s a Critic ; Media Watch Meet the Corby's ]
• · via The Ombudsman Association links to Making globalisation work for all
• · · Cowardice in Journalism Award for Newsweek ; Glenn Harlan Reynolds As people live longer, the age when they are at their greatest creativity has gone up a bit. But the length of time people are extraordinarily creative hasn't increased. So why is that? Oh, To Be Young And Creative... ; Mind like a sieve? Don't worry. The difference between mere mortals and memory champs is more method than mental capacity. Never underestimate the power of a good night's rest. You can be smart, well-read, creative and knowledgeable, but none of it is any use if your mind isn't on the job 11 steps to a better brain
• · · · Carl Bernstein & and Bob Woodward - Jack Robertson picks the wrong conspiracy theory to reject: In case you hadn’t heard, the legendary Watergate whistle-blower ‘Deep Throat’ outed himself this week at the age of 185. - Porn star or Poison Kitchen, J-schoolers? ; Google: Chance meeting that changed political history FBI No. 2 Mark Felt was the reporters' mysterious super-source: Hero or traitor, we'll never know why ; Deep Disgraceful Throat & All the President's Men Watergate book a hit again as Deep Throat unmasked
• · · · · John Quiggin on The Old Man and the Blogosphere: Age before beauty ; Being a blogger these days is a bit like being one of the frogs in the Okefenokee Swamp So you wanted to be heard?; Bless Me, Blog, for I've Sinned - Media Dragons everywhere confess their sin (or sins), transgressions, humanity ... Online confessors are like flashers
• · · · · · Archiving the history of the new medium - We now live in a cable and podcast world Preserving The Pods: Collector's Trove of Podcasts; In Search Of the Perfect Little Magazine ; All About Niches It's all about niche publishing these days Even the niches have niches