Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

The Ten Best Things I Wrote in 2011

My version of a year end review. These are the highlights from my writing and posting life this year. They are in chronological order: earliest to latest. I have included Facebook likes as a rough proxy for reader interest 1. The “Twitter Can’t Topple Dictators” Article (PressThink, Feb. 13, 2011) “Almost everyone who cares about [...]

The Citizens Agenda: A Plan to Make Election Coverage More Useful to People

I’m teaming up with The Guardian to try something different in campaign journalism. Here’s the announcement post, with my commentary after it. The Citizens Agenda: Making Election Coverage More Useful Co-published with The Guardian. by Amanda Michel and Jay Rosen In a few weeks, the Iowa caucuses will officially kick off the 2012 campaign for [...]

Occupy PressThink: Tim Pool

“Being a livestream he acts as ‘eyes and ears’ for the viewers. Literally. People will tell him to move the camera somewhere and he’ll do it. They’ll ask for interviews with someone, and Tim will go over and do so… The viewers will ask him questions and he won’t rest until he gets them their [...]

“Low information voters” and the political press

What if journalists sense that their work never reaches the voters whose inattentiveness is being exploited? What if they somehow know that voters are getting screwed but they’ve lost faith in their ability to do anything about it? Last week, Ezra Klein, the Washington Post’s policy wonk who is rapidly becoming their most valuable journalist, [...]

A note to my conservative friends

A few things about the practice of journalism and the American news media on which the conservative movement and I agree. The attempted “sting” against me and my NYU colleague Clay Shirky by James O’Keefe (which you can read about here and here) had its intended effect. It sent even more culture war resentment my [...]

If “he said, she said” journalism is irretrievably lame, what’s better?

Further along in my dialogue with NPR over its embrace of “he said, she said” reporting: two new items to report. Another engagement with NPR’s ombudsman. And Voice of San Diego’s reporters handbook, which disallows he said, she said. For the background, see: We Have No Idea Who’s Right: Criticizing “he said, she said” journalism [...]

Building Froggietown: A Parent’s 9/11 Story

This is something I wrote when the shock of September 11th, 2001 was still… there. I am reprinting it today to mark the ten year anniversary of that event. Peace. In Manhattan, Sep. 25, 2001 My colleagues and I held a teach-in last week for journalism students at NYU. An intellectual vigil, if you will. [...]