Podcasts about nieman lab

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Best podcasts about nieman lab

Latest podcast episodes about nieman lab

Six heures - Neuf heures, le samedi - La 1ere
Lʹ invitée média – Et vous, êtes-vous " info-malade " ?

Six heures - Neuf heures, le samedi - La 1ere

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2025 16:31


Cela s'appelle " fatigue informationnelle ". Une enquête réalisée pour la Fondation Jean Jaurès et Arte par LʹObSoCo (LʹObservatoire Société et Consommation) constate en France une " fatigue informationnelle " et évoque un véritable " exode informationnel " dans une société devenue " info-malade ". En clair, les citoyens en ont marre de l'info en général, et des médias en particulier : la confiance sʹeffondre, la fatigue et lʹévitement de lʹactualité augmentent, et la polarisation sʹintensifie. Les plateformes dépriorisent lʹinformation, le public sʹen détourne et les influenceurs captent lʹattention. " Quiconque nourrit une vision optimiste pour les médias en 2025 est dans lʹillusion ", affirme S. Mitra Kalita, CEO de URL Media, dans les prédictions annuelles du Nieman Lab, laboratoire de journalisme de Harvard. Comme le souligne Andrew Losowsky, head of community product chez Vox Media, " la situation est désormais si désespérée que le changement est la seule option ". Mais quel changement ? Pour en parler, Fathi Derder reçoit Guénaëlle Gault, directrice générale de LʹObSoCo (LʹObservatoire Société et Consommation). https://www.jean-jaures.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/exode-inform.pdf 

#dkpol
Hvad du altid gerne har villet vide om Lars Boje. Men aldrig turdet spørgs Taylor Swift om

#dkpol

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2024 66:27


Esben og Jakob fejrer julens komme med at se på Borgernes parti, de ser på Elbitsagen, som oppositionen kræver sendt videre til Folketingets granskningsudvalg, og så tager de en duel om, hvorvidt der kommer valg i 2025. Til sidst løfter de sløret for julens to særudgaver af #dkpol. Ugens emner i #dkpol:Lars Boje (15:04): Lars Boje Mathiesen er blevet opstillingsberettiget til næste folketingsvalg. Jakob og Esben ser nærmere på Borgernes Parti – hvad er det nye, hvad er bemærkelsesværdigt, og hvor kommer inspirationen fra? Og så kommer Esben med Taylor Swift-pointen!Elbit-sagen (32:35): Elbit-sagen er ikke død. Nu skal der nemlig nedsættes en grænskningskomité. Jakob forklarer både komitéen og grænskningsudvalget – og hvad det gør ved sagen.Folketingsvalg i 2025 (42:48): Det er blevet tid til endnu en “duel” mellem Jakob og Esben. Denne gang om, hvorvidt der kommer et folketingsvalg i 2025. Hør deres argumenter for og imod. Husk desuden, det er den 10. januar, at DKPOL-løbeklubben løber igen. Turen starter kl. 08:00 foran Altinget i Ny Kongensgade 10, København.Værter: Esben Schjørring, politisk redaktør på Altinget, og Jakob Nielsen, ansvarshavende chefredaktør på Altinget.Producer: Emma Klitnæs, podcastassistent.Shownotes:Jakobs anbefaling:Nieman Lab's forudsigelser for journalistikken i 2025 Esbens anbefaling:Ezra Kleins podcast om Marschall McLuhan og Neil Postman Altingets afdækning af Kim Boyes forbindelse til covid-protestbevægelserne Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

NotiPod Hoy
Aumento del consumo de pódcast entre los latinos: Un hallazgo clave de Edison Research en 2024

NotiPod Hoy

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2024 5:52


Entérate de lo que está cambiando el podcasting y el marketing digital:-Casi la mitad de los latinos en Estados Unidos escuchan pódcast mensualmente.-Nieman Lab destaca el rol clave del podcasting en sus predicciones de 2025.-Investigación de WARC revela una sorprendente brecha en la inversión publicitaria en audio.-YouTube está implementando nueva función de doblaje automático.-Blubrry y Adobe anuncian nueva colaboración para mejorar la creación de pódcast.‘Favoritos del mes'‘Greal: El secreto de las ocho llaves' es un pódcast de ficción sonora que narra la historia de un periodista con aspiraciones literarias que, tras un misterioso encuentro, recibe un enigmático cofre. Con la ayuda de una experta en historia del arte, ambos emprenden una búsqueda por Cataluña siguiendo pistas sobre el Santo Grial y superando desafíos con la guía de un escritor reconocido. El pódcast está disponible al completo en todas las plataformas de podcasting.Patrocinios ¿Estás en la CDMX y quieres grabar tu pódcast? RSS.media by RSS.com es tu “ONE STOP SHOP”. Graba, edita, aloja, promueve y monetiza con nosotros. Visítanos en www.rss.media y haz tu idea realidad.Entérate, en solo cinco minutos, sobre las noticias, herramientas, tips y recursos que te ayudarán a crear un pódcast genial y exitoso. Subscríbete a la “newsletter“ de Via Podcast.

Timcast IRL
Democratic Party In CIVIL WAR Over Loss To Trump, Liberal Media BREAKS w/Cenk Uygur

Timcast IRL

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2024 123:41


Tim, Phil, Libby & Elaad are joined by Cenk Uygur to discuss Jon Stewart slamming Joe Biden for pardoning his son Hunter, Cenk Uygur explains why he's happy that Kamala lost the 2024 election, Tim Pool debating Cenk Uygur on the problem with a direct democracy, and Tim & Cenk roasting Nieman Lab after they blame social media for the collapse of the corporate press. Cenk Uygur is a progressive political commentator, attorney, and founder of The Young Turks, a popular online news and commentary show known for its left-leaning perspective. Hosts:  Tim @Timcast (everywhere) Phil @PhilThatRemains (X) Libby @libbyemmons (X) Elaad @ElaadEliahu (X) Serge @SergeDotCom (everywhere) Guest: Cenk Uygur @cenkuygur (X) | ‪@TheYoungTurks‬  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The co-lab career stories
Margaret Lin - Social Media Expert

The co-lab career stories

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2024 12:17


Margaret was most recently an associate director for Vanity Fair, working under Condé Nast Entertainment. She led social video development and production for the magazine, working with A-list actors and musicians, as well as behind-the-scenes costume designers and other personnel. She's also worked at Wall Street Journal, Vox Media, and more in social media management roles and been interviewed at Digiday and Nieman Lab. Margaret is open to full-time opportunities in social media. In this episode, Aubrey Borrough interviews Margaret, a social media editor based in New York City. Margaret shares insights about her education, career journey, challenges. She also discusses the evolution of her storytelling skills and her aspirations for future roles in the tech or beauty sectors.

Portland Press Herald Audio
Newsroom Live: What works in community news?

Portland Press Herald Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2024 60:58


Talking media startups, news deserts and the future of the Fourth Estate This conversation took place on Tuesday, October 15 at the Roux Institute at Northeastern University. Authors Dan Kennedy and Ellen Clegg sat down for a conversation about their book What Works in Community News: Media Startups, News Deserts, and the Future of the Fourth Estate (Beacon Press) at the Roux Institute at Northeastern University on Tuesday, October 15. Local news is essential to democracy. Meaningful participation in civic life is impossible without it. However, local news is in crisis. According to one widely cited study, some 2,500 newspapers have closed over the last generation. And it is often marginalized communities of color who have been left without the day-to-day journalism they need to govern themselves in a democracy. In this book, journalists Ellen Clegg and Dan Kennedy cut through the pessimism surrounding this issue, showing readers that new, innovative journalism models are popping up across the country to fill news deserts and empower communities. Through a blend of on-the-ground reporting and interviews, Clegg and Kennedy show how these operations found seed money and support, and how they hired staff, forged their missions, and navigated challenges from the pandemic to police intimidation to stand as the last bastion of collective truth—and keep local news in local hands.   Dan Kennedy Dan Kennedy is a professor of journalism in the College of Arts, Media and Design and a nationally known media commentator. Professor Kennedy teaches news reporting, opinion writing, media ethics, and other journalism courses with an emphasis on how technology is changing the business of news. He has also been published in The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, Nieman Lab, Nieman Reports, Poynter Online, and other venues. Ellen Clegg Ellen Clegg spent more than 3 decades at The Boston Globe and retired in 2018 after 4 years of running the opinion pages. In between stints at the Globe, she was deputy director of communications at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard. She is a member of the steering committee for the Elizabeth Neuffer Fellowship at the International Women's Media Foundation. Ellen is co-founder and co-chair of Brookline.News, a nonprofit startup news organization in Brookline, Massachusetts.

Pleine Présence
Episode 42 - Rencontre avec Florence Martin kessler

Pleine Présence

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2024 53:40


Dans ce nouvel épisode, Lili Barbery reçoit Florence Martin-Kessler, fondatrice et PDG du journal vivant « Live Magazine ». Diplômée de Sciences Po, Florence démarre sa vie professionnelle dans la finance en tant que contrôleuse de gestion. Elle change de trajectoire, part s'installer à l'étranger et se met à réaliser ses premiers documentaires qui lui permettent d'attirer l'attention du Nieman Lab à l'Université Harvard. En intégrant ce programme unique au monde, elle fait la rencontre de personnalités incroyables, toutes intéressées par le journalisme du futur. Parmi elles, Douglas McGray, le fondateur de Pop-Up Magazine, la version américaine de Live Magazine. Elle décide alors de lancer ce spectacle hybride en France et en Europe. Au programme de ces soirées, des journalistes, des photoreporters, des enquêteurs viennent raconter les coulisses d'un de leurs articles, sans caméra ni captation, devant un public allant de l'adolescence à la retraite bien entamée. Les récits poignants sont ponctués d'anecdotes ahurissantes, de témoignages hilarants ainsi que de plages musicales orchestrées par un groupe live. Un magazine vivant et métamorphique qui se crée, le temps d'une soirée, sous les yeux des spectateurs. De quoi redonner le goût de s'informer, de lire et de se documenter. Une discussion passionnante précédée d'une courte méditation pour s'apaiser fissa. Pour en savoir plus sur Lili Barbery, rendez-vous sur https://lilibarbery.com/Pour la suivre sur Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/lilibarbery/Pour découvrir sa plateforme de cours en ligne : https://lilibarbery.tv/Pour suivre la programmation de Live Magazine : https://www.livemagazine.com/Pour suivre leurs actus sur Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/live_magazine_/Pour suivre Florence Martin-Kessler sur Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/florencemartinkessler/Pour en savoir plus sur la bourse Nieman à l'Université de Harvard : https://nieman.harvard.edu/fellowships/ Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

What Works: The Future of Local News
Episode 86: Mark Henderson

What Works: The Future of Local News

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2024 44:41


Dan and Ellen fall into their third season of What Works with an interview with Mark Henderson, an old friend of the pod and a pioneer in online media. Mark is a journalist and technologist with decades of experience in news. He is the founder and CEO of The 016, a first-of-its-kind news publisher and distributor focused on Worcester, Massachusetts. Mark worked at the Telegram & Gazette from 1990 to 2014. He spent 19 years in the newsroom, rising to the position of assistant sports editor before being named deputy managing editor for technology in 2005. In 2009, he was named digital director, where he launched the first paywall at a New York Times Company newspaper. He founded the Worcester Sun, a subscription news site that launched in August 2015 and suspended publication in February 2018. Mark was also one of the very first people Dan and Ellen interviewed for their book, “What Works in Community News.” Although Mark is not in the book, Dan did write up his conversation for Nieman Lab, which can be found here. Dan has a Quick Take on a report from the Poynter Institute, a leading journalism education organization based in St. Petersburg, Florida, that offers a clear-eyed assessment of why there are reasons to be optimistic about the future of journalism despite the very real challenges that we still face. Ellen recounts a Knight Science Journalism Program panel and awards ceremony last week at MIT. The program honored Cicero Independiente, a nonprofit newsroom in the Chicago area. The staff won for an innovative project that examined toxic air. 

Print Is Dead. (Long Live Print!)
Caitlin Thompson (Cofounder & Editor, Racquet)

Print Is Dead. (Long Live Print!)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2024 45:16


STRING THEORY— Media, and most every brand in general, talks a lot about building and nurturing a community. Tribes, even. Finding one, inserting yourself into it, and then making your message an integral part of it. And what activity creates a more loyal community, than sports? If there is the ultimate niche audience, sports is it. It goes without saying that every sport has fans. And some lend themselves to something beyond fandom; they are lifestyles. And few magazines have built up a brand around a single sport and its audience and their lifestyle as much as Racquet.  Launched with a Kickstarter campaign in 2016 by Caitlin Thompson, Racquet is a presence at major tennis events and has inserted itself into the lifestyle of tennis fans and players alike. The path has been rocky at times, but Thompson is clear about her aim to provide a “premium experience at a premium price,” as she told the Nieman Lab in an interview in 2017. Like any other media, Racquet will live and die based on a business plan, and it is quite possible that Racquet magazine is just a small part of a larger creative media agency, all centered around a global community. And while she is not loath to smash some volleys in the direction of the tennis establishment, she is doing this while also trying to recenter the entire community and become its new beating heart.Caitlin Thompson has much in common with the world's top tennis players: passion, drive, ambition—and a willingness to make … a racket. Print Is Dead (Long Live Print!) is a production of Magazeum & MO.D ©2021–2024

The Full-Bleed Podcast
Caitlin Thompson (Editor & Cofounder: Racquet)

The Full-Bleed Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2024 45:16


Media, and most every brand in general, talks a lot about building and nurturing a community. Tribes, even. Finding one, inserting yourself into it, and then making your message an integral part of it. And what activity creates a more loyal community, than sports? If there is the ultimate niche audience, sports is it. It goes without saying that every sport has fans. And some lend themselves to something beyond fandom; they are lifestyles. And few magazines have built up a brand around a single sport and its audience and their lifestyle as much as Racquet.  Launched with a Kickstarter campaign in 2016 by Caitlin Thompson, Racquet is a presence at major tennis events and has inserted itself into the lifestyle of tennis fans and players alike. The path has been rocky at times, but Thompson is clear about her aim to provide a “premium experience at a premium price,” as she told the Nieman Lab in an interview in 2017. Like any other media, Racquet will live and die based on a business plan, and it is quite possible that Racquet magazine is just a small part of a larger creative media agency, all centered around a global community. And while she is not loath to smash some volleys in the direction of the tennis establishment, she is doing this while also trying to recenter the entire community and become its new beating heart.Caitlin Thompson has much in common with the world's top tennis players: passion, drive, ambition—and a willingness to make … a racket. ©2024 The Full-Bleed Podcast is a production of Magazeum & MO.D. Visit magazeum.co for more information.

Marketing Meets Web3 by Step3
Building Deeper Consumer Connections in Media and Beyond

Marketing Meets Web3 by Step3

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2024 31:11 Transcription Available


Unlock the secrets to crafting genuine connections with your audience as we showcase the seismic shift from passive subscriptions to dynamic memberships in the media landscape. As Nick and I navigate this intriguing transition, we're joined by Francisco Zaffarano, whose sharp analysis for Nieman Lab helps decode the 'membership internet' and its gripping impact on our media consumption habits. Feel the pulse of Gen Z and millennials who are reshaping consumer-brand relationships, favoring interaction and shared values over traditional content models. We're peeling back the layers on why media giants like The Guardian and health-centric publications are leaning into this movement, offering communities and exclusive content that resonate on a deeper level.Prepare to be captivated as we examine Gatorade's bold leap into the membership realm with their Gatorade ID platform. It's a textbook example of the personalized, exclusive experiences that are winning over the hearts and wallets of younger consumers. We're not just talking about the buzzworthy features and celebrity collaborations like DJ Khaled's involvement; we also dare to question the sustainability of this trend. Could 'membership fatigue' set in, or will the integration of Web 3 technologies offer a new frontier for user engagement? This episode is a treasure trove for anyone intrigued by the future of digital engagement and the evolving journey of membership models in establishing loyalty and a sense of belonging amongst savvy consumers.News covered:Memberships go off-platformBEHIND GATORADE'S NEW GEN Z-TAILORED MEMBERSHIP PLATFORMThis content is for informational purposes only. Do check our sponsor Step3 if you want to learn more about how Web3 can help companies create better communities for their users.

It's All Journalism
How can journalists and academic researchers find common ground?

It's All Journalism

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2023 26:35


Tamar Wilner is a postdoctorate fellow at UT Austin's School of information, where she works on Co-Designing for Trust National Science Foundation-funded project aimed at tackling the misinformation crisis. She and Valérie Belair-Gagnon recently wrote a report for Nieman Lab on the disconnect between what journalists experience in the newsroom and what academic researchers understand about the news industry.Visit the It's All Journalism website to find out how to subscribe to our podcast and weekly email newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoicesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

It's All Journalism
How can journalists and academic researchers find common ground?

It's All Journalism

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2023 26:35


Tamar Wilner is a postdoctorate fellow at UT Austin's School of information, where she works on Co-Designing for Trust National Science Foundation-funded project aimed at tackling the misinformation crisis. She and Valérie Belair-Gagnon recently wrote a report for Nieman Lab on the disconnect between what journalists experience in the newsroom and what academic researchers understand about the news industry. Visit the It's All Journalism website to find out how to subscribe to our podcast and weekly email newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Making the Media
S4E05: Community Service

Making the Media

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2023 30:40


S4E05: Community Service New approaches to journalism are required to engage with audiences, restore trust, and connect with communities turned off by the traditional news agenda. In this episode, we explore the view of a US-based journalist and academic who is the co-author of a report calling for the establishment of more community-centered journalism as a way of turning the tide against news avoidance. Damian Radcliffe was one of the authors of the report, “Redefining News: A Manifesto for Community-Centered Journalism,” which calls for a radical new approach to story creation and agenda setting. It calls for far greater involvement with communities to understand their needs and tell their stories in ways that re-establish the value which journalism can bring. Our Guest This Episode Damian Radcliffe   Journalist, researcher, and professor based at the University of Oregon with over 25 years of experience in the media industry, Damian has worked in editorial, strategic, research, policy, and teaching roles in the USA, Middle East, and UK.   His work focuses on digital trends, social media, technology, the business of media, and the evolution—and practice—of journalism.    As an analyst, researcher, and trainer, he has worked with a wide range of additional industry and academic organizations including the BBC World Service, Facebook, FIPP, INMA, Thomson Reuters Foundation, World Association of News Publishers (WAN-IFRA), and the United Nations. He has been quoted on issues relating to digital media and journalism by major outlets such as AFP, BBC News, Business Insider, NPR, The New York Times, Snapchat, Wired, and Voice of America.    As a freelance journalist, his work has also been published by leading publications and trade outlets such as the BBC, Columbia Journalism Review (CJR), Global Investigative Journalism Network (GIJN), Harvard's Nieman Lab, HuffPost, PBS MediaShift, Poynter, TheMediaBriefing, and ZDNet.    More Resources For more on this topic, check out A Manifesto for Community-Centred Journalism  – Read the paper MediaCentral virtual event  – Watch the webinar to find out more about news collaboration Contact Us Questions? Comments? Cool ideas? Get in touch: makingthemedia@avid.com or @craigaw1969. Follow Avid at @avid.

Redacciones4G - Podcast
Hanaa' Tameez: innovación en medios locales | T4 - E9

Redacciones4G - Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2023 40:18


Las comunidades y los canales son las nuevas estrellas de las plataformas. Los medios, a partir de ellas, pueden ampliar su comunicación con sus audiencias. Hablamos con Hanaa' Tameez, periodista de Nieman Lab, experta en contar historias de innovación periodística. Redacciones5G-Podcast es una iniciativa de Telecom Argentina, junto a Irina Sternik y Eduardo Aguirre. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/redacciones5g/message

Editor and Publisher Reports
170 Ken Doctor pulls no punches on why the JCPA was a bad idea & updates us on two years at Lookout Local.

Editor and Publisher Reports

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2023 35:45


On December 5th, 2022, well-known news publishing analyst Ken Doctor, published a 2800-plus word updatevia Nieman Lab on the 2-year progress of his innovative Santa Cruz, CA digital news start-up, Lookout Local.   Within the document, Doctor pulls no punches about his opinion on the state of legacy media and its desire to help bolster a sustainable business model via big tech compensation by writing: "Lookout Local has never been about money itself, but money to the end of the mission — money that can prove out the proposition that a robust replacement for suicidal dailies can, indeed, be built. That's especially important in the age of Gannett's trainwreck, Axios Local's skimming, and the misguided Journalism Competition and Preservation act currently before Congress.” He also claims good progress, with a digital-only local news enterprise reporting that without print costs, 80% of his bottom-line expenses are a staff of 15 full-time people, with 10 working in the newsroom and five on the business side. He also states proudly, "We're old-fashioned, working in a real office, with face-to-face communication throughout the week." The lengthy article also offers industry advice crafted as 11 important "takeaways" as lessons learned over the past 2-years. They include being patient and aggressive, planning but being improvisational, making good friends, leaning on them, and including students in your newsroom. In this 170th episode of E&P reports, we check in again with media analyst Ken Doctor on how the last 2-years have gone in his quest to build a perfect, sustainable model in local journalism he calls Lookout Local. We also ask him about his opinions on the future of legacy media and why he was so publicly against the recently failed, Local Journalism Sustainability Act (JCPA). Also appearing is Ashley Harmon (Holmes), Lookout Local's new director of sales & marketing.  

The Coffee
2023, el año en que las comunidades valdrán más que las audiencias

The Coffee

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2023 28:15


En este episodio hablo de la predicción que hice para el Nieman Lab de Harvard sobre el apogeo de las comunidades en detrimento de las audiencias que si bien pueden contarse en millones no alcanzan a generar el mismo impacto o llamado a la acción que sí que se logra cuando se conquista el corazón y la atención de las personas. Durante mi reflexión hablo sobre el caso de la Kings League y cómo está conquistando a un nicho de aficionados que están abiertos a consumir un nuevo futbol, aunque ello represente una aparente traición al formalismo del deporte tradicional. También hago referencia al éxito que Mr. Beast ha tenido lanzando su propia línea de productos a través de Beast Burger y Feastables. Mi predicción en el Nieman Lab de Harvard: https://www.niemanlab.org/2022/12/its-no-longer-about-audiences-its-about-communities/Sigue mi canal de YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC4wnzJ617MGUzJxKt4BJn9wAdquiere mi libro: https://www.amazon.com/-/es/Mr-Mauricio-Cabrera/dp/B099ZJJBVXSuscríbete a mi newsletter: https://www.storybaker.co/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast
Podcast #98: 'Colorado Sun' Reporter Jason Blevins

The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2022 88:11


To support independent ski journalism, please consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This podcast hit paid subscribers' inboxes on Oct. 2. Free subscribers got it on Oct. 5. To receive future pods as soon as they're live, please consider an upgrade to a paid subscription.WhoJason Blevins, ski country (and more) reporter at The Colorado SunRecorded onSeptember 13, 2022Why I interviewed himOver two decades starting in 1997, Jason Blevins built the best local ski beat in America at The Denver Post. That he was anchored in Colorado - one of the fastest-growing states in America and home to expansion monster Vail Resorts, the atrocious I-70, America's greatest ski towns, and the largest number of annual skier visits in the country - also made his coverage the most consequential and relevant to a national audience. By his own account, he loved the Post and his colleagues, and was proud of what he had built there.“I created this beat at The Denver Post,” Blevins told Powder in 2018. “It was something that I carved out myself, just looking at mountain communities. I found that the best stories were in these small towns with small-town characters. Some of the brightest minds.”But in 2010, the paper started a slow decline following its acquisition by New York-based Alden Global Capital. The newsroom shrank from a high of 250 reporters to approximately 70. This still wasn't enough for Alden, as The Washington Post's Margaret Sullivan documented in March 2018:Jesse Aaron Paul could hardly believe his good fortune when he started his internship at the Denver Post in 2014 not long after he graduated from Colorado College.“I felt like I had reached the end of the yellow brick road,” Paul, now 25, said, describing his first day at the paper with its history of Pulitzer Prizes, its beautiful downtown building (“like a beacon”), and its nationally regarded top editor, Greg Moore, who hired him at summer's end and who dubbed him “Super Jesse.”That all came crashing down on Wednesday when newsroom employees were summoned to an all-staff meeting at the paper's headquarters, no longer downtown but at the printing plant in an outlying county.After round after round of cutbacks in recent years at the hands of its hedge-fund owners, the staff thought there might be a small number of buyouts offered. There wasn't much left to cut, after all.Top editor Lee Ann Colacioppo, who has been at the paper for almost 20 years, gave it to them straight — and the news was far worse than expected.The Post, already a shadow of its once-robust self, would be making deep layoffs: another 30 jobs.“Sobs, gasps, expletives,” was how Paul, who covers politics, described the stunned reaction.“The room went silent — we were blindsided by the numbers” said Aaron Ontiveroz, a 33-year-old photographer who has been on that award-winning staff for seven years, watching its ranks drop from 16 photographers to six.Blevins, fed up, resigned shortly, as The Ringer documented:In March [2018], Blevins got back from [the Olympics in] South Korea and settled into his routine. (He also wrote about business and other subjects.) The next few weeks turned out one of the grimmest stretches in The Post's history. On April 6, The Post adorned its “ultimate visitors guide” to Coors Field with a photo of Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia—a mistake so egregious that one Denver radio host joked it was a strapped staff calling for help. The same night, The Post ran an editorial denouncing the paper's owner, Alden Global Capital, the hedge fund that's decimating the Post's newsroom.But what got Blevins was Alden president Heath Freeman's order that The Post lay off 30 more employees. “I couldn't really reconcile the fact that I was working so hard for such a shithead,” Blevins said.Asked whether he'd ever seen Freeman, Blevins said, “No one's ever seen him. There's like one photo of him out there. He's more like a mystery serial killer, just hiding in the shadows and slowly murdering newspapers.”Blevins decided to add himself to the 30-man headcount voluntarily. He sent an email to his editor and a resignation letter to the HR department. He kissed off the paper's “black-souled” owners in a tweet. And with that, The Post lost a good sportswriter, a newsroom character, and 21 years' worth of institutional memory.Here's the tweet:Blevins wasn't the only Post reporter to bounce. Over the spring and summer of 2018, the paper continued to lose talent. Instead of scattering, they formed into a sort of Rocky Mountain Voltron called The Colorado Sun. Per Corey Hutchins,* writing in Columbia Journalism Review:The politics desk at The Denver Post has imploded. Starting in April with voluntary exits that included Brian Eason, a Statehouse reporter, and climaxing this month with a new round of departures, four of the political writers and an editor have gone. John Frank and Jesse Paul, who also covered the Statehouse, resigned in recent weeks, along with other colleagues, in defiance of Alden Global Capital, the New York-based hedge fund that owns the Post and other newsrooms—and has set about shrinking their ranks dramatically. But there is some hope for readers who still want to see the work of these journalists in Colorado: Frank and Paul are headed to The Colorado Sun—a Civil-backed platform staffed entirely, so far, by 10 former Post employees, who will be ready to cover the midterm elections in November. (Eason will also contribute to it.)Larry Ryckman, an editor of the Sun, who left the Post as a senior editor in May, says he's not in a position to recruit anyone, but receives calls “practically every other day from people at the Post who want to come work for me.” The Sun—which raised more than $160,000 in a Kickstarter campaign, doubling its goal—will be ad-free with no paywall, and reader-supported, and will focus on investigative, narrative, and explanatory journalism. Founding staff members own the company, an LLC, which also received enough startup funding from Civil to last at least the next two years.Now the Sun, which hopes to start publishing around Labor Day, is poised to be a kind of post-Post supergroup. Four years in, The Colorado Sun is thriving. Blevins tells me in the podcast that the publication is approaching 20,000 paid subscribers and has 27 reporters. Morale and output are high. Profitability is close. They feed content to every paper in Colorado – for free. How, in this age of media apocalypse, did this bat-team of super-journalists conjure a sustainable and growing newsroom from the ether? Will it work long-term? Is The Sun's template repeatable?Let's hope so. Hurricane Alden's damage is not localized – the fund owns approximately 200 American newspapers and is trying to devour more. The company repeats its cut-and-gut strategy everywhere it lands. It works because locals' decades-old brand allegiance often persists even as the quality of the product declines. This was especially true in Denver, a city that had lost its other daily newspaper – The Rocky Mountain News – in 2009. Where 600 reporters once competed across two daily papers to deliver the most urgent local news to the residents of Greater Denver, somewhere between 10 and 15 percent of that number do the job today.Fortunately for skiing and the high country, one of that number is Blevins. His work has always been important in a hyper-specific way, exploring skiing's impact beyond its traditional branches of stoke-brah Red Bull flippy-doozers and ogling mansion-porn materialism. But in our current mass media extinction event, a Texas kid who spent his formative years living in a Vail laundry room has become an unlikely general in the battle for journalism's soul. His platoon is small and outgunned, but they have more spirit and better ideas. Frankly, they could win this thing.*I highly recommend Hutchins' Substack newsletter, Inside The News in Colorado:What we talked aboutSkiing as a Texas kid; the ‘90s ski bum; Vail 30 years ago; living in a laundry room; getting a chance at The Denver Post with no reporting experience; inventing the Colorado business ski beat; the great Charlie Meyers; the ‘90s heyday and slow implosion of mainstream American newsrooms; the nefarious impact of Alden Global Capital's gutting of local newspapers across America; leaving The Post to found The Colorado Sun; the Sun's journalist-led business model and whether it can be replicated elsewhere; why The Sun doesn't cover sports; the I-70 tipping point; pandemic relocators; Back-in-'92 Bro coming strong; Vail locals as the great liftline generators; the midweek business resort communities always wanted has arrived and no one was ready; the trap of basing long-term policy decisions on the anomaly of Covid; Colorado as short-term-rental laboratory; how ski towns created their own housing crisis; the new Mountain West, “where the locals live in hotels and the visitors stay in houses”; the housing scuffle between Vail Resorts and its namesake town; does an old Telluride lawsuit tell us how this ends?; the sheep defenders; the centuries-old problem of the company town; why developers give up and would rather build mansions than affordable housing; density is not the enemy; the elusive NIMBY; whether Vail's employee pay bump and lift ticket limits will be enough to prevent a repeat of the complaint-laden 2021-22 ski season; why the Epic Pass keeps losing independent partners; the most well-kept secret in skiing; why comparing Vail and Alterra's business models is so difficult; the inevitability of Alterra going public on the stock markets; perhaps the best reaction I've ever heard to Vail and Beaver Creek charging $275 for a one-day lift ticket; and why independent ski areas are thriving in the megapass era.                 Why I thought that now was a good time for this interviewAny time is a good time to talk to Blevins. He is wired on virtually any story impacting Colorado's ski industry: Vail's financial performance, leadership tumult at the National Ski Patrol, patroller unionization, Keystone's expansion oopsie. Incredibly, skiing is just part of his beat. His Sun author page is an eclectic menu of stories ranging from the drama upending crunchy thinktanks to novel collaborations between ranchers and the Bureau of land management to crises in Colorado trailer parks. But we didn't talk, explicitly, about any of these things. We focused, instead, on adding context to stories I've been covering in The Storm: multi-mountain passes, mountain-town housing, traffic, the evolution of media. We could have had a different conversation the next day, and an entirely different one the day after that. Blevins is the best kind of journalist: observant, curious, prolific, devoted, and unapologetically honest. And also extremely busy. I took more of his time than I deserved, but his candor and insight will be enormously valuable to my listeners.Questions I wish I'd askedYou could ask Blevins about any issue of consequence to hit the Colorado ski scene in the past 20 years and he would have a ready answer, so we could have gone just about anywhere with this interview. Our focus was the evolution of media in the digital age, I-70, housing, the megapass wars, Vail Resorts' operating adjustments ahead of next ski season, and the resilience of independent ski areas in this consolidation era. But I had backup questions prepared on the tumult roiling the National Ski Patrol, the proposed mega-development at tiny Kendall Mountain, the comeback of Cuchara, resort employee unionization, and much more. Next time.Why you should read The Colorado SunThere is a whole subset of journalists who write about journalism. This beat is surprisingly robust. If you want to keep up, I suggest subscribing to Nieman Lab's near-daily newsletter, which aggregates the day's best media coverage of itself.But even if you're not paying attention, you understand that journalism, like everything else, has gotten its ass kicked by the internet over the past 25 years or so. The world I grew up in is not the world we live in now. Newspapers, dropped daily on a doorstep and acting as a subscriber's primary source of information about the local community and outside world, no longer exist principally in that form or serve that function. They are one source of information in a universe of infinite information, most of it bad.Many people, it seems, have a hard time telling the good information from the bad. “The media” is a four-letter word in many circles, cast as an agenda-driven force puppet-mastered by diabolical unseen elites. Besides, why bother reading the work of trained journalists when you can find online groups who validate any kookball idea you have, from the notion that the planet is flat (surely these knuckleheads are trolling us), to the conviction that the government is pumping toxic chemicals into the atmosphere.Certainly there are ideologically driven news organizations. But “the media,” for the most part, is individual journalists – educated middle-class workers – seeking the truth through a methodical process of fact-finding. Unfortunately, as the world migrated online and the information gatekeepers lost power, traditional media business models collapsed, opening an enormous void that was quickly filled by every moron with a keyboard.Big, legacy media was slow to adapt. But it is adapting now. Journalists are finding a way. The Colorado Sun, like the Texas Tribune before it, has established a sustainable template for high-quality, community-supported journalism. They have no central office, no printing costs, minimal advertising. Every dollar they earn goes into reporting. Most of those dollars come from citizens grateful for the truth, who pay a monthly subscription even though The Sun has no paywall.It's an appealing alternative to the minimalist business model of Alden Global Capital and The Denver Post. And I think it will predominate long-term, as journalists migrate from low-morale dens of aggressive cost-cutting run by opaque hedgemasters to spirited corps of locals engaged with and invested in their communities. In 50 years, we may be looking back at The Colorado Sun as a pioneer of digital-age journalism, one that established a new template for what a local news organization could be.Podcast notes* Alden Global Capital's hilariously useless website.  * The Texas Tribune is considered the OG of modern public-service journalism, and it comes up throughout the podcast.* In our discussion on the current housing-development dispute between the town of Vail and Vail Resorts, Blevins referred to a recent column he had written comparing this situation to a similar situation in Telluride:When a deep-pocketed investor proposed luxury homes and a village on Telluride's pastoral valley floor in the late 1990s, the town moved to block development, citing damage to the region's rural character. Town voters approved a decision to condemn the 572 acres on the valley floor in 2002. The case eventually landed in the Colorado Supreme Court, which ruled that Telluride had the power to condemn that acreage outside its boundary.The valuation proved spicy. The town offered the developer $26 million. The developer wanted $51 million. He forced a jury trial to move to nearby Delta County where the jury in 2007 ordered Telluride to pay $50 million, which was twice what the town had set aside to protect the parcel. A massive fundraising effort followed and the valley floor remains a bucolic stretch of open space on the edge of downtown Telluride.In Telluride, the value boiled down to the developer arguing the “highest and best use” of the 572 acres, where he envisioned multimillion-dollar homes, shops and restaurants. At Vail, that could come down to whether the parcel could ever be used for high-end homes.“The Vail corporation will argue that the land should be valued for its higher and best use,” said Collins, who penned a legal paper analyzing the Telluride valley floor case. “Assuming the ski corporation wants to fight this, that will absolutely be their argument. Highest and best use. That's just good lawyering.”This, Blevins thinks, is where the Vail dispute is headed. Tens of millions in public money spent and no new housing built. For more insight like this, sign up for The Sun:The Storm publishes year-round, and guarantees 100 articles per year. This is article 104/100 in 2022, and number 350 since launching on Oct. 13, 2019. Want to send feedback? Reply to this email and I will answer (unless you sound insane, or, more likely, I just get busy). You can also email skiing@substack.com.The Storm explores the world of lift-served skiing all year round. Join us. Get full access to The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast at www.stormskiing.com/subscribe

The Katie Halper Show
Taboo Reporting With Robert Scheer, Laura Hazard Owen & Andrew Perez

The Katie Halper Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2022 33:28


***Please support The Katie Halper Show *** For bonus content, to support independent media & to help make this program possible, please join us on Patreon at: https://www.patreon.com/thekatiehalpershow Direct link to the full Patreon broadcast: https://www.patreon.com/posts/taboo-reporting-70631542 Legendary reporter Bob Scheer discusses a long career reporting on war all over the world; Laura Hazard Owens discusses how to report on abortion in a post-Roe world; Andrew Perez discusses fact checking the Washington Post Fact checker. Bob Scheer is the editor of Scheer Post. Scheer has written eight books, including two this decade: "The Great American Stickup: How Reagan Republicans and Clinton Democrats Enriched Wall Street while Mugging Main Street," and his newest book is "They Know Everything about You: How Data-Collecting Corporations and Snooping Government Agencies Are Destroying Democracy." He is a clinical professor of communications at the Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism at the University of Southern California. He has interviewed Jimmy Carter, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton and others. Between 1964 and 1969 he was Vietnam correspondent, managing editor and editor in chief of Ramparts magazine. Link to Bob's work: https://scheerpost.com/ Link to Bob's radio program: https://www.kcrw.com/culture/shows/scheer-intelligence Laura Hazard Owen is the editor of the Nieman Journalism Lab at Harvard University's Nieman Foundation. She writes a weekly column on fake news and misinformation research. She was previously the deputy editor of Nieman Lab. Before that, she was the managing editor of Gigaom and wrote about book publishing for seven years. Link to Laura's piece: https://www.niemanlab.org/2022/07/unimaginable-abortion-stories-will-become-more-common-is-american-journalism-ready/ Andrew Perez is senior editor and reporter at The Lever covering money and influence. Link to Andrew's piece: https://www.levernews.com/emails-raise-questions-about-washpost-fact-checker/ Follow Katie on Twitter: https://twitter.com/kthalps

CMQ Investing Presents: Compound Money Quietly
The Bubble of 2022: Why One Academic Believes Tech Stocks Have a Long Way to Fall

CMQ Investing Presents: Compound Money Quietly

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2022 17:15


Advances in technologies like blockchain and AI supposedly have the potential to fuel economic growth, creating billions of dollars of value for investors. But are these new technologies living up to the hype? I share and discuss the findings of a new article from Nieman Lab about why we could be living in an unproductive bubble.

NotiPod Hoy
Analizan las tendencias de vender o financiar un pódcast con anuncios

NotiPod Hoy

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2022 7:49


Lo esencial que debes saber: • Se complican las negociaciones para las empresas que están comprando pódcast exclusivos. • Amazon y Spotify están considerando adquirir Audioboom. • Según IAB el 76 % de las personas en Brasil saben lo que son los pódcast. • Nieman Lab analiza cómo Joe Rogan se convirtió en un podcaster exitoso. • Los pódcast ya no son conversaciones privadas. • ¿Cómo Squarespace supo que los pódcast iban a crecer? • Más podcasters enfrentan problemas. • Retina: el nuevo medio transversal de Prisa. • Según el medio IP Mark los constantes cambios en los hábitos de consumo de contenido han hecho que grandes empresas recurran al audio a la hora de lanzar al mercado un producto o servicio.
 Tips de podcasting • La Asociación Pódcast de España entrevista a Jesús Pérez, productor del pódcast “Comunicar más que hablar”. • Iván Patxi ofrece consejos para crear un pódcast de misterio y terror. • Oscar « Tito» López, consultor y coach de talentos, ofrece 9 consejos para darle más presencia a tu voz. 
 Pódcast recomendado El Camino Mozárabe. Un nuevo programa con narraciones sonoras de «El Camino hasta Santiago de Compostela'. La «Diputación Cordobesa» produjo los capítulos de un minuto y pico de duración. Los catorce cascos urbanos del itinerario hasta Santiago de Compostela han sido transformados en archivos sonoros que dan a conocer sus contextos históricos y culturales.

NotiPod Hoy
Popular plataforma de blogging quiere añadir audio

NotiPod Hoy

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 6:09


Lo esencial que debes saber: • Medium está probando audio en su plataforma. • Spotify enfrenta un problema ideológico que ha generado muchas preguntas. • Revelan guerra soterrada entre estrellas del ‘podcast' en España. • Ejecutivos de la NPR reprenden al ‘NY Times' por fallos éticos en el pódcast ‘Caliphate'. • MediaRadar dice que el gasto publicitario en pódcast creció un 21 % en 2021. • Nieman Lab analiza cómo algunos medios usan Twitter Spaces. Pódcast recomendado Tumble en Español . ¿Te has preguntado por qué hacemos caca? ¿O qué pasaría si la Luna desapareciera? Tumble en Español es una versión de Tumble, el pódcast para toda la familia sobre descubrimientos científicos. Nuria y Alvaro usan preguntas de niños como punto de partida en este viaje por la curiosidad.  La creación y distribución de esta newsletter y pódcast tomaron al equipo de Via Podcast 8 horas. Si te sirvió de ayuda y te gustó compártela a un amig@.

Breitband - Medien und digitale Kultur - Deutschlandfunk Kultur

Eckert, Stinewww.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, BreitbandDirekter Link zur Audiodatei

Podcast Wisnu Prasetya
Eps 61 - Prediksi Jurnalisme 2022

Podcast Wisnu Prasetya

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2021 21:47


Membahas beberapa prediksi jurnalis dan para peneliti media tentang isu dan tren jurnalisme di tahun 2022 yang dirangkum oleh Nieman Lab

MRCTV's Podcast -Public Service Announcement
Episode 197: NewsBusters Podcast: Harvard Hates Objective Journalism

MRCTV's Podcast -Public Service Announcement

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2021 39:28


Harvard's Nieman Lab looked ahead to the "news" business in 2022 and promoted an end to objectivity as a journalism ideal. "Solidarity for social justice" is the new fad, but solidarity with whom? The "marginalized" get a major boost, and if you're not "marginalized," you're going to get lectured about your advantages. They think the media's job is to create "transformational change" for the Left. 

Ink Stained Wretches
Study: The Future is Not Female

Ink Stained Wretches

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2021 50:39


Plus, MSNBC grapples with big changes, the New York Times gives us chef's kiss climate summit coverage, and we dig into how the media beclowned itself with the Steele dossier Times 02:28 - Segment: Front Page 02:38 - The future of MSNBC 09:51 - Nieman Lab study on the gender distribution of bylines 12:16 - The New York Times on women running the climate change movement 15:23 - FBI raids Project Veritas's office, related to Ashley Biden diary investigation 20:49 - President Biden's awkward interview with a local news anchor 24:34 - President Biden's pick for the FCC: Gigi Sohn 27:40 - Spending package includes $1.6 billion tax credit to news outlets 29:14 - The Virginia election and the Lincoln Project stunt 35:40 - Segment: Obsessions 36:50 - Coverage of the Ahmaud Arbery trial versus the Kyle Rittenhouse trial (Chris) 40:34 - Indictment of a Steele Dossier analyst, and fawning Steele coverage circa 2018 (Eliana) 47:40 - Segment: Favorite Item of the Week 47:52 - Kevin William's National Review piece on Texas (Chris) 48:44 - The Miami Herald hires a bot writer for real estate beat (Eliana) Links Our very own Eliana Johnson's article on Rachel Maddow circa 2014 The New York Times article on young women leading the movement against climate change The National Review article on Texas The New York Post article on the Miami Herald hiring bot writers

Our Hometown News
News Brief - Apple Reduces Revenue Share for News Partners

Our Hometown News

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2021 1:26


Here at Out Hometown, we try to stay on top of the latest developments when it comes to online newspaper publishing. In this News Brief, we're highlighting a piece by Joshua Benton over at Nieman Lab about upcoming changes to Apple's News Partner Program. The article, "Apple now wants to be your “News Partner” (meaning they'll let you keep more of your readers' cash if you join Apple News)," discusses the ways that Apple is updating it's program to provide better revenue sharing to their news partners.  Here are a few of our big takeaways: Small publishers (those making less...Article LinkLet us know your thoughts about this episode by reaching out on Social Media!Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ourhometownincInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/ourhometownwebpublishing/Twitter: https://twitter.com/ourhometownincLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/our-hometown-com/..........Our Hometown Web Publishing is The Last Newspaper CMS & Website You'll Ever Need.  We help you generate revenue, engage with readers, and increase efficiency with Our Hometown's Digital & PrePress CMS features to fit your needs & budget.OHT's Web Publishing Platform is:-Powered with WordPress-Hosted on Amazon Web Services-Integrated with Adobe InDesign & Google Drivehttps://our-hometown.comSubscribe to our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKw6KpKUiQkWldrX2-J1Kag?view_as=subscriberOur-Hometown can be reached via email for comments or questions at: ops@Our-Hometown.com

Josh on Narro
Email Fwd:

Josh on Narro

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2021 17:29


I.Last week, a partnerships manager at Medium working with the White House found that there was a strange problem with the platform: President Joe Bid... a blog postthe time he got blackmailed2019 history of the company by Laura Hazard Owen in Nieman Labhad once been a neo-Naziethics disclosure about Substackmembers began organizinglaid off its entire staffa take on Snapchat storiesa refreshed newsletter platforman e-book publisherIn his prepared testimony, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg calls for tweaks to Section 230Google CEO Sundar Pichai, by contrast, expresses concerns about Section 230 reform effortsTwitter CEO Jack Dorsey: he plans to talk about the “trust deficit” users have with platformscasey@platformer.news

NotiPod Hoy
¿Qué tan eficaces son los pre-rolls publicitarios de audio?

NotiPod Hoy

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2021 11:17


Lo más reciente en la newsletter de @ViaPodcast:  ✅ ¿Qué tan eficaces son los pre-rolls publicitarios de audio en pódcast? ✅ Clubhouse lanza un programa acelerador para ofrecer apoyo financiero y experiencia a 20 creadores de contenido. ✅ Ana Alonso de Blas estará lidereando SER Podcast.  ¡El podcasting está cambiando cada minuto! Todos los días revisamos docenas de sitios y te resumimos lo más importante sobre las tendencias, recursos y herramientas del podcasting. ¡https://viapodcast.fm/suscribete/ (Subscríbete) a la “newsletter” de Via Podcast y recibe diariamente las 7 notas más importantes del día y prepárate para lo que viene! ➽ Headliner ofrece seis nuevas plantillas de audiograma. ➽ La empresa de alojamiento de podcasts Transistor, ahora ofrece un servicio gratis de música para la introducción de un pódcast. ➽ The podcast Host también ofrece una biblioteca de música gratuita para podcasts. ➽ Epidemic Sound recaudó 450 millones de dólares en nuevos fondos. ➽ Abren la convocatoria para el Laboratorio de Historias Poderosas en Colombia, para quienes quieran contar historias subrepresentadas sobre el acceso a derechos sexuales y reproductivos en zonas rurales y periféricas del país. ➽ CubaPod, la plataforma cubana de podcasting, celebra su primer aniversario con nueva identidad visual y próximos retos. ➽ Nieman Lab dedicó un artículo a hablar de La Brega, un pódcast totalmente bilingüe, sin voz en off, para explicar cómo un pódcast centra la experiencia puertorriqueña. ➽ Twitter se está reinventando. ➽ “Los podcasts están explorando los límites de la comunicación oral” afirma Carlos A. Scolar.  Crear un pódcast es fácil, lograr que te escuchen es un reto. Nosotros te ayudamos a potenciar tu pódcast. Cada semana publicamos un webinar, tutorial o clase magistral. ¡Únete a la http://academiadepodcasting.com/ (Academia de Podcasting) y aprende de profesionales! 

Een Podcast over Media
S06E10 - De Vriend van de Show-show

Een Podcast over Media

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2021 44:43


Hoe lees je veel boeken? Wanneer had Alexander het gevoel dat dit het juiste moment was om uit Blendle te stappen? En wordt er wel genoeg over kunst gepraat in de media? Zomaar een greep uit de prangende vragen waar Alexander en Ernst-Jan eerlijk antwoord op geven tijdens het online vriendenevenement van vrijdag 19 februari. Je had er natuurlijk bij moeten zijn, maar dit is bijna net zo leuk.

A Thing or Two with Claire and Erica
Phil Chang’s Wild—and Hugely Informative—IG and Vacuums that Don’t Suck

A Thing or Two with Claire and Erica

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2020 49:50


We’ve got some real dirt today—or, rather, we have ways to clean it up (including a stick vac that’s maybe falling out of favor?) and a guest who’s dishing it on his Stories, which we consider must-see IG. Tune in and then hit up @heyphilchang to see what we mean...   The linkage:   You can find our show notes over at claireanderica.com now. Look at us.   Our robot vacuum endorsements: Neato XV-21 Pet & Allergy Automatic Vacuum Cleaner and iRobot Roomba 960. A somewhat controversial hand vac rec: Black & Decker Pivot Vac. Everybody’s favorite, the Dyson Stick Vac—Claire has the V10, and Erica has the V8—but, wait, should Consumer Reports have us reconsidering? Cam is a Miele fan and will someday be the proud owner of this toy one. Should his brand loyalty change, he could also get a Dyson. Follow Phil Chang’s WILD Instagram. It’s all about his Stories. Further reading from the L.A. Times on Tommy Le, an unarmed Vietnamese-American 20 year old who was shot and killed by a Seattle police officer. To get all that news, Phil uses the RSS reader Feedly and follows ProPublica, FAIR, Southern Poverty Law Center, Nieman Lab, The Intercept, and The Guardian. Also, podcasts! Phil heartily endorses Deconstructed with Mehdi Hasan, America Dissected with Abdul El-Sayed, Why Is This Happening? with Chris Hayes, The Guardian’s Audio Long Reads, and Stay Tuned with Preet. Do a deep-dive into Sharon Choi, Parasite director Bong Joon-ho’s translator, starting with this Guardian article. And for more on female translators in general, check out this episode of Call Your Girlfriend. A book that will have you wanting to book the next flight to Seoul: The Birth of Korean Cool. Get a whole $50 off some cool Noemie fine jewelry with the code ATHINGORTWO. Try BetterHelp online counseling—use ATHINGORTWO for 10% off your first month. YAY.   Produced by Dear Media

t cetveli
1 - Doğrulama organizasyonları için 2019 nasıl geçti? 2020'de neler beklemeli?

t cetveli

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2020 45:00


Teyit'in hazırladığı t cetveli'nin birinci bölümünde gazetecilik, yeni medya ve haber doğrulama organizasyonları açısından 2019 nasıl geçti, 2020'de neler beklemeliyiz konusunu ele aldık. Mehmet Atakan Foça, Gülin Çavuş ve Emre İlkan Saklıca'nın hazırladığı t cetveli Nieman Lab'ın 2020 öngörülerinden yola çıkarak hem yılın muhasebesini yapıyor, hem de yeni yıla ilişkin tahminlerini sıralıyor.Bölümde sözü geçen içerikler:Nieman Lab 2020 tahminleri - https://www.niemanlab.org/collection/predictions-2020/Linda Solomon - Everyone in your organization, moving toward a common goal - https://www.niemanlab.org/2019/12/everyone-in-your-organization-moving-toward-a-common-goal/Joe Amditis - Collaborative journalism takes its rightful place at the table -https://www.niemanlab.org/2019/12/collaborative-journalism-takes-its-rightful-place-at-the-table/Craig Newmark - Formalizing newsrooms' battle against disinformation -https://www.niemanlab.org/2019/12/formalizing-newsrooms-battle-against-disinformation/Reuters Institute - Digital news report - http://www.digitalnewsreport.org/---------------------www.teyit.orgdestek.teyit.org

NotiPod Hoy
Nielsen lanza servicio para ayudar a la venta de anuncios en podcasts

NotiPod Hoy

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2019 11:02


En NotiPod Hoy La plataforma ‘Podcast Listener Buying Power Service’ ofrecerá datos del comportamiento del consumidor, incluyendo datos sobre sus compras locales, los productos que compran, su estilo de vida y sus medios de comunicación favoritos. Según una investigación de Voxnest los comportamientos de escucha difieren significativamente según la categoría del programa. Conoce las mejores horas y las categorías más escuchadas en Estados Unidos y Europa. La mayoría de los propietarios de altavoces inteligentes escuchan podcasts en el dispositivo. Pew Research Center publica una hoja con datos interesantes sobre la audiencia de radio y podcasts. Según Vivid Seats, una de las empresas de venta de boletos más grandes de Estados Unidos, el número de eventos relacionados con podcasts ha aumentado en más del 2000% en los últimos 6 años. iHeartMedia ha lanzado, de forma silenciosa, una segunda estación de radio en Albuquerque, Nuevo México, que transmite podcasts. Nieman Lab analiza lo que ha pasado en el mundo del podcasting en los primeros 6 meses del año. Veritonic ha lanzado Veritonic Audio Score que puede ayudar a los profesionales de marketing a valorar la efectividad de sus anuncios de audio, voces en off, música, scripts, etc. Backtracks, el reproductor de audio y podcast, ahora funciona con Apple AirPlay. Google estaría planeando añadir un botón multimedia a Chrome para facilitar el control de música, podcasts y videos. Podcast recomendado: ¿De qué tiene hambre tu vida? Es un podcast de salud en el que Ana Arizmendi, especialista en Psicología de la Alimentación, ayuda a los oyentes a comprender qué hay detrás de sus conductas compulsivas relacionadas con la comida. Además ofrece herramientas, recursos y reflexiones para que puedas transformar tu relación con la comida. Más detalles y otros episodios y contenidos sobre Podcasting en ViaPodcast.FM

Freelance Pod
Delia Cai's Deez Links is a Snapchat streak that grew up to be a newsletter

Freelance Pod

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2019 34:28


Deez Links is "a dailyish link to cool shit happening in & around the media industry." Each day, Delia Cai - also Growth & Trends Editor at Buzzfeed - sends out one link. Just one link. She really sells it, in the way you'd want a particularly well-informed and fun friend to sell it to you. It's working out for her - Deez Links turned three in February, and was recently voted fourth most popular media newsletter, after Nieman Lab, Axios and American Press Institute.  Delia guests on the podcast to talk about how she wanted to take the quick wit of a Snapchat streak and turn that into a newsletter; how extra her third birthday celebrations for Deez Links were, but the community she built loved meeting in IRL, so actually, it was just enough; and the joy of having a passion project. Here's my take on how an enjoyable side project can rev up your creativity. -- How has your industry moved from analogue to digital? Each episode, creative guests tell host Suchandrika Chakrabarti how the internet has revolutionised work. Newsletter: https://tinyletter.com/freelancepod Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/freelancepod/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/freelance_pod_ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/FreelancePod/ YouTube: https://goo.gl/chfccD

Miscellany Media Reviews
Episode 53: Podcast Saga Part 6 - Missteps on the Road to...

Miscellany Media Reviews

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2019 29:30


Luminary had a troubled launch, but I think a part of it is that no one fully knows what's going on. And no, I'm not just talking about the lack of communication between Luminary and the podcast world. Luminary unintentionally stepped on landmines of podcasting norms that need to be fleshed out. Maybe the concept can be salvaged. Maybe not, but until we understand what went wrong and what went right, I don't think we can make the judgment call.Sources:1. Barnes, Brooks. “With Big Stars and Paid Subscriptions, Luminary Aims to Be the Netflix of Podcasts.” The New York Times, The New York Times, 4 Mar. 2019, www.nytimes.com/2019/03/03/business/media/luminary-media-podcast-app.html. 2. a.“Luminary, Launch, and Licensing.” Hot Pod News, hotpodnews.com/luminary-launch-and-licensing/.b. Quan, Nicholas. “Luminary's Rough Launch Continues as Another High-Profile Podcast Asks to Be Removed from Its App.” Nieman Lab, 24 Apr. 2019, www.niemanlab.org/2019/04/luminarys-rough-launch-continues-as-another-high-profile-podcast-asks-to-be-removed-from-its-app/.c. Olson, Mathew. “$100 Million Podcast Startup Luminary's Botched Launch Is Nothing New.” $100 Million Podcast Startup Luminary's Botched Launch Is Nothing New, digg.com/2019/luminary-podcast-launch-mistakes. d. Benton, Joshua. “L'affaire Luminary Continues with More Podcasts Dropping out and Allegations of Technical Bad Behavior.” Nieman Lab, 25 Apr. 2019, www.niemanlab.org/2019/04/laffaire-luminary-continues-with-more-podcasts-dropping-out-and-allegations-of-technical-bad-behavior/. 3. Crampton, Caroline. “Making Money: Part One.” Hot Pod News, 9 Apr. 2019, hotpodnews.com/making-money-part-one/. 4. Crampton, Caroline. “Luminary Cleans up the Show Notes Links Situation.” Hot Pod News, 7 May 2019, hotpodnews.com/luminary-cleans-up-the-show-notes-links-situation/. [This wasn't the original source 4, but I elected for this one because it also provides Luminary's explanation for the name thing I keep complaining about. I'm not satisfied with their response given what my situation was, but I think it's something I still should present to you all.]----Transcript available on our website: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcriptsMusic for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.comTwitter: @MiscellanyMediaTumblr: miscellanymedia----Support the caffeine addiction this podcast saga is giving me: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios----And check out The Oracle of Dusk wherever you are listening to this podcast

NotiPod Hoy
Los podcasts se consolidan como estrategia de marketing

NotiPod Hoy

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2019 5:28


En NotiPod Hoy ☑️ Según el portal Puro Marketing ya no hace falta explicar qué es un podcast  porque el 70% de las personas mayores de 12 años ya conocen  el término. ☑️ Spotify demanda a Apple, ante la Comisión Europea, por competencia desleal argumentando que Apple limita su crecimiento debido a las reglas y a la comisión que cobra a los servicios digitales. ☑️ Tim Sabean, vicepresidente senior de Contenido Digital de Westwood One, ha asegurado que se necesitan tres cosas para lograr anuncios de podcasts exitosos: ser transparente, real y directo. ☑️ Luminary lanzará una suscripción premium con más de 40 podcasts exclusivos, sin publicidad, por 7.99 dólares al mes. ☑️ La radio por Internet de iHeartMedia ha lanzado “The iHeartPodcast Channel”, el cual se reproducirá en AM 1470 en Allentown y donde los usuarios podrán disfrutar de un podcast tras otro, casi todos de una hora de duración. ☑️ El portal Bello Collective publica una entrevista donde muestra el detrás de las escenas del exitoso podcast de true-crime Bear Brook. ☑️ ¿Cuánto vale tu podcast? Conoce  cómo se puede determinar el valor de un podcast-. ☑️ Después de haber publicado un artículo sobre el posible agotamiento de los podcasts, en Hot Pod News han recibido varias respuestas sobre el tema y las han compartido en un nuevo artículo. ☑️ Nieman Lab asegura que la industria de los podcasts está saliendo de su adolescencia y se está enfrentando a una nueva lucha por su identidad. ☑️ Descubre el The Hot New Hotel Amenity, un hotel que se ha convertido en un estudio de podcast.

Afternoons with Rob Breakenridge
Momo Challenge Hoax

Afternoons with Rob Breakenridge

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2019 11:07


Parents are concerned about the Momo Challenge, a creepy doll roumoured to pop up in videos and give instructions to kids to hide or injure themselves. Is this really bigger than what is being made of it and is it a hoax? Laura Hazard owen, deputy editor of The Nieman Lab at Harvard University joins the show.

In Between Europe
#19 What Future for the Media in Central Europe?

In Between Europe

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2019 41:52


  We’re back! Here with us today is Marius Dragomir, the director of the Center for Media, Data, and Society at Central European University (CEU) and we discuss the crisis-ridden media environment in the region. Despite the doom and gloom around the failure of the old business model and increasing political control, there are some good examples emerging that provide reason for optimism.  History minute: Media Pluralism in an Authoritarian Regime  Resources: Media Influence Matrix, Center for Media, Data, and Society, CEU, 2019 Control the money, control the media: How the government uses funding to keep media in line, Marius Dragomir, Journalism, Vol. 19, Issue 8, 2018 The Free Press Under Threat in Central Europe, Lenka Kabrhelova, Nieman Lab for Journalism, 27 February 2019 Media in Central Europe: From independent observer to political tool and the new enemy, Zselyke Csaky, Visegrad Insight, December 2017   Subscribe via RSS feed. Subscribe via iTunes.

Tricky
Print Is Dead! Long Live Print!

Tricky

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2019 38:02


BuzzFeed, Vice and other leaders in digital media have laid off over 2,000 people so far this year. It seems that nobody can bring in enough revenue from digital advertising to fuel free news online. Meanwhile, printed newspapers continue to lose subscribers. The good news, says University of Texas at Austin associate professor Iris Chyi, is that loyal subscribers are willing to pay more for less— even while newspapers feed their own "death spiral" by cutting newsrooms, hiking prices, and bemoaning their own demise. Nieman Lab director Joshua Benton joins in to discuss and disagree about what the numbers tell us about newspapers' past, and to pitch a future for print. 

Journalists Are My Heroes
3 Sins for National Media to Avoid in 2019 | Nikki Usher

Journalists Are My Heroes

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2019 32:13


Nikki Usher, associate professor of journalism at George Washington University and the University of Illinois, joins JAMH to share some of what she's learned from years of interviewing journalists and studying their industry. She also discusses the "three sins" that she fears national media will continue to commit in 2019, based on her recent article for Nieman Lab. We talk about: the different frustrations audiences have with national versus local media; "horse race" coverage of political campaigns; journalists making the mistake of making the story about themselves; the fallacy that facts alone can change people's minds; the fact-checking trend in journalism; "day-to-day systemic outrage" in modern journalism; "the objectivity police" and "the view from nowhere"; objectivity as a method versus a philosophy; what happens when journalists legitimize fringe groups; how coverage of mass shootings has changed for the better; how journalists should approach 2020 campaign coverage; the need for more diversity in newsrooms; the "place-based realignment" in journalism; and how digital scale is shifting power in media away from local newsrooms. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/journalistsaremyheroes/support

ZigZag
The Civil Token Sale is Live

ZigZag

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2018 23:51


Manoush and Jen explain the latest news on Civil’s token sale. They also admit why they're a little uneasy about some recent press coverage of their endeavors, and try to make sense of one man’s failed attempt at #MeToo redemption. Who you’ll hear: Manoush and Jen (@manoushz) (@jpoyant) A PROGRAMMING NOTE: Season Two officially kicks off on Oct 11, 2018. Never heard the show? Start with Season One here. GO DEEPER: Clarifications on where the money from the sale goes and how the process of buying CVL will get easier. The New York Times features ZigZag. PBS Newshour has a Civil explainer and Coinbase interviews Manoush about her hopes for journalism. An honest assessment of the current process for buying CVL from Nieman Lab. Are the days of explosive crypto growth over? #MeToo must-reads from Jia Tolentino at the New Yorker and Mike Pesca at Slate. Listener donations help keep this podcast going. CREDITS: David Herman, Audio Engineer and Composer Tory Williams, Photography ZigZag comes from Stable Genius Productions, in partnership with Civil. We are proud members of Radiotopia, from PRX. ZigZag is the business show about being human. Join a community of listeners riding the twists and turns of late-capitalism, searching for a kinder, more sustainable way. Manoush Zomorodi and Jen Poyant investigate how work and business impact our wellbeing and the planet we live on. On Seasons 4 and 5, hear from rebels and visionaries with radical ideas on how we can build stable lives, careers, and companies. **If you’re also interested in Jen and Manoush’s personal story and their adventures in starting their own business with a little help from blockchain technology, listen to the first three seasons, starting with Season 1, Chapter 1.

ZigZag
The Civil Token Sale is Live

ZigZag

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2018 23:51


Manoush and Jen explain the latest news on Civil’s token sale. They also admit why they're a little uneasy about some recent press coverage of their endeavors, and try to make sense of one man’s failed attempt at #MeToo redemption. Who you’ll hear: Manoush and Jen (@manoushz) (@jpoyant) A PROGRAMMING NOTE: Season Two officially kicks off on Oct 11, 2018. Never heard the show? Start with Season One here. GO DEEPER: Clarifications on where the money from the sale goes and how the process of buying CVL will get easier. The New York Times features ZigZag. PBS Newshour has a Civil explainer and Coinbase interviews Manoush about her hopes for journalism. An honest assessment of the current process for buying CVL from Nieman Lab. Are the days of explosive crypto growth over? #MeToo must-reads from Jia Tolentino at the New Yorker and Mike Pesca at Slate. Listener donations help keep this podcast going. CREDITS: David Herman, Audio Engineer and Composer Tory Williams, Photography ZigZag comes from Stable Genius Productions, in partnership with Civil. We are proud members of Radiotopia, from PRX. ZigZag is the business show about being human. Join a community of listeners riding the twists and turns of late-capitalism, searching for a kinder, more sustainable way. Manoush Zomorodi and Jen Poyant investigate how work and business impact our wellbeing and the planet we live on. On Seasons 4 and 5, hear from rebels and visionaries with radical ideas on how we can build stable lives, careers, and companies. **If you’re also interested in Jen and Manoush’s personal story and their adventures in starting their own business with a little help from blockchain technology, listen to the first three seasons, starting with Season 1, Chapter 1.

Mike Kane Cast
Episode 26 - Sam Ford: Wrestling and Academia Work Together

Mike Kane Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2018 49:21


NEW MIKE KANE CAST - iTunes|Android|Spotify In this special episode, I got the privilege of talking with Sam Ford, Director of Cultural Intelligence at Simon & Schuster. Sam's range of expertise is incredible, and includes a few shared passions: Intellectual life, Kentucky, and, of course, professional wrestling. Sam shares his small-town roots and early love of the USWA out of Memphis, and shows how he has combined that love of pro wrestling with a deep knowledge of comparative media to become an expert who remains a fan! If you've ever turned on a TV set, this episode will inform and entertain you! (From samford.wordpress.com) Sam Ford is Director of Cultural Intelligence for Simon & Schuster, a CBS company. In addition, he is leading various initiatives of the Future of Work in Kentucky with the MIT Open Documentary Lab, the University of Southern California Annenberg School’s Civic Paths team, and other partners, and is a member of the Kentucky team taking part in the MIT Regional Entrepreneurship Acceleration Program (REAP), the first U.S. region to ever be accepted to the program. As a Knight News Innovation Fellow with Columbia University’s Tow Center for Digital Journalism, he is co-leading the Community Stories Lab with Dr. Andrea Wenzel–work which received the inaugural Research Prize for Professional Relevance from the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC) in 2018. Sam also serves as a research affiliate with MIT’s Program in Comparative Media Studies/Writing and as an instructor in Western Kentucky University’s Popular Culture Studies Program. He is also co-founder of the Artisanal Economies Project. With Henry Jenkins and Joshua Green, Sam co-authored the 2013 NYU Press book Spreadable Media: Creating Value and Meaning in a Networked Culture, which was released in paperback in Spring 2018. The book has also been translated into Spanish, Portuguese, Chinese, Korean, Italian, Swedish, and Polish. It was named one of Strategy+Business’ 2013 Best Business Books and voted as a “Top 10 Best Marketing Book You Read This Summer” by the readers of Advertising Age. He is also co-editor, with Abigail De Kosnik and C. Lee Harrington, of the 2011 book The Survival of Soap Opera: Transformations for a New Media Era as well. He frequently publishes academic work on media fandom, transmedia storytelling, professional wrestling, soap operas, the marketing and communications world, and a range of other subjects.  In 2015, Sam launched and ran the Center for Innovation & Engagement at Univision’s Fusion Media Group (as FMG’s VP, Innovation & Engagement), which he ran through the end of 2016. In that role, he helped manage relationships with a range of academic, industry, nonprofit organizations, and other key communities that are focused on innovation and experimentation in storytelling or new ways of building deeper relationships with key audiences and communities. He also collaborated with teams throughout the portfolio company to foster, build, and scale new approaches to storytelling and audience engagement. The Center was the subject of a Harvard Nieman Lab feature, and projects the Center played a key role in designing were honored with a Shorty Social Good Award and a Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award. Before joining Univision/Fusion Media Group, Sam worked for strategic communications and marketing firm Peppercomm from 2007-2015, where he was named both 2014 Digital Communicator of the Year and a 2014 Social Media MVP by PR News, as well as 2011 Social Media Innovator of the Year by Bulldog Reporter. During that time, Sam served as both a member of the Board of Directors of the Word of Mouth Marketing Association and as co-chair of their Ethics Committee. From 2005-2008, Sam was co-founder and later research manager of the MIT Convergence Culture Consortium. He also acted as co-organizer of the MIT Futures of Entertainment conference series from 2006-2012. Sam has been a contributor to Harvard Business Review, Fast Company, and Inc. He has also written for Wall Street Journal, Boston Globe, BusinessWeek, Advertising Age, The Huffington Post, The Christian Science Monitor, Harvard’s Nieman Lab, Knowledge@Wharton, Columbia Journalism Review, Poynter, Tribeca, Portfolio, Chief Marketer, CMO.com, PRWeek, PR News, The Public Relations Strategist, Communication World, O’Dwyer PR, Firm Voice, PropertyCasualty360, Global HR News, TABB Forum, SLAM! Sports, and various other publications. He began his career as a reporter and columnist for various Kentucky newspapers and, in 2006, won a Kentucky Press Association award for Best Feature. Sam has appeared in documentaries Soap Life, Who Shot the Daytime Soap?, and VICE’s Lil Bub and Friendz and has been quoted in/on, or had his work cited by, a wide range of publications/shows, including The New York Times, The New York Times Magazine, The Financial Times, The Los Angeles Times, Mashable, CNN, APM Marketplace, BBC World Service, PRI’s TheWorld, CNBC, The Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Quartz, Fortune, Forbes, Investor’s Business Daily, CIO, Hollywood Reporter, Les Inrocks, Asahi Shimbun, Nikkei, DePers, Harvard’s Nieman Lab, American Press Institute, Knowledge@Wharton, The Washington Times, HLN, Venture Beat, AdWeek, MediaShift, ESPN: The Magazine, Télérama, Mental Floss, Boing Boing, Slashdot, Buzzfeed, Metro, Reader’s Digest, CableFAX, Soap Opera Weekly, The San Jose Mercury-News, and MIT Slice of Life…and most proudly as trivia on Jeopardy! and NPR’s Ask Me Another, as well as The New York Times crossword. In addition to being a featured speaker at South by Southwest on several occasions, Sam has spoken or moderated at a wide range of in-person and virtual events, including National Association of Television Programming Executives (NATPE), Social Media Week NYC, Future of Storytelling, Front End of Innovation, Back End of Innovation, Media Insights & Engagement Conference, Planning-ness, Annual Insurance Executives Conference, Media Days Munich, NeoTVLab in Argentina, Cartagena Inspira in Colombia, Consumer Culture Theory conference, Console-ing Passions, Flow, and Social Media for Utilities, as well as events for MIT, the University of Southern California, Brown University, UC-Berkeley, Northeastern University, Aberystwyth University in Wales, Western Kentucky University, ESOMAR, the Public Relations Society of America, CTAM, the Advertising Research Foundation, the Association of Cable Communicators, the Word of Mouth Marketing Association, PR News, CableFAX, the Popular Culture Association, the Society for Cinema and Media Studies, the Association for Corporate Growth, the Luxury Marketing Council, the American Association of University Presses, the Association of Management Consulting Firms, the International Association of Business Communicators, the Association of National Advertisers, MarketingProfs, the Kentucky Press Association, the Kentucky Travel Industry Association, the Corporate Communication Leaders Forum, Donate Life America, Social Media Today, and a range of other forums. Sam received his Master’s degree from MIT’s Program in Comparative Media Studies/Writing and a Bachelor’s degree from Western Kentucky University as part of the Honors Program, where he majored in news/editorial journalism, communication studies, mass communication, and English, with a minor in film studies. Currently, he serves as a member of the inaugural MIT Graduate Alumni Council. He is also past chair of WKU’s Department of Communication Advisory Council and a member of  WKU’s Popular Culture Studies Program Curriculum Committee and the WKU Department of Communication Ad Hoc Curriculum Committee. Previously, he served as a member of WKU’s Young Alumni Council and WKU’s Advertising+Public Relations Professional Advisory Committee. Sam is also on the editorial board of USC’s Case Studies in Strategic Communication, the Organization for Transformative Works’ Transformative Works and Cultures, and Soundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal. He lives between New York City and Bowling Green, Ky., with wife Amanda and daughters Emma and Harper.

america tv director university social media new york city english master education work sports future new york times society spring chinese innovation planning board spanish mit italian south bachelor forbes storytelling fortune meaning harvard argentina kentucky cnn cbs southern california investors colombia wrestling survival npr cinema journalism korean wales vice swedish columbia university huffington post usc national association future of work cmo polish cnbc southwest academia jeopardy metro case study buzzfeed portuguese reader cultures passions ky fast company uc berkeley financial times cio los angeles times harvard business review slam brown university american association intellectual boston globe international association digest console work together northeastern university hollywood reporter businessweek utilities bowling green quartz mashable univision media studies adweek tribeca backend strategic communications frontend washington times bbc world service simon schuster nikkei christian science monitor hln venturebeat samford business daily western kentucky university mental floss best business books cultural intelligence ethics committee columbia journalism review advertising age wku robert f honors program boing boing san jose mercury news pr week australian broadcasting corporation social media today poynter nyu press public relations society best feature marketingprofs espn the magazine digital journalism strategy business aberystwyth university fmg uswa corporate growth pr news friendz joshua green national advertisers business communicators slashdot lil bub tow center lee harrington les inrocks asahi shimbun chief marketer knowledge wharton nieman lab advertising research foundation esomar american press institute peppercomm southern california annenberg school cablefax mouth marketing association popular culture association soap opera weekly communication world mit open documentary lab abigail de kosnik fusion media group comparative media studies writing
ZigZag
Chapter 8: Putting Crypto Pioneers to the Test

ZigZag

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2018 29:56


It’s true. ZigZag listeners agree that registering to buy CVL tokens is a pain in the ass. And yet, many still plan to join Civil’s experimental social network for journalism. On this episode, listeners ask tough question and explain why they’re undeterred by the platform’s growing pains. Also, Manoush and Jen gather the “First-Fleet” of Civil journalists to discuss problems with employers and business-models past (DNAInfo, The Denver Post, the New York Daily News)...and how they plan to make sure local and investigative journalism have a future, tokens or no tokens. GO DEEPER: The story of Munchee explains much of Civil’s caution around its token sale. Nieman Lab thinks it’s funny that Manoush failed the crypto quiz. Kara Swisher’s conversation with Mark Zuckerberg about platforms, information, and power. Ex-Politico reporter Azi Paybarah, Professor Christina Greer, and the Daily Beast’s Harry Siegel explain how their upcoming podcast, FAQ NYC, will fill a gap in local news. The debate over journalism and paywalls. For now, everything on the first-fleet sites Popula, Sludge, Block Club Chicago, Cannabis Wire, and Documented is free. Sign up for ZigZag’s newsletter for our weekly pick of thought-provoking articles and podcasts. Who you’ll hear: Manoush (@manoushZ) Jen (@jpoyant) Matthew Iles (@matthewiles) Maria Bustillos Founder of Popula (@mariabustillos) Stephanie Lulay Block Club Chicago (@slulay2) Eric Lubbers The Colorado Sun (@brofax) Harry Siegle FAQNYC (@harrysiegel) Support our work at https://zigzagpod.com/donate/ — Produced by Stable Genius Productions Follow ZigZag on Instagram and Twitter: @ZigZagpod ZigZag is the business show about being human. Join a community of listeners riding the twists and turns of late-capitalism, searching for a kinder, more sustainable way. Manoush Zomorodi and Jen Poyant investigate how work and business impact our wellbeing and the planet we live on. On Seasons 4 and 5, hear from rebels and visionaries with radical ideas on how we can build stable lives, careers, and companies. If you’re also interested in Jen and Manoush’s personal story and their adventures in starting their own business with a little help from blockchain technology, listen to the first three seasons, starting with Season 1, Chapter 1.

ZigZag
Chapter 8: Putting Crypto Pioneers to the Test

ZigZag

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2018 29:56


It’s true. ZigZag listeners agree that registering to buy CVL tokens is a pain in the ass. And yet, many still plan to join Civil’s experimental social network for journalism. On this episode, listeners ask tough question and explain why they’re undeterred by the platform’s growing pains. Also, Manoush and Jen gather the “First-Fleet” of Civil journalists to discuss problems with employers and business-models past (DNAInfo, The Denver Post, the New York Daily News)...and how they plan to make sure local and investigative journalism have a future, tokens or no tokens. GO DEEPER: The story of Munchee explains much of Civil’s caution around its token sale. Nieman Lab thinks it’s funny that Manoush failed the crypto quiz. Kara Swisher’s conversation with Mark Zuckerberg about platforms, information, and power. Ex-Politico reporter Azi Paybarah, Professor Christina Greer, and the Daily Beast’s Harry Siegel explain how their upcoming podcast, FAQ NYC, will fill a gap in local news. The debate over journalism and paywalls. For now, everything on the first-fleet sites Popula, Sludge, Block Club Chicago, Cannabis Wire, and Documented is free. Sign up for ZigZag’s newsletter for our weekly pick of thought-provoking articles and podcasts. Who you’ll hear: Manoush (@manoushZ) Jen (@jpoyant) Matthew Iles (@matthewiles) Maria Bustillos Founder of Popula (@mariabustillos) Stephanie Lulay Block Club Chicago (@slulay2) Eric Lubbers The Colorado Sun (@brofax) Harry Siegle FAQNYC (@harrysiegel) Support our work at https://zigzagpod.com/donate/ — Produced by Stable Genius Productions Follow ZigZag on Instagram and Twitter: @ZigZagpod ZigZag is the business show about being human. Join a community of listeners riding the twists and turns of late-capitalism, searching for a kinder, more sustainable way. Manoush Zomorodi and Jen Poyant investigate how work and business impact our wellbeing and the planet we live on. On Seasons 4 and 5, hear from rebels and visionaries with radical ideas on how we can build stable lives, careers, and companies. If you’re also interested in Jen and Manoush’s personal story and their adventures in starting their own business with a little help from blockchain technology, listen to the first three seasons, starting with Season 1, Chapter 1.

Media Voices Podcast
Media Voices: The Second Source’s Jasmine Andersson on the challenges facing women in journalism

Media Voices Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2018 39:47


In this week’s episode, one of The Second Source’s co-founders, Jasmine Andersson talks about the aims of the project, the launch of their new mentoring scheme and how women can support each other in challenging environments. In the news round-up, the team dive into what YouTube’s $25 million news spend means for publishers, whether Reddit will work for advertisers and what the deal is with Rolling Stone’s revitalised magazine. Chris worries that AR ads will start manipulating the size of his head. We're reading: - 'The good, the bad, and the mansplaining of WikiTribune’, via Nieman Lab http://www.niemanlab.org/2018/07/several-people-are-typing-the-good-the-bad-and-the-mansplaining-of-wikitribune/ - ‘The promises and pitfalls of reporting within chat apps and other semi-open platforms: A journalist’s guide’ via Nieman Lab http://www.niemanlab.org/2018/07/a-journalists-guide-to-the-promises-and-pitfalls-of-reporting-within-open-and-closed-and-semi-open-platforms - The Death of Truth, by Michiko Kakutani https://www.theguardian.com/books/2018/jul/14/the-death-of-truth-how-we-gave-up-on-facts-and-ended-up-with-trump?CMP=share_btn_tw

Media Voices Podcast
Media Voices: Corinne Podger on mobile journalism and digital storytelling

Media Voices Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2018 43:02


This week, Corrine Podger takes us through best practice in mobile journalism and digital storytelling, and how varying mobile consumption habits affect the journalism in different territories. In the news round-up, the team discuss Quartz's sale, a mixed bag of news for UK newspapers, and The Beast Inside. Chris flubs the outro, see if you can tell. We're reading: The Guardian finds less polished video works better on Instagram Stories, via Digiday - https://digiday.com/media/guardian-finds-less-polished-video-works-better-instagram/ Tell me more: The Globe and Mail is slipping a little extra context into its stories (while explaining its editorial thinking along the way), via Nieman Lab - http://www.niemanlab.org/2018/07/tell-me-more-the-globe-and-mail-is-slipping-a-little-extra-context-into-its-stories-while-explaining-its-editorial-thinking-along-the-way/

Media Voices Podcast
Media Voices: Bauer Xcel's Ian Betteridge on leading a data-driven digital division

Media Voices Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2018 34:30


On this week's episode, Bauer Xcel's Director of content and audience development Ian Betteridge talks about drawing together the separate roles of editorial and data-driven audience development, how commercial needs drive content strategy and how he brings together the print and digital teams to make the many brands he oversees a success. He also tells the story behind 'Betteridge's Law'. In the news round-up, Peter and Esther talk about their highlights of the Digital News Report, why Quartz is partnering with Facebook Watch and a dismal set of newspaper ABCs. Peter gets excited about independent magazine publishing. We're reading: - Despite concerns about control, news publishers are still pushing a lot of content to third-party platforms, via Nieman Lab http://www.niemanlab.org/2018/06/despite-concerns-about-control-news-publishers-are-still-pushing-a-lot-of-content-to-third-party-platforms/ - Platforms and Publishers: A Definitive Timeline, via Tow Centre http://tow.cjr.org/platform-timeline/

Media Voices Podcast
Media Voices Paywall Special

Media Voices Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2018 56:05


In this bumper episode, the team discusses the rise of the paywall. As everyone from Vanity Fair to the New Statesman have decided to launch paywalls, we try to determine whether there is a recipe for paywall success, taking in everything from the need for brand recognition, the propensity for people to pay, and the likely outcomes of the trend towards reader revenue. We're reading: • 'Google’s news chief Richard Gingras: “We need to rethink journalism at every dimension”', via Nieman Lab - http://www.niemanlab.org/2018/05/googles-news-chief-richard-gingras-we-need-to-rethink-journalism-at-every-dimension/ • 'What Google Chrome’s new built-in ad blocker means for you', via What's New In Publishing - http://whatsnewinpublishing.com/2018/05/07/google-chromes-new-built-ad-blocker-means/ • 'How not to do paywalls', via TechCrunch - https://techcrunch.com/2018/05/06/subscription-hell/

Media Voices Podcast
Media Voices: PressPad founder Olivia Crellin on the need for diversity in journalism

Media Voices Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2018 33:55


In this week's episode of Media Voices, PressPad founder and BBC journalist Olivia Crellin explains how PressPad aims to diversify the media by removing one of the main financial obstacles to those trying to enter the profession. In the news round-up, the team discuss a week of huge news around paywalls, the success of The New York Times' subscription efforts, and why Snapchat has stopped paying licensing fees. We're reading: • Why the "golden age" of newspapers was the exception, not the rule, via Nieman Lab - http://www.niemanlab.org/2018/05/why-the-golden-age-of-newspapers-was-the-exception-not-the-rule/ • 3 questions to ask your data when evaluating your paywall, via Digital Context Next - https://digitalcontentnext.org/blog/2018/04/30/3-questions-to-ask-your-data-when-evaluating-a-paywall/ • How to get rich quick in Silicon Valley, via Guardian - https://www.theguardian.com/news/2018/apr/17/get-rich-quick-silicon-valley-startup-billionaire-techie

Media Voices Podcast
Media Voices: President of theguardian.org, Rachel White on funding independent journalism

Media Voices Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2018 33:13


On this week's episode of Media Voices, Esther interview's the Guardian's director of philanthropic & strategic partnerships Rachel White about finding ways of funding independent journalism. In the news round-up, the crew of the good ship Media Voices discuss Google's plans to fix local news, an uptick in trust in traditional media in the UK and discuss Jonah Peretti insisting that everything is fine at BuzzFeed. We're reading: • 'I write fake news', via the Guardian - https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2018/jan/26/experience-i-write-fake-news • 'Never get high on your own supply - why social media bosses don't use social media' - via the Guardian https://www.theguardian.com/media/2018/jan/23/never-get-high-on-your-own-supply-why-social-media-bosses-dont-use-social-media • 'Facebook's trust survey isn't as simple as it sounds' - via Nieman Lab http://www.niemanlab.org/2018/01/facebooks-trust-survey-which-will-help-determine-news-feed-ranking-is-two-questions-but-its-not-as-simple-as-it-sounds/

Media Voices Podcast
Media Voices: Refinery29's Jacqui Kavanagh on authenticity of experience

Media Voices Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2018 35:42


In this week's episode of Media Voices, we speak to Refinery29's Jacqui Kavanagh about that brand's success in Europe since it launched in 2015, about what authenticity means to brands and audiences, and why experiential is a growth industry. In the news round-up, the gang discuss the Guardian's return to black, some unfortunate closures at news sites we've long admired, and whether Facebook's plan to have The People judge the trustworthiness of news outlets is a good idea (no, but what's the alternative?) We're reading: - 'The Chicago News Landscape' via the Centre for Media Engagement: https://mediaengagement.org/research/chicago-news-landscape/ - 'How one woman built an award-winning news outlet from her dining room table' via Nieman Lab: http://www.niemanlab.org/2018/01/we-stepped-in-and-started-doing-it-how-one-woman-built-an-award-winning-news-outlet-from-her-dining-room-table/ - ''Time well spent’ is shaping up to be tech’s next big debate’ via The Verge: https://www.theverge.com/2018/1/17/16903844/time-well-spent-facebook-tristan-harris-mark-zuckerberg

Media Voices Podcast
Media Voices: The Death of Digital Special

Media Voices Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2017 30:00


In this very special episode of Media Voices, we discuss the conflux of news about BuzzFeed, VICE, Mashable and many more and ask whether the dream of a digital future for publishers is over before it began. It's Media Voices' first birthday! The team briefly reminisce about the travails of launching the podcast, their favourite episodes, and their plans for the future. We're reading: • Newsonomics: The New York Times’ Mark Thompson on regulating Facebook, global ambition, and when to stop the presses (forever), via Nieman Lab - http://www.niemanlab.org/2017/11/newsonomics-the-new-york-times-mark-thompson-on-regulating-facebook-global-ambition-and-when-to-stop-the-presses-forever • A mission for journalism in a time of crisis, via Guardian - https://www.theguardian.com/news/2017/nov/16/a-mission-for-journalism-in-a-time-of-crisis

Media Voices Podcast
Media Voices: Stylist Magazine's editor-in-chief Lisa Smosarski on its circulation success

Media Voices Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2017 36:53


This week, Stylist Magazine's editor-in-chief Lisa Smosarski explains how the title has managed to grow its weekly circulation at a time when much of the industry is experiencing print decline. In the news round-up the gang butt heads over the Guardian's new £42 million Venture Capital fund, argue about The Wall Street Journal's new social media guidelines and agree that BuzzFeed UK's success is a good thing (mostly). What we're reading: • 'The war to sell you a mattress is an internet nightmare', via Fast Company: https://www.fastcompany.com/3065928/sleepopolis-casper-bloggers-lawsuits-underside-of-the-mattress-wars • 'Not a revolution (yet): Data journalism hasn’t changed that much in 4 years', via Nieman Lab: http://www.niemanlab.org/2017/10/not-a-revolution-yet-data-journalism-hasnt-changed-that-much-in-4-years-a-new-paper-finds/ • '“De Correspondent” and the blueprint for a successful membership model', via Monday Note: https://mondaynote.com/de-correspondent-and-the-blueprint-for-a-successful-membership-model-3660eba337ba

Through the Noise
#301 Journalist and Writer Simon Owens on Connecting With Your Audience

Through the Noise

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2017 47:39


Simon Owens is a returning guest to Through the Noise, having been one of our earliest guests on the show. He's a journalist employed by many who has departed from his freelance marketing career in favor of pursuing the leads and stories that call to him. Writing about tech, media, and marketing, his niche is broad enough to appeal to and provide important content for a huge range of people. Join us for a conversation about transitions in tech, getting and retaining subscribers, and the value of connecting with people through the intimate medium of podcasts. If you're a listener of Through the Noise, we'd definitely appreciate if you took a few minutes to let us know with a review on iTunes or your favorite podcast listening service. Have ideas to help us improve? We're into constructive criticism too. Simon Owens is a longtime journalist, marketer, and PR professional. He began his career as a newspaper reporter covering local government in Virginia. In 2008, he moved to Washington, DC to work at a marketing agency while simultaneously serving as an associate editor at PBS’ MediaShift. He has conducted PR, content marketing, and social media strategy for dozens of companies, organizations, and individuals, including Google, Comcast, Forbes, ESPN, C-SPAN, and Nike. For two years he was an assistant managing editor at US News & World Report where he built out the company’s then-nascent social media presence. His writing has appeared in The Atlantic, New York Magazine, Scientific American, Forbes, Harvard’s Nieman Lab, The Next Web, Daily Dot, PBS.org, and US News & World Report.

Multimedia Week
EP80 - Matthew Powers & 'NGO Journalism'

Multimedia Week

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2016 43:20


Matthew Powers discusses his research, which focuses on the intersection and overlap between non-profit communications and journalism. It’s an area that every visual or multimedia journalist or student should think about, because at some point, you are likely to end up with a commission from a non-profit. Maybe you feel uncomfortable crossing that line, or maybe it’s a sector you really want to move into. Whatever your thoughts, It's clear that the line is becoming increasingly blurred and there are lot’s of opportunities opening up in this sector. As always we’d love to hear your views, write to us or comment on our Facebook page www.facebook.com/multimediaweek. Matthew Powers, @mj_powers, is an Assistant Professor of Communication at the University of Washington. SHOWNOTES:Sharron came across Mathew’s research via this article When Greenpeace hires journalists, it’s adouble-edged sword http://theconversation.com/when-greenpeace-hires-journalists-its-a-double-edged-sword-47398 Matthew's most relevant paper to this shows ‘NGO Journalism’ discussion is here: https://www.academia.edu/10414692/The_New_Boots_on_the_Ground_NGOs_in_the_Changing_Landscape_of_International_News More of Matthew’s papers at: http://www.com.washington.edu/powers/ The Greenpeace report discussed in the show is here: http://energydesk.greenpeace.org/2015/12/08/exposed-academics-for-hire/ The HRW reporting in CAR is here: http://features.hrw.org/features/Unravelling_central_african_republic/index.phpAn older but very relevant series by Nieman Lab on NGO’s as newsmakers: http://www.niemanlab.org/2009/11/ngos-as-newsmakers-a-new-series-on-the-evolving-news-ecosystem/Ashley Gilbertson's work for UNICEF is excellent http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2015/11/21/opinion/sunday/exposures-uncertain-journeys.htmlPhotojournalism, advocacy and change by David Campell is another good read https://www.david-campbell.org/2015/04/30/photojournalism-advocacy-change-marcus-bleasdale-human-rights-watch-central-african-republic/If you enjoyed this podcast, you might like to hear David Campbell’s interview with Emma Daly, communications Director at Human Rights Watch in New York  http://www.multimediaweek.net/e/ep-24-interview-with-emma-daly-human-rights-watch SCHOLARSHIP APPLICATIONS: The University of Bolton, together with Beijing Foreign Studies University are offering two fully funded postgraduate scholarships for international students in Multimedia Journalism for the 2016/17 academic year. Recipient’s £7,500 tuition fees will be waived in full. Download the application guidance and form here: http://goo.gl/7whvdO *Due to summer holidays, please note that podcasts in the next six weeks or so will be biweekly. 

Press Publish
Press Publish 16: Jason Kint on how worried publishers should be about the arrival of adblockers on mobile

Press Publish

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2015 40:16


It’s Episode 16 of Press Publish, the Nieman Lab podcast! My guest today is Jason Kint. Jason is CEO of Digital Content Next, which I confess I liked better under its old name, the Online Publishers Association. It’s the trade organization representing most of the country’s largest online publishers. I wanted to talk to Jason...

Press Publish
Press Publish 15: Matt Thompson on The Atlantic’s attempt to breathe some life into classic blogging

Press Publish

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2015 65:52


It’s Episode 15 of Press Publish, the Nieman Lab podcast! My guest today is Matt Thompson. Since earlier this year, Matt has been deputy editor of TheAtlantic.com, But you might know him from some of his previous career stops. He spent a few years at NPR, heading up some of its most interesting digital initiatives,...

Press Publish
Press Publish 14: Jenna Weiss-Berman on BuzzFeed’s podcast strategy and moves into audio news

Press Publish

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2015 52:03


It’s Episode 14 of Press Publish, the Nieman Lab podcast! My guest today is Jenna Weiss-Berman, the director of audio at BuzzFeed. Jenna was hired last fall to figure out the site’s podcasting strategy, and thus far she’s launched three shows, each targeting the sites’s young diverse audience. Just about everything BuzzFeed does draws attention,...

Press Publish
Press Publish 13: Adam Ragusea on podcasts and the pessimist’s case for public radio’s future

Press Publish

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2015 73:35


It’s Episode 13 of Press Publish, the Nieman Lab podcast! My guest today is Adam Ragusea, the host of The Pub, a podcast about the state of public media — mostly public radio. I first heard Adam’s voice about 7 years ago, when he was a reporter for WBUR, the local NPR station here in...

It's All Journalism
#160 - Melody Kramer reimagines public media

It's All Journalism

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2015 38:42


Melody Kramer is a data journalist, who writes a weekly column for Poynter. Nieman Lab recently published a paper she wrote on putting the "public" back in public media membership.

Press Publish
Press Publish 12: Jesse Holcomb of Pew Research on what they’re watching for in this election cycle

Press Publish

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2015 41:23


It’s Episode 12 of Press Publish, the Nieman Lab podcast! My guest in today’s episode is Jesse Holcomb, an associate director of research at the Pew Research Center. Jesse is one of Pew’s lead researchers on journalism, which means he’s been part of a lot of interesting projects — analyzing issues like how local news...

Press Publish
Press Publish 11: Cory Haik on how The Washington Post is rethinking its strategy for mobile

Press Publish

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2015 42:54


It’s Episode 11 of Press Publish, the Nieman Lab podcast! Hey, did you not know we have a podcast? That’s fair — Press Publish debuted back in January 2013 and, like many podcasts, it lost steam after a while. But we’re ready to jump back in! I hope you’ll join us as we interview some...

A Responsive Web Design Podcast
Episode #20: Nieman Lab

A Responsive Web Design Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2015


Some large companies go responsive at scale—what about sites built by one person? At the Nieman Journalism Lab at Harvard, Josh Benton wears many hats: editor, writer, designer, developer, even QA. Read more »

Mediespanarna
161. Nyårsavsnittet

Mediespanarna

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2014 43:17


I vilket Jesper och Erik snor en lista från Nieman Lab

It's All Journalism
#106 - Justin Ellis, Nieman Lab & Wouter Vermeulen, Opera Media Works

It's All Journalism

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2014 45:09


Here's another piece of audio from the 2014 Association of Alternative Newsmedia conference in Nashville.This time around, Justin Ellis, assistant editor at the Nieman Lab, and Wouter Vermeulen, director of Platform Sales & Product Marketing at Opera Mediaworks, talk about mobile devices like smartphones and tablets are changing the way readers are consuming the news and how newsrooms need to shift their strategies to meet those demands.

Press Publish
Press Publish 1: Dan Sinker and Erin Kissane of Source on the community of news developers

Press Publish

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2013 58:12


In the first episode of our new weekly Nieman Lab podcast, we look at how they built a central gathering point for news devs and how they're trying to pull coders into journalism.