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Archive for July, 2007

Jul-31-2007

Facebook for Journalists….

I hear quite a few college students talking about Facebook, Friendster and of course, MySpace. With numerous email accounts, it never made sense to me to consider joining any of this until I read this. Facebook seems really useful to freelance writers especially. I guess it is just electronic networking. Anyway, this story comes to me from Alexis, a fellow nonfiction student at Columbia.

Samuel

FROM THE POYNTER INSTITUTE FOR MEDIA STUDIES

Posted, Jul. 26, 2007
Updated, Jul. 26, 2007

Poynter Online centerpiece stories

More Centerpieces QuickLink: A127211

Facebook: What’s In It For Journalists?
With the help of some new friends, we came up with a few answers. And just as many questions.

By Pat Walters (more by author)
Naughton Fellow

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About a week ago, my editor and I started a Facebook group.

We had been reading a lot about Facebook, mostly about how “old” people had launched an invasion on the site. My editor, Bill Mitchell, is 58, by no means old, but surely long past his college years. He friended me at the beginning of the month.

RELATED RESOURCES

Also writing about Facebook this month are:

“Facebook: Ripe for News Applications?” and “Facebook Boosts College Paper’s Readership, Recruiting,” Amy Gahran, E-Media Tidbits

“Social Media Runs on ‘Friend Power,’ ” Mark Glaser, PBS Media Shift

“Joining the Club on Facebook,” Rebecca MacKinnon, RConversation

“Facebook: What’s in it for me?” Jonathan Weber, Times of London

Press Release on Facebook Growth, comScore

Since Facebook opened itself to the public last September, it has grown a lot. The Internet market research company comScore announced at the beginning of July that the site had grown to 26.6 million unique visitors in May 2007, an 89 percent jump from the 14 million unique visitors the site was drawing a year earlier.

But despite the growth and the hype, Bill and I wondered: What’s in it for journalists? For journalism? And for news organizations, at large?

So we established a Facebook group called “Journalists and Facebook.” What better way to report on Facebook, than to use Facebook? We invited about 25 journalists to join the group, posted a few questions to the discussion board and waited.

Seemed to make perfect sense.

By the time we posted this story on Poynter Online, the group had mushroomed to more than 800 members, journalists and non-journalists from all over the world.

Here’s the story of what we learned.

NOTE: I posted a draft of this piece to the Facebook group at 2 p.m. Wednesday. I invited the group members to help me make it better, a process one group member called “collective editing.” The response was fantastic. Nearly two dozen group members posted thoughtful responses to the piece. Some even threw me line edits.

But after reading all of the comments this morning, I chose not to fold them into the piece. Two reasons: Doing so would misrepresent the process. And it would snuff out the identities of the folks who wrote in (making it look like their clever thoughts were mine). Instead, I’ve included excerpts from several comments at the end of this piece.

To read all the comments in their entirety (and to add some of your own) visit the Facebook group.

When Bill and I created our Facebook group, I didn’t think anyone would join it. I mean, I knew some people would join it. Maybe some of our “real” friends, other Poynter colleagues, a few college students.

So, when I found, as I got ready to leave work Friday, that more than a hundred people had joined the group, I was astonished. Wow, I thought to myself, this might actually work. Over the weekend, more people joined. Sure, some of them were “real” friends, Poynterites and collegiates. But lots of them were strangers, people Bill and I had never encountered in the “real” world.

And I think this is about the time it happened. I became obsessed. I hadn’t felt this way about Facebook since I signed up (and geez, that must have been four years ago). I checked the group, as well as my own news feed and profile, several times a day. (And no, I didn’t feel guilty doing this on the clock. This was work, after all.)

I started friending people I’d never actually met before. I contacted Dakarai Aarons, an education reporter for the Commercial Appeal (in Memphis, where I’m moving in two weeks), and Trey Heath, editor of the Daily Helmsman, the newspaper at the University of Memphis. They accepted my requests for friendship; this was fun.

But then it hit me. Very few of my Facebook friends, acquaintances and group buddies were talking to one another. The questions Bill and I had built “Journalists and Facebook” to answer were languishing. The work we had set out to accomplish wasn’t getting done.

By Wednesday morning, at a little more than a week old, the group had more than 650 members. And … 18 wall posts, 8 discussion topics and 41 posts to those topics — make that, 38, since three of them were mine. At my last count, 31 people people had made posts, roughly 5 percent of our group members. Had we failed?

I don’t think so. Web usability guru Jakob Nielsen wrote about “participation inequality” on his blog in October. Here’s what he said:

User participation often more or less follows a 90-9-1 rule:
Ninety percent of users are lurkers (i.e., read or observe, but don’t contribute).
Nine percent of users contribute from time to time, but other priorities dominate their time.
One percent of users participate a lot and account for most contributions. It can seem as if they don’t have lives because they often post just minutes after whatever event they’re commenting on occurs.
I don’t doubt Nielsen’s findings, especially considering how well they lined up with what I observed on the Facebook group. Still, Bill and I were curious. Why had so many people joined the group but not joined the discussions?

It turns out lots of people join Facebook groups carelessly. It’s easy to do — takes just two clicks of the mouse — and it feels good, as if you’re admitting yourself to a club. On Wednesday, Bill invited me to join a group called “I read the group name, I laugh, I join, I never look at it again.” It has 7,854 members. Several group members have posted complaints that Facebook bars them from joining more than 200 groups. One group member, a fellow named Albert Saynotoit Williams, claims to have joined 374.

It is unclear how active this prolific group-joiner is in those nearly 400 groups. But it might not matter. Consider our Facebook group. Sure, as of Wednesday morning, very few of the members had participated in the discussion. But we can’t discount the value of the group itself. We had gathered hundreds of people who are interested in the connection between journalists and Facebook. We just hadn’t figured out how to get them talking to one another yet.

To say the group members weren’t talking to one another at all is not entirely fair. Some of them were talking. And they provided some fine insight not only into how they use Facebook, but into what we can learn from the site.

(Even better: When I posted the draft of this story to the group Wednesday afternoon, several group members posted for the first time. This might have had something to do with the message I sent to each group member inviting response to the piece. Go SPAM!)

My favorite post (as of Wednesday morning) came on Tuesday. Dave Sommer wrote, “Hello, message board full of grieving teens. My name is so and so, from news organization X. Would any of you here like to share any poorly punctuated memories of that poor kid who drowned/got shot/died suddenly during a sporting event? MSG me!”

There are a few things I find interesting about this satiric post.

First, it makes us take a hard look at the way lots of journalists use Facebook these days. I’ll admit I did it. Last summer, while I was covering higher education for a newspaper in Delaware, a student died in her dormitory. I went on Facebook, looked up some of her friends and even wrote a story about how her wall had become a make-shift memorial.

It also makes us consider an important ethical concern. How should we interact with sources on Facebook, a place on which we house our personal online identity and through which we interact with our friends and family? Other group members raised this question directly. One asked, “Should we Facebook friend our sources?” Another, “Should journalists support politicians on Facebook?”

Lastly, this post suggests that we move forward, get past the commonplace uses of the site, stop using Facebook only as a window into the lives of teenagers and college students. Because Facebook isn’t just for the kids anymore. More importantly, the growth of Facebook points to a cultural shift. People of all ages are getting increasingly comfortable with the idea of interacting with each other online.

A couple weeks ago, I read a fascinating post on Jeff Jarvis’ blog. The veteran journalist and director of the interactive journalism program the City University of New York’s Graduate School of Journalism had come to a revelation that relates to this discussion. Local news, he wrote, isn’t about content, it’s about people.

“Our job is not to deliver content or a product,” he argued. “Our job is to help them make connections with information and each other.”

And that’s what Facebook is doing. It connects me to people I know, and to information I care about. Surely, it isn’t always journalism. Last week, for instance, I learned my friend Brent started teaching English in Baltimore.

But some news organizations are working to apply the power of social networking (a phenomenon that group member Robin Sloan called “social context”) to the distribution of news content. In its recent Web site redesign, USA Today included a feature that enables each reader to build a personal page, track news stories, aggregate comments and invite people as friends. The Minneapolis Star Tribune launched vita.mn, an arts and entertainment Web site that depends on the so-called audience for most of its content. The Mail & Guardian in South Africa took its content to Facebook when it launched a “headlines” application last week. (Poynter Online’s Amy Gahran wrote about this and other Facebook news applications Wednesday.)

(Disclosure: The editors of USA Today and vita.mn are on Poynter’s National Advisory Board.)

A question: Should journalists try to build their own social networks? Or make use of existing ones? Or some combination?

But considering the growth of social networking, whether it is happening on Facebook, or MySpace, or Friendster, or LinkedIn, or Pownce, it seems clear that there’s at least one thing journalists cannot do — and that’s ignore it.

Here are some additional (and valuable) thoughts from my colleagues, the members of the “Journalists and Facebook” group.

Andrea James: “If we are to report on the world we live in, then we have to fully live in it. And that includes the online realm. … Anything we can do to open the doors to our newsrooms, and give people a glimpse inside, is an asset to readers.”

Howard Rheingold: “Social networks have been key to journalists forever — what journalist does not have a network of sources? What Facebook and other online social networks do is make it very easy to expand that network and to send and receive messages to and from the entire network very quickly. Evaluating and cross-checking the credibility of sources is something that journalists have always done.”

John Holihan: “Facebook and other networking sites like it, have become a society within a society. Within this Internet society are hundreds of stories that you may not hear about in the every day-working world. You have a Facebook Wall that becomes a memorial. You have questionable groups being started, and you have people joining groups just to say they have over 300 memberships. It’s an entire world of social behavior that can only be discovered by surfing the facebook network and studying how people use it.”

Yvonne DiVita: “First reaction, Pat, is that ‘everything’ is in it — Facebook — for journalists. … I’m sold on social media. I’m sold on the voice of the customer. I’m sold on the long tail, so this seems like a no-brainer. … Isn’t connecting to people beneficial — regardless of how you do it? It doesn’t mean you shouldn’t check your facts, that’s a given. It doesn’t mean everyone is honest and authentic — but it shouldn’t be hard to discover the fakes (you merely need ask someone who is connected to that person… and anonymity disappears).”

Amy Webb: “Perhaps Facebook is nothing more than a neat site where we can share ideas, discuss topics collaboratively and meet new people. Does Facebook have to impact journalism at all? I’m not saying that reporters and editors should ignore new technology. … Instead, I think we should start to take a good look at what’s available now and what is ahead on the horizon. It’s okay to be selective with the technology and digital tools we use as journalists. … It seems unnatural, somehow, to me to hear folks at conferences talk about how they’ve ‘friended’ so-and-so, when they’re not even sure if their newspaper has RSS feeds.”

Dakarai Aarons: “As news organizations are learning how to use the Web more creatively and effectively, I think the question that must be answered is this: how do we bring some of the conversation going on in our communities to a place where we can use it to inform our journalism? … The danger is that in using this medium, we don’t become highly insensitive in approaching potential sources. A number of national outlets made that very mistake during the Virginia Tech shootings, and a number of Facebook groups were started by VT students in backlash.”

David Stearns: “I guess I see no distinction between [friending reporters], and engaging with reporters in more ‘traditional’ social settings, like the proverbial watering holes that seem to exist in every city, where journalists, politicians, whistleblowers and other motley sources gather to share stories and information. I joined the group because I thought maybe I’d stumble across a health reporter who might be interested in the topics I’m dealing with day-in and day-out. A group solely comprised of journalists is valuable. But one that plugs them into a potential font of trends, data and other story leads, would seem even more valuable to me.

Mark Comerford: “Why are we surprised at the 90/9/1 rule? We have in large part been the ones who have socialized our audience (even the word for people who partake of our product implies a certain passivity, a certain power relation) into being talked at, or talked to but seldom talked with. This has been going on for decades. Politicians talked at/to the voters, teachers talked at/to pupils, experts talk (down) to non-experts, media talk to/at just about everyone. So now the paradigm starts to shift.”

Rebecca Skloot: What’s struck me since I joined Facebook is what a great tool it is for writers (and editors) looking to connect with writers and editors they don’t yet know. This probably stands out to me because I’m a long time freelancer — a profession that depends in large part on finding editors you don’t know (which you often do through friends who’ve written for them), and keeping in touch with the ones you do know. Search for “freelance journalist” or “freelance writer” on facebook, then look at their friends list … there’s plenty of networking going on here. … Finding email addresses for editors used to be hard — now you just enter the publication into the facebook search function (try New York Times and see how many hits you get), and viola, you can message an editor (who may want to strangle me for pointing this out).”

Laura Fries: “as i mentioned in my previous wall post, i think that the (current) functionality of FB groups inhibits discussion; you have to directly navigate to the page and click on the discussion in order to participate; there’s no serendipitous discovery or pull/subscription mechanisms. … in other words, it ain’t your fault that we haven’t been talking, and I think that the second the tech changes, we’ll be buzzing like bees.”

Kevin Dugan: “As the 179th member of this group, let me be completely transparent. I’m a ‘flack’ to quote Rob Pegoraro from another group topic. But I wanted to offer up one PR perspective. … Journalists limiting profile access to PR people makes sense on the surface. But Facebook allows us to learn more about the reporters we’re pitching and their work. … Facebook is one piece of a larger network. What can it do for journalists? Facebook already helps you find sources. Hopefully it will also help better sources find you.”

Mark Deuze:
local journalism, nay, ANY journalism is about people (or better yet: it is about community). it was the late James Carey who said it nicely: ideally, journalism is about amplifying the conversations a society (community, people) has with itself.
new media such as Facebook or typewriters or whatever can best be understood as amplifying/accelerating something (cognition, attitudes, and/or behaviors) that was already there. We did not become networking individualists simply because of cell phones, laptops and Facebook. [...]
to belabor an old but crucial point: access to FB and other digital media is neither random nor exponential: a certain type (class) of people has access, and there is no “natural” growth from the bottom up. so whose conversation are you tapping into online? the same privileged white middle class that is already well-served by existing offline (advertising-supported) media. at the very least, that is a real danger here, an important caveat to all the justified optimism.
Thanks to everyone who commented on the piece (especially Mark Deuze, for bringing us home with some very excellent thoughts).

For those of you who haven’t visited it yet, stop by the “Journalists and Facebook” group to read the rest of the comments and join the conversation yourself.

Posted under Rant
Jul-30-2007

Back in the Swing of Things

Thanks to all of you who have emailed me about my blog. Right after finishing my classes at Columbia and then the immediate trip to Austria and Germany, I decided I needed to take a break from blogging and ponder a few changes. This will continue to be a personal blog but will increasingly become a resource and reference page for writers – mostly nonfiction in focus. I will post stories on writers and writing, the publishing industry and any other things that strike my fancy. I want to preserve my own creative writing energy for projects that I’m working on. Long blog entries can be tedious and there’s only so much water in the well.

We will kick off the blog with an interesting story about Oprah Winfrey getting blasted about the way she treated James Frey on her show.

Samuel
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Publisher blasts Oprah over James Frey controversy
Sunday, July 29, 2007 11:49 PM

BY MICHAEL MERSCHEL
The Dallas Morning News
GRAPEVINE, Texas—Publisher Nan A. Talese took up a fresh defense of A Million Little Pieces this weekend, defending the “essential truth” of the discredited memoir — while criticizing Oprah Winfrey and her fans.

Asked about the book during a session at the Mayborn Literary Nonfiction Writers Conference of the Southwest on Saturday, Talese said her experience with author James Frey had not changed the way she handled memoirs.

“I’m afraid I’m unapologetic of the whole thing,” she said. “And the only person who should be apologetic is Oprah Winfrey,” who she says exhibited “fiercely bad manners — you don’t stone someone in public, which is just what she did.”

Calling Winfrey’s behavior “mean and self-serving,” Talese said that readers should be able to decide for themselves about whether to believe an author, and that Frey was clear about how believable he was.

“When someone starts out and says, ‘I have been an alcoholic. I have lied, I have cheated’ … you do not think this is going to be the New Testament.”

A Million Little Pieces was Winfrey’s Book Club selection for September 2005. In January 2006, after The Smoking Gun Web site revealed that parts of the book had been fabricated, Talese and Frey were subject to Winfrey’s on-air wrath, and Frey acknowledged that his book was not the literal truth.

Saturday evening, Talese spoke up in response to an audience comment during a question-and-answer session with keynote speaker Joyce Carol Oates, who had been discussing the nature of truth in memoir writing.

Talese said that when producers invited her to Winfrey’s program, they told her she’d be sitting on a panel with Richard Cohen of The Washington Post and Frank Rich of The New York Times to discuss “Truth in America.” But moments before the live program aired, she says, she was told program would be called “The James Frey Controversy.”

“James was told, ‘It’s going to be very rough, but at the end there will be redemption,’ ” Talese said. (She heard this thirdhand, she clarified on Sunday.) “And she verbally flayed him in public.”

She continued, “And at the end of it she pulled James aside and said, ‘I know it was rough, but it’s just business.’ (Sunday, she clarified that this was relayed to her by Frey.) And so I really, really am bothered by the sanctimoniousness of Oprah Winfrey.”

Winfrey’s publicists could not be reached Sunday. On her broadcast, Winfrey, who had stood by the author in the early days of the scandal, told her audience: “To everyone who has challenged me on this issue of truth, you are absolutely right.” She angrily told the author, “I feel really duped. But more importantly, I feel that you betrayed millions of readers.”

In May, Random House agreed to pay $2.35 million in refunds to readers who purchased the book before that interview.

In interviews Saturday and via e-mail and phone from California on Sunday, Talese explained why she was speaking out about the incident now.

She says people have asked, ” ‘Do you mind talking about it?’ as if it were some sort of disgrace. And I’ve said, ‘No I’m fine.’ I published the book, I’m proud to publish the book. … I think it has helped a lot of people.”

She described the Oprah audience as “holier-than-thou” and discussed being on the show as Frey amended his account of one character’s suicide.

“Oprah kept saying, ‘Did she kill herself? Did she cut her wrists?’ And he said, ‘No, she hung herself.’ And the whole audience went, ‘Boo! Boo!’ It was like being in the Roman circus. And after I said to them, ‘The tragedy is not how she killed herself, it’s that she killed herself,’ they all looked like a treeful of owls — no expressions at all. It was awful.”

Asked about the book’s veracity, she said: “I believe he overblew his character, which he has admitted in his new author’s note to the book, and I agree with what Oprah said initially when she championed the book. The essential truth is very powerful. The only difference between us is I have not gone back on the statement.”

Talese, publisher and editorial director of Nan A. Talese/Doubleday, is an industry legend who has published the likes of Margaret Atwood and Ian McEwan. Her husband is author Gay Talese, a prior Mayborn participant.

The conference draws writers from across the country to discuss the practice of narrative journalism and nonfiction writing.

Posted under The Writing Life