News By The People, For The People

By Roland Piquepaille

This article is about the frontiers between "journalists" and "bloggers."

It carries many references, including the article by Gina Barton, "What is a journalist?," from The Indianapolis Star, for Quill, published by the Society of Professional Journalists in its May 2002 issue. [Note: This article was mentioned yesterday by Scripting News after I sent an email to Dave Winer.]

As the following excerpt shows, boundaries between traditional newspapers and weblogs are blurring. A good weblog can largely be as informative as an established media.

I was reminded of Fromson's comment recently after the assassination of Dutch prime minister candidate Pim Fortuyn. American newspapers, locked into the binary way of casting domestic politics, referred to Fortuyn as a right-wing candidate. But he was openly gay and a former Marxist and who espoused a number of progressive causes. The right-wing label came from his advocacy of immigration restrictions -- a not unreasonable stance in Europe's most overcrowded country.
I looked through several newspapers for an explanation of Fortuyn's politics that confronted such obvious contradictions. I finally found the answer in a Weblog authored by Adam Curry, the former MTV "VJ" who lives in Amsterdam.
Full of knowledgeable asides, links to other blogs and commentaries on published reports, Curry put the tragedy in subtle and intelligent perspective, far outstripping anything conventional U.S. media reported.

Source: Paul Andrews, for Online Journalism Review, May 20, 2002


Famous quotes containing the words the people, news and/or people:

    I am persuaded that the people of the world have no grievances, one against the other. The hopes and desires of a man who tills the soil are about the same whether he lives on the banks of the Colorado or on the banks of the Danube.
    Lyndon Baines Johnson (1908–1973)

    The good news may be that Nature is phasing out the white man, but the bad news is that’s who She thinks we all are.
    Alice Walker (b. 1944)

    I do not deny the possibility that the people may err in an election; but if they do, the true [cure] is in the next election, and not in the treachery of the person elected.
    Abraham Lincoln (1809–1865)