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Posted by Guest Poster.
People can walk through a salad bar and make something that is just perfect for them, and the next can make something completely different. Modern Journalism is not so much different from this.
Posted by Guest Poster.
While our public relations peers are grasping onto social media platforms as a tool to harness trends and clients, straight journalists must proceed with caution, but embrace it in a way that displays journalism at it’s very best.
Posted by Guest Poster.
Even as a self-avowed “print person”—and a student in the magazine specialization—I have been told to expect to spend a lot of time learning how to organize a blog.
Posted by Guest Poster.
When weighing options for the future of journalism, it’s comforting to circle back to the Internet’s potential with a sigh of relief, but the conversation shouldn’t end there. There are potential threats developing which could change the innovative news experience that has defined our generation’s education and democratic expression.
Posted by Patrick De Oliveira.
Patrick De Oliveira tells us about journalism in his home country – Brazil.
Posted by Guest Poster.
This is a Consider This Journalism guest post by Robert Schur. “I have seen the future of journalism. Two words: Michael Jackson.”
Posted by Guest Poster.
My days in the bubble of collegiate journalism are numbered. Do I have the chutzpah to break into the daunting real world of journalism? I usually give the same answer. Yes. But I don’t know what that means. “The job I would be doing in journalism five years from now, most likely doesn’t exist yet today,” is typically how I begin. “Five years ago, ‘professional’ bloggers did not exist.”
Posted by Guest Poster.
My guess is that there will ALWAYS be newspapers, and broadcast stations. However they will fall into one of two groups: those who provide world-class coverage, and those that are hyper-local.
Posted by Guest Poster.
This is a guest post by Ida Lieszkovszky. “Twitter is the new talent, they said, and editors to sift through information are all the media needs to pay for.”
Posted by Patrick De Oliveira.
There is something to be said about having a correspondent connected to the right sources reporting on a story – someone working on a beat. That is still where most of the quality news comes from. The death of the newsroom isn’t really something we can accept.