New Al Jazeera Show Merges TV with the Social Web

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Al Jazeera’s new TV program, The Stream, uses social media to both gather news information and interact with its viewers. The show launched online a few weeks ago and will start airing on TV May 2. The Stream uses Storify, which opened to the public this week, to gather information from across the social web to share with viewers.

The show incorporates Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and other social media elements to create a show that focuses on Middle Eastern news and technology. The show encourages its viewers to interact with them – via Twitter or Facebook – by submitting to the “Feed the Stream” box on their site.

What do you think about news shows like The Stream that incorporate social media elements into the program?

 

 

Storify Compiles News from the Social Web

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A new website that allows users to compile news from the social web just launched its public beta version. Storify allows users to compile news from across the social web using sites like YouTube, Facebook, Flickr and Twitter and then build streams of information around specific topics. Users can also add text, pictures or their own information about a topic.


The information streams can then be followed by other users or even embedded on a website. Storify is now open to public users, after being tested by news organizations like The Washington Post, NPR and PBS.

You can read a New York Times article about it here.

 

MSU Works with Poynter for Online Journalism Class

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Missouri State University has hired the Poynter Institute to teach an introductory course for its journalism program. Mark Biggs, head of the media, journalism and film department at the school said,

 

We are thrilled to be working with the premier journalism training institute in the country and anticipate that this partnership will result in a fantastic learning experience for our journalism students.

You can read an article about it here.

Is There a Line Between a Journalist and Blogger?

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Recently, a journalism student from NYU discussed in a Wall Street Journal article what she thought were the differences between a blogger and a journalist. She was responding, in part, to a discussion about the topic at the South by Southwest event last month.

She talks specifically about writing for the music industry and says:

.. the consensus among music writers is that bloggers dig for new talent and ‘break’ bands quickly, while journalists carefully analyze trends and interview intensely. But I think music journalism needs more people to be hybrids of the two—bloggers with journalistic instincts to do more thorough work, and journalists with their ears to the ground to take more risks with their reporting.

Although she is talking specifically about reporting and writing about music, some of the general ideas can be applied to all bloggers and journalists. So what do you think?

Are the two titles interchangeable or do they have specific characteristics?

Do students tend to blur the line between the two?