Book Review – News to Me: Adventures of an Accidental Journalist

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News to Me: Adventures of an Accidental Journalist. Laurie Hertzel. Minneapolis, MN: University of Min-nesota Press, 2010. 224 pp.

In her memoir, News to Me: Adventures of an Accidental Journalist, Laurie Hertzel makes short work of her first husband.

No, he wasn’t the subject of one of the many homicide stories published in the Duluth News-Tribune during Hertzel’s eighteen years on the staff. He is, rather, a very minor character in this coming-of-age story about Hertzel’s life at the mid-sized northern Minnesota daily.  [Read more...]

Book Review – Battling Nell: The Life of Southern Journalist Cornelia Battle Lewis

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Battling Nell: The Life of Southern Journalist Cornelia Battle Lewis, 1893-1956. Alexander S. Leidholdt (2009).Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. pp. 331.

In the 1920s, Cornelia Battle Lewis wrote strident columns for the Raleigh (N.C.) News and Observer attacking the Ku Klux Klan, defending Communist-backed strikers at a regional textile mill, and supporting Al Smith’s candidacy for president despite his Catholicism. By the time she died suddenly in 1956, Lewis was still writing strident columns for the News and Observer, Raleigh’s leading newspaper, but these warned of the menace of Communism and urged defiance of the U.S. Supreme Court’s mandate to de-segregate schools. She even denounced her former self.

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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?