Industry

Journalists making money? New U says yes!

August 6, 2010 by aajavoices

NEWU

Mariel Myers with Mentor Kaizar Campwala and fellow New U participant Toan Lam during the New U bootcamp. Courtesy: Doug Mitchell

By Van Tieu
Voices

Investors are from Mars and journalists are from Venus. And Mariella Meyers knew she needed some major interplanetary translation.

For three years, Meyers had nurtured an idea she believes could revolutionize local news– a business that focused on customizable mobile local newscasts. But she had no business background, only 14 years on news production.

So Meyers went looking for a way to learn how to sell investors on the idea. She found it at AAJA with the New U Entrepreneurship program for journalists. Its mission is to teach journalists how to create a sustainable business model and how to pitch it effectively.

“We want to level the playing field. The only way you can do that is to speak the language of investors,” say Doug Mitchell, co-director of New U.

From basic economics to presentation, participants got a two-day crash course introduction into the world of business and how to conquer it.

“We’re helping to create a brand from scratch to these budding entrepreneurs who used to be journalists,” says Alli Joseph, co-director of New U.

And the business boot-camp is the real deal.  Five thousand dollars are at stake for the participants. Immediately following the workshops, each mentee taped a 15-minute presentation and a 30-second elevator pitch of for a panel of judges. This fall, AAJA members will be able to view the videos and vote for the winner.

“It is kind of set up like American Idol,” Mitchell explained.

Myers had just three weeks to put together her presentation. While juggling her day-time job, her two young sons, and a start-up production company, Myers polished her idea into a viable business model during lunch breaks and late nights at Starbucks.

“After giving my presentation, I even made changes to my elevator speech based on the critique the judges gave me,” says Myers.

Teaching journalists of color the ins and outs of the business side is key in ensuring diversity in media. There is a noticeable gap in the type of in the type of people who receive funding for start-up businesses, says Mitchell. Of all venture capital companies, whites represent 87 percent, while Asians make up 12 percent, and blacks one percent, according to CB Insights research firm.

In part, New U was also created because of the economic downturn. As lay-offs were plaguing the industry, journalists of color were being swept out the door, says Doug.

New U provides a chance for journalists to create their own opportunities.

After days of intensive coaching, Myers said she’s seen that first hand.

“I used to joke with people that, ‘I only do news. I only do editorial’,” says Myers, “I’ve been in this world for so long. Business people are a whole different breed of people.”

Now, Myers is able to speak their language.


Industry

ABC’s of the American Dream: Asian women spell out success

Issue of race can also be a hovering cloud of doubt. Does it matter? Does it hurt?

August 6, 2010 by aajavoices

Mei-Mei Chan

Mei-Mei Chan during a conference call. (AAJA Voices Staff/Vivian Wong)

By Angela Chen
Voices

In second grade, 7-year-old Mei-Mei Chan got F’s on her spelling tests.

The world of English was oceans away from her childhood in Canton, China. And in this, her struggle began in spelling the word “alphabet” with an alphabet that wasn’t her own.

But her linguistic struggles are long gone. Now a journalism giant, she is the quintessential example of the American Dream and upward mobility.

Chan, the president and publisher of The News-Press in Fort Myers, Fla., is one of three panelists who talked shop at AAJA’s “Stories of Success” presentation on Thursday. She joined Mi-Ai Parrish, publisher of the Idaho Statesman, and Jeannie Park, former executive editor of People magazine, in a talk-show style chat about career struggles.

Parrish and Chan are two of only three Asian American mainstream media publishers in the nation, according to Jinah Kim, a reporter for NBC News who moderated the talk. Parrish is the only Korean-American publisher of major U.S. paper.

Kim’s questions ranged from politics to lifestyle balance and battling stereotypes.

“The magic of America is something never to take for granted,” Chan said. “America is the land of opportunity, the golden mountain…  we have an obligation to give back.”
Chan is a firm believer in the American Dream, and why not? Her life’s work affirms its effectiveness.

All panelists agreed that hard work is an inextricable part of the equation in rising through the ranks. Unfortunately, U.S. society is not a meritocracy, and hard work alone will not get you where you want to go, according to Chan.

“Thinking I’m going to do the best and it’s going to speak for itself — that’s not always the case,” Chan said. “Power and politics are a way of life, and you have to be attuned to the nuances along the way.”

Those nuances were not lost on Park during her career.

“Hey, Jeannie,” Kim said, while the panel was discussing politics, “Tell the people here your ‘F you’ story.”

Park laughed, the audience shifted eagerly, and the former editor explained. At an old job with a “contentious atmosphere” and combative morning meetings, Park was one of few who didn’t engage in the nastiness.

“I was actively looking for ways to make an impression,” Park said. “So my boss stopped me one day and said ‘You know everybody’s always fighting and yelling but you get the job done and you’re still really nice.”

Park mulled that comment over on the way back to her computer, and after a while, decided to send her boss an email.

“I sent an email with the message, ‘I just don’t want you to think I’m that nice,’ in the body,” Park said. “And in the subject line, I wrote ‘F— you.’”

Her boss called a minute later and laughed about the email with her. The email made its point, and it elicited the right response because Park knew her audience.

Kim asked next about balance and constant tug-of-war between family and work.

“You can’t have it all,” Parrish said. This job’s not for everyone. I don’t sleep a ton.”

Park agreed: “I dealt with it every stage of my life, and when kids came along, all that went out the window. But you know, I became efficient as a mom. I got in, knew what I was doing — none of that hallway yakking!”

The issue of race can also be a hovering cloud of doubt. Does it matter? Does it hurt? Benefit? It can be easy to blame race for not getting the job or promotion you want, and it would be naïve to discount it. However, it’s important to avoid pouncing to that factor whenever something undesirable happens.

“Know that the world’s not out to get you,” said Parrish. The Korean-American publisher, who’s been erroneously pegged as Mexican many times, pointed out that ignorance is not malicious. “They just don’t know any better,” she said.

In the hour-and-a-half with this half-circle of power, the women were full of enthusiasm and anecdotes. Tips suggested Asians be a louder part of the conversation and encouraged bold moves designed to make ears perk and eyes pop — but to never forget to be self-aware and self-assessing on the way to the topl.

- @angelawchen


Industry

Seeking a broadcast career? Learn to be versatile

August 6, 2010 by aajavoices

By Pimpan Jongchirawongsa
Voices

So your career goal is to work in the broadcast industry as a field reporter, news anchor, or maybe a producer.

But what does it take to break into the broadcast industry today, and how can you prepare yourself?

Regardless of the position or the size of the market you want to start in, the competitive nature of the broadcast industry combined with the recent economic crisis may stir up a feeling of anxiety for many aspiring journalists.

Randall Yip, senior producer of the consumer unit at KGO-TV in San Francisco, says that the economic crisis has led to many staff cutbacks. Many journalists have had to take on more than one task – writing, shooting, and even editing their own pieces.

This used to apply only to the journalists in smaller markets. Not anymore – everyone’s having to wear more hats, often with less pay.

“I am now responsible for not only producing and writing my stories, but I must now often serve as my own photographer and editor. These new responsibilities mean I must spend a greater amount of time working on a story while the number of stories I am expected to produce remain the same.”

Yip says the broadcast industry demands even more than that.

“Some news outlets have made the big leap to multi-media journalism. Everyone is expected to turn stories on multiple platforms – TV, print, radio and the web. Other news outlets are slowly making the transition. For instance, at ABC7, reporters are expected to first write a story for the web and then later produce that same story for television.”

For aspiring journalists, developing a broad set of skills is crucial because it will be very useful in helping you gain entrance into an industry that is constantly evolving.

“As a student, you need to be a multimedia journalist because you don’t really know what direction journalism is headed. It’s important to learn a little bit of everything so when you’re put in that situation at your first job, you’re familiar with what to do.”

Aside from taking journalism courses, how else can you develop these skills?

One way is by getting as much hands-on experience as possible. Patti Lee, reporter at KTVU in Oakland, Calif., says new media offers new opportunities.

“There may only be three traditional news stations in a city, but there are other outlets for reporters, including online news services, blogs and social networks.”

Even if there isn’t a TV station at your university, “produce the stories on your own and put it up on the web so you have something to show somebody,” Yip says.

Yip also mentioned that obtaining internships while in college is very helpful because you can take advantage of the opportunity to get your work critiqued by professional journalists.

However, he warned that securing a lot of internships could also work against you if you have nothing to show for them.

“Internships are more learning by observing. It’s important to take what you learn and put it to good use in stories you can use for school or volunteer work.”

Essentially, translate the skills you learned from your internships to create pieces you can showcase when applying for a job.

For Shanna Mendiola, a reporter for KTVZ/KFXO NewsChannel 21 in Bend, Ore., internships can show you how the industry is in the real world.

“You only get so much out of school, but by putting yourself in a real situation you see if you can do the job and you learn a lot on the job as well.”

But there’s more to it than just applying for the internship and getting it. Taking initiative to get what you want out of the internship is also important.

“You have to make the most out of it. Ask a lot of questions and you’ll get more in return because people aren’t just going to tell you,” says Mendiola.

Lee adds, “If you want to put a tape together, you have to push for that. Come in on days that you’re not scheduled, ask for reporters to take you out,”

Whether it is reporting for your school’s TV station, posting your own videos on YouTube or obtaining internships, all of these experiences add to the knowledge you can bring when applying to your first position.

Standing out in a group of other aspiring journalists can be a challenge. So what else can you do?

“Put yourself at the top by learning how to do everyone’s job,” Mendiola emphasizes.

“People competing with you might only know how to do one job, but if you know how to do everything – produce, edit, shoot your video – you are on top of their list – you’re just what they’re looking for.“

She also advises applicants to “put the most interesting stories with the most interesting visuals on your tape because that’s what will keep news directors looking. The story ideas you come up with can’t just be fluff. Really think about what news stations are doing – hard news.”

“Show them you’re hungry and show them your ability to adapt to various situations,” Yip says.

From writing or producing a good story to editing a piece on time, you have to be able to respond to the changing demands of the newsroom.

“Those are the people who are going to make it, the people who are most adaptable to every situation they are thrown into.”

Yip advises aspiring journalists to really think about why they want to become a reporter, editor, writer or producer. He says to learn how to write, shoot, edit and even upload videos on the Internet.

Yip also shares that this industry is more than just glitz and glamour.

“Your desire to be on television may be your initial reason for getting into journalism, but it has to be more than just wanting to be on TV. You have to really think about why being a journalist is important in society.”

When asked about reporting, Mendiola says, “It’s more than just what people think – you go out there and ask questions and you write a story. It’s being able to be a detective, being a good communicator, writing stories in a way that’s comprehendable to people and being very knowledgeable about everything.”

For Lee, making friends in the industry plays a huge role. Lee says that the friends you make are frequently the ones who will get you your job because they are the ones who will let you know about opportunities and be willing to be references.

As an undergraduate or graduate student pursuing a career in journalism, don’t let the cutbacks or competition in the broadcast industry drive you out. Instead, take initiative and advantage of the various opportunities and resources available to you because it can make you the perfect candidate for that dream job.


Industry

Citizen journalists redefine rules of reporting

August 5, 2010 by aajavoices

By Elizabeth Gyori
Voices

In the midst of a loud rally, Alex Kane could be seen conducting interviews and scribbling down notes as protesters chanted and marched.

But he didn’t have a press pass, and he didn’t report back to a newsroom.

Kane is part of a growing movement known as citizen journalism.

“(I) do my job as a reporter – talking to people, quoting people and writing it up as a news story – but also doing it as a citizen,” Kane said.

He doesn’t have any formal training, and he doesn’t make a living reporting the news. Rather, he pursues journalism on the side while attending Marymount Manhattan College and serving as president of the Student Political Association.

But Kane does the job, he said, because he likes being able to report from an alternative angle. The Average Joe-turned-reporter like Kane is often unpaid and therefore unchained by the restrictions commonly associated with mainstream media.

“I definitely see how I do my reporting in a much different way than the (New York) Times or The Washington Post,” Kane said. “I’m not constrained by the pressures of advertisers or the usual constraints that the corporate media has.”

Not only does he write for newspapers like the Indypendent, a free, tri-weekly New York-based newspaper, he also blogs for Mondoweiss, a blog about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Kane’s most recent piece for the Indypendent, “Palestine Solidarity: One Woman’s Journey,” features Debbie Mardon, a New York resident who transforms from an “apolitical mother” with a soft spot for right-wing pundits into a dedicated activist for Palestinian liberation.

“I think it’s important that another perspective be presented for current times, but also that it is important that these stories be reported for history as well – to show that there was a struggle, that there was a resistance, that people are fighting back and struggling for survival and for justice,” said Jaisal Noor, another citizen journalist.

Noor, a history graduate of the University of Maryland, is a production assistant for Democracy Now! and an educator at the New York Historical Society.

Marc Cooper, a journalism professor at the University of Southern California and director of USC Annenberg Digital News, said that the freedom allowed by citizen journalism has helped it grow exponentially – and it’s threatening corporate media.

“We live in a time of radical media revolution in which the monopoly of ownership of the means of information has been broken. Those means are now in the hands of anyone with a computer or a smart phone,” Cooper said.

To Cooper, taking a picture or writing a Facebook entry at the right time can now be considered a piece of journalism.

But fellow USC professor Joe Saltzman, Director of Image of the Journalist in Popular Culture, believes citizen journalism is still flawed.

“The original citizen journalism concept … is still tentative and filled with errors of omission, prejudice, political bias and special interests,” Saltzman said.

Saltzman therefore believes the future of citizen journalism depends on the quality of what is reported by citizens and their commitment to providing all sides of the story.

Even so, news sources such as CBS, CNN and the British Broadcasting Corporation have begun to incorporate citizen journalism.

“Journalism as we know it is dead,” Cooper said.


Industry

Today’s journalism debate: Be first, or be right?

August 5, 2010 by aajavoices
Anne Reifenberg

Anne Reifenberg, a recruiter from Bloomberg, shows job offerings to Tia Ghose, an intern at the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel at the AAJA Career Fair & Expo. (AAJA Voices Staff/Vivian Wong)

By Jackelyn Ho
Voices

They call it news for a reason. All across America, people are fighting to be the first to know the latest trending topics – before it even happens.

Whether it’s the need for higher ratings, more website hits, or simply bragging rights, many newsrooms are slowly morphing from “accurate, fair, and honest” into “immediate” journalism. No one wants to be the last to know.

Suddenly, the competition has become fiercer: instant status updates, tweets, and blogs. Journalists who’ve been formally trained to report news are now up against citizen journalists.

Zahrah Farmer, producer and host of the video series “Days with Zahrah,” believes in equal opportunities for everyone – professional or not – saying, “I think everyone has the right to tell their story.”

Angie Lau, co-director of AAJA’s J Camp and anchor for Bloomberg, adds on, “I think that society is well-served when there are a lot of voices out there reporting, observing. Sometimes they are professionally trained journalists but sometimes they are just from somebody who witnessed an event in history.”

On the other hand, social media users just want to be the first person in their network to update their status, and news outlets desire that first sound bite. This results in a loss of detail and meaning to stories. Farmer believes this is a habit that has formed over time, saying “the media is ultimately trying to entertain, and this is what drives content.”

Gone are the days of reading and watching detailed news reports. In a five-month study done by the Poynter Institute called “EyeTrack07,” researchers studied reading behaviors within a control group.

The results showed that the stories that received the most attention were briefs, editorials, and ones with graphics. An overwhelming 53-percent of newspaper readers scanned headlines first and then their attention shifted to other headlines or pictures before settling on a story to read. After deciding on an article, many resorted to skimming through the content rather than thoroughly reading all the details.

“The attention span of our audience is nil,” said Douglas Gey, professor of television production at Laney College in Oakland, Calif. “We are a visual society and it’s not bad, but it’s just the way we’re going.”

Social media sites such as Twitter and Facebook may be great for spreading awareness, but they are also contributing to the growth of short attention spans. EyeTrack07 results showed that a rare percentage of readers want the full story, preferring quick sentences over long, descriptive paragraphs.

Although the news industry is constantly changing, journalists are urged to stick to their ground. Gey stresses the importance of being a a reliable source for the public by reporting the facts and remaining unbiased.

In filtering the many news sources that are available today, Lau says credibility is the main draw. “The consumer needs to understand where their information is coming from and take it with a grain of salt,” she said.

The industry is made up of individual journalists. If each person continues to report honestly and accurately, then the fear for quick journalism will dissipate. Whether it’s a citizen or professional journalist, precision is key. If done correctly, attention span will be the least of worries. At the end of the day, all of America will get the headlines, but it means nothing if what was intended as “news” turn out to be “wrongs.”


Industry

Publishers, media bank on e-readers as next big hit

August 5, 2010 by aajavoices

By Candice Nguyen
Voices

Waking up to a hot cup of joe and an e-reader may not be part of your morning routine, but it could be soon. In just 80 days, Apple sold more than three million iPads, while Amazon sold more than two million of its Kindles since its release.

That kind of rapid adaptation is reminiscent of the revolutionary way Apple’s iPod made listening to music convenient and easy.

But will the iPad be the new iPod?  Book publishers and other media companies hope so.

Since 2002, the publishing industry has experienced shrinking profit margins, slashed expenditures and a multitude of layoffs. U.S. book sales fell nearly 2 percent last year, causing major publishers to focus their attention to e-book sales, which tripled to $313 million, according to the Association of American Publishers. Publishers receive about 35 percent of the e-book’s initial retail price, in comparison to the 13 percent they receive from a hardcover book sale.

Mike Shatzkin, a publishing industry consultant, predicts e-book sales could rise to 20 to 25 percent of the entire book market by 2012. E-books currently amount to only 3 to 5 percent of total sales, although that figure is set to go up, according to the International Digital Publishing Forum.

Book publishing companies aren’t the only ones hoping to profit from e-readers. Newspaper and magazine companies also look toward the iPad as a lifeline out of dwindling advertising opportunities. Good news, though: As of June, many companies are paying newspapers and magazines up to five times more to place ads on iPad applications than on regular websites.

According to an internal memo made public, the Wall Street Journal application brought in $2.4 million in sales since it was released on the iPad. It sold $400,000 packages to companies, which included two ad pages on the paper and $100,000 in online ads. According to Jay Yarow of The Business Insider, it took less than a week for the WSJ to sign on six advertisers since the launch of its application.

But will e-readers save the publishing and media industry?

“The iPad is a second chance,” said Jon McVey, the Executive Creative Director for Seattle interactive design agency ZAAZ. “Publishers first tried to bring their print content to the Web, but they didn’t do it right. … Publishers are seeing the iPad as a do-over, another opportunity at doing digital right. It’s a godsend to them.”

However, McVey is hopeful that the iPad’s interactive capabilities will boost revenue. “On the iPad, not only can you go deeper in the editorial content, you can also read a review, and then buy the soundtrack, watch the trailer, buy the movie tickets, etc.,” he said.

Although some worry the high price of new e-readers will deter the kind of rapid adaptation that made iPods ubiquitous, tablets could get cheaper. The cheapest Apple iPad with 16GB and Wi-Fi is currently priced at $499. A person can easily spend more than $800 if 3G access is added, and that’s without accessories or apps. To compete, Barnes & Noble and Amazon recently cut their tablet prices to under $200.

Find Candice on Twitter at @candinguyen


Industry

What sites work for journalists?

August 5, 2010 by aajavoices

By Lynne Guey
Voices

Amid the deluge of websites claiming to be the “most knowledgeable” source on everything and anything known to mankind, it is understandable that today’s consumers complain of information overload.

Read the rest of this entry »


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