Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Fulbright Blog

I recently introduced that I will be covering the Gordon College Fulbright scholar, Dr. Akintola. I have decided that instead of blogging about him on BecomingLoisLane, I will create a separate blog. The link to this blog is:

http://gordonfulbright.blogspot.com/

Check it out!

Friday, October 16, 2009

Make Yourself Unique

Mike Williams, the station manager of WDHD Channel 7 of Boston, has spent more than a handful of years working his way up the ladder of professional success. “The only limits you have in this business are the ones you place on yourself,” said Williams. As I spent time touring the news station in downtown Boston, I met and conversed with people from all areas of production and if there is one thing I learned, it is that hard work and creativity equals success. In order to stand out and make an impression in the field of journalism, you have to make an effort and be unique, Williams said.

An interesting idea that Williams raised was the idea that broadcast stations are becoming obsolete and outdated. “We don’t believe that in the long run there will be very many news stations," he said, stating that cost is rising and viewership is waning, and that will put many stations out of business in the future. If this is true, online publications are even more important. Nearly six-in-ten Americans younger than 30 say they get their national and international news online. Since I’m such a verification junkie, this idea impresses the fact of how important online news really is, and how it must follow the elements of journalism if it needs to be the truth if it is going to empower the public with knowledge.

So, taking Mike Williams’ advice to heart, I’ve decided that in addition to blogging about verification, I am also going to post about my work. Right now, I’m taking the time to introduce my latest project. From October 19 until November 7, 2009, Gordon College will be hosting Dr. Is-haq Akintola, it’s first ever Fulbright scholar. Dr. Atkintola focuses his studies on the peaceful teachings of Islam and he is the associate professor of Islamic studies at Lagos State University in Nigeria, a country where tensions have risen sharply between Christians and Muslims in the past decade.

As a college communications worker at Gordon, I have been assigned to be Dr. Akintola’s point person. I will be following him to his different lectures and events and keeping tabs on the issues and topics that arise on a daily basis, the questions posed, and the community’s reactions and responses. I plan on using my Fulbright assignment and Becoming Lois Lane as a tangible way to expose and delve more deeply into the elements and ethics of journalism. The first of which being, how does one cover a story like this?

Stay tuned. . .

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Verify! Verify! Verify!

Have you ever had someone tell you something that you thought wasn't true? Have you ever had someone tell you something that you know isn't true? When someone tells me something I know isn't right I get this prickling feeling on the back of my neck and my face gets hot. In other words, I get on fire for verification.

The other day, some classmates and I took a trip to a company that works for social justices issues. The founder of this company talked to us about his projects and missions and was even kind enough to print us out some graphs and charts demonstrating his points. Unfortunately, as he started throwing statistics our way, I started to wonder where these "facts" came from. Finally, I could stand it no longer and I raised my hand. Asking this man where his information came from, his response was, "basically, I'm from the hood," meaning that the figures were his estimates that he compiled from living in an urban environment for many, many years. Of course you can guess what happened next . . . those journalistic, truth-seeking bells started going off in my head.

Don't get me wrong-- this man is doing great things for people in need. The problem here is that he could be doing even greater things by passing on knowledge to others that is factually based . In other words, verified information.Think about this opportunity-- a group of fifteen college juniors and seniors getting ready to go out into the world and wanting to make a difference. This information could really kick-start someones social justice engine. They could pass the statistics on to others who could pass it on to others and so on and so forth. Knowledge is power. The possibilities are endless, but without truth as a foundational element, no causes can get far.

This concept of verification gets driven home in light of The Atlantic’s recent article “The Story Behind the Story,” which demonstrates the distinction between being a journalist and being a citizen, in this case a blogger, with an agenda. This article is basically about an active, right-wing political blogger, Morgen Richmond, who spent his time “cruising the Internet looking for ideas and information for his blogging.” Richmond found dirt on the then-nominated U.S. Circuit Court Judge Sonia Sotomayor, which he posted on his blog and on YouTube and was then quickly picked up again and again by many different news stations and media outlets. Richmond was a blogger with a political agenda, not a journalist with “an allegiance to facts and truthful conclusions that worked for his readers” (Elements of Journalism 116). In a matter of hours, information was broadcast across the Internet, television and radio about a political candidate that was information not researched as truth that a citizen needs to make their own decisions about a candidate, but research done for the sake of finding dirt so an ‘opponent’ can look bad. That is not journalism.

According to Mark Bowden, author of article, “Work formerly done by reporters and producers is now routinely performed by political operatives and amateur ideologies of one stripe or another, whose goal is not to educate the public but to win… Americans increasingly choose to listen only to their own side of the argument, to bloggers and commentators who reinforce their convictions and paint the world only in acceptable, comfortable colors.” Journalism needs to be a public forum, independent from faction. The news must be built on foundational elements of truth so that the truth can set citizens free from stereotypes and bias and allow them to make their own educated, factually based decisions. Knowledge gives us that power.


What do you think?

Words of Wisdom...


"The only limits you have in this business are the ones you place on yourself. Every day is different, no two days are the same-- find something you enjoy and have a passion for and you will be successful."


--Mike Williams, Boston 7News Station Manager