Posted on September 17th, 2007 by Deborah Potter
“If only his eyes were open…” “If only that clock were not behind his head…” Jack Zibluck, who teaches photojournalism at Arkansas State University, says the only way to deal with these musings is to say “No.” Just because you can make a photo better by asking a subject to move or “fixing” the background [...]
Filed under: 11. Multimedia Ethics | No Comments »
Posted on September 17th, 2007 by Deborah Potter
How can you share data quickly and easily online? KHOU-TV in Houston, Texas, used simple PDF maps. Reporter Mark Greenblatt says in The IRE Journal that his station didn’t have time to buy mapping software or train the Web staff to use it, so they created PDF files of neighborhood maps showing where aggravated assaults [...]
Filed under: 03. Multimedia Newsgathering, 06. Multimedia Storytelling | No Comments »
Posted on September 17th, 2007 by Deborah Potter
Good advice from Bob Woodward of Watergate fame: Reporters should remember that investigative journalism is a lot like “what TV’s Columbo does.” Two stories from a new biography of Woodward and Carl Bernstein make the point. When the five burglars were arrested at the Watergate, Woodward asks, What do you do? Do you go over [...]
Filed under: 02. Finding the Story, 04. Reporting in Depth | No Comments »