Entries Tagged as 'Journalism'

Thursday, May 12th, 2011

Twitpic: the price of free online services

Apparently Twitter users are cross because Twitter-friendly image upload service Twitpic has changed its terms to allow it to sell on users’ uploaded images for a profit. Yes – it’s annoying. And yes, it flies in the face of what copyright law intends. But, you know, that’s what happens when we get used to the […]

Wednesday, May 4th, 2011

Why the AV referendum will struggle for turnout

Here’s the level of argument in the “Yes” and “No” camps for the Alternative Vote referendum tomorrow. “Yes”: a motley band of comedians and actors think it’s a really good idea. Hmm – I never knew Honor Blackman had all that expertise in electoral reform. “No”: Nick Clegg likes it and nobody likes Nick Clegg. […]

Friday, April 29th, 2011

Need more traffic to your serious media blog? Try the gutter

It seems the gutter is just the place to be to divert a load of bottom-feeding traffic from Google’s door to your high-minded publication. Here are six of the top ten search strings to find Freelance Unbound yesterday: andrew marr affair andrew marr affair with who did andrew marr have an affair with who did […]

Thursday, April 28th, 2011

Sky recycles four-year-old press release for latest Royal Wedding story

Sky seems to be desperate to run anything about the Royal Wedding at the moment – hence this slightly ungracious pop at the economics of the couple’s big day: Extra Bank Holiday to cost Britain billions. As many retailers benefit from a Royal Wedding consumer spending spree, it is claimed the extra bank holiday will cost […]

Wednesday, April 27th, 2011

Andrew Marr and Helen Mirren – the affair that never was…

Discovered while idly Googling the latest tabloid media exposé – a Daily Mail profile of Dame Helen Mirren from a couple of years ago. Not only does it feature the Mail’s trademark obsession with mature female celebrities in swimsuits, it also has an ironic Andrew Marr  super-injunction connection: Despite being happily married, the veteran of […]

Wednesday, April 27th, 2011

Is offering bribes to bloggers any different from old-style PR sweeteners for journalists?

Paul Bradshaw has a timely post here on the legal position of bloggers who accept payment or other incentives to post content on behalf of brands or other interests. It’s a warning to the sponsors of this as much as anyone – Bradshaw points out that a PR firm offering entry into a prize draw […]

Wednesday, April 27th, 2011

No money in classified advertising? Thank goodness sex sells…

Here’s a fantastic argument against the privacy super-injunction by journalism professor Tim Luckhurst in today’s Sun. Essentially it boils down to this: Without stories about sex and celebs to attract readers, this country will lose popular papers that for over a century have made it a genuine people’s democracy. So – the key reason it […]

Tuesday, April 26th, 2011

Police overdo Royal Wedding adjective strategy

How many more adjectives can be used to describe the policing style for the Royal Wedding? So far we have “robust, decisive, flexible and proportionate”. Robust and flexible? Decisive and proportionate? Hard and soft? Focused and diffuse? Please just decide what one policing style you will use and then stick to it. It’ll make your […]

Tuesday, April 12th, 2011

Death of the Flip video camera will hit multimedia journalism students

Cisco has pulled the plug on its Flip video product, perhaps signalling the end of the cheap, simple standalone video camera. It’s a shame, not least for journalism departments, which have moved in on the product as a good way of giving all students access to half-way decent video technology. The Guardian report makes the […]

Friday, April 8th, 2011

Alcohol and the media – the ugly truth

This morning’s report on the Today programme that “one-in-10 of all cancers in men and one-in-33 of all cancers in women are caused by past or current alcohol intake” must have come as a bit of a shock (source: BMJ). After all, it was only a month or so ago that we were told that […]