Videos of Ira Glass, the host of NPR’s “This American Life” radio show, talking about storytelling.
ED ARNOLD ~ Remembrances from four friends
“Long before the term design was ever associated with newspapers, there was Ed Arnold. Long before there were Macs, or QuarkXPress, or SND, there was Ed Arnold. In the book of newspaper design, Ed Arnold is the Genesis — the prologue to a rich story of how our craft developed. And the trailblazer — a lone, but resounding, and articulate, voice. I can’t think of anyone else who could sit with a non-believing publisher and editor and convince them that packaging the news attractively was the key to getting readers to pay attention.”
Comments Off
Wires Reject Handout Photo Of Bush Speech
The White House broke with tradition Wednesday night and refused to let photojournalists shoot still pictures of the president at the podium after his prime-time address on the Iraq war. As a result, newspapers and wire services had little choice but to run low-quality frame grabs from the video of the speech. An official handout photo from the White House, which most news outlets rejected, was the only other option.”
A fundamental way newspaper sites need to change
“…the goal for me, a data person focused more on the long term, is to store information in the most valuable format possible. The problem is particularly frustrating to explain because it’s not necessarily obvious; if you store everything on your Web site as a news article, the Web site is not necessarily hard to use. Rather, it’s a problem of lost opportunity. If all of your information is stored in the same ‘news article’ bucket, you can’t easily pull out just the crimes and plot them on a map of the city. You can’t easily grab the events to create an event calendar. You end up settling on the least common denominator: a Web site that knows how to display one type of content, a big blob of text. That Web site cannot do the cool things that readers are beginning to expect.”
Comments Off
How to sell more newspapers
“Everyone wants to sell more papers. Everyone is doing everything they can and virtually no one is succeeding. Why? Because almost every effort is too narrowly focused. What the industry needs is an enterprise-wide solution, beginning with a focus on the goal of selling more newspapers. Here are the steps…”
Comments Off
The Press’ New Paradigm
“Watergate also changed America, in ways that journalism hasn’t evolved to handle. In the three-and-a-half decades since Woodstein’s stories first began appearing in The Washington Post, while journalists have been busy honing their ability to uncover hidden information, the world has become a place where the scarcity of info isn’t the biggest problem. Its proliferation is. And by and large, journalism organizations don’t have the skills or tools to sort through all the data.” (Thanks kottke.org!)
Comments Off
It’s time to redesign the Society for News Design
“Last month the Society for News Design announced the 1,136 winners of their 27th Annual Creative Competition. This is not the first time the number of winners exceeded 10³, which begs the question: What other organization gives its members more than a thousand awards a year? The Pulitzer Prize Board gives 21 awards. Does SND believe that the appearance of words is 50 times more noteworthy than the meaning of words? I hope not. The Nobel Foundation grants six awards for things that are clearly more important than ‘overall redesign of a regularly appearing newspaper section.’ ‘Nuff said.”
Comments Off
“Reimagining” the Wall Street Journal
“St. Pete Times media critic Eric Deggans has a feature in today’s paper on Mario Garcia and his ‘reimagining’ of the Wall Street Journal, which will launch a redesigned and narrower paper next year.”
Comments Off
Why They Got it Wrong, How They Got it Right
“Today’s the day editors of newspapers who got caught out by bad information [about the West Virginia mining tragedy] yesterday try to explain what went wrong. Jay Rosen rounds up some of the explanations. And L.A. Observed illuminates how the L.A. Times, for one, got it right with a memo from Assistant Managing Editor John Arthur…”
Comments Off
Toronto Star removes registration from thestar.com
“The Toronto Star and thestar.com announced today that the Company has removed the mandatory registration feature from its Internet site, making it even easier for readers to access Toronto’s best site for local, continuously updated news, blogs and information. ‘We believe that in order to be competitive in the online news and information space, growth of both audience and page impressions will be the cornerstone of our success. Further, we believe that the key to that growth is through the removal of all barriers, including registration,’ said Michael Goldbloom, Publisher, Toronto Star.”
Comments Off


