|
Wednesday, August 31, 2005
|
|
|
A busy first week of school has made for light blogging this week,
along with horrific news to talk about in class... but here's a little
good news -- that SouthKnox Bubba
has returned, in his secret identity as "R
Neal," standing in for a week at the Facing South weblog.
It's temporary, but he's doing a few of the things that attracted me to
his old blog, and should be a good way to start a discussion in class.
What's he doing?
- Watching the news and pointing out stop-you-in-your-tracks images in words: "...seeing someone with the remains of a loved one they can't even bury,
wrapped in sheets, waiting by a flooded road for someone to tell them
what to do with the body..."
- Adding some "local knowledge" background about a recent issue, in this case racial tension in at a nearby high school:
"Most of Blount County's relatively small minority population (2.9%
black and 94.7% white compared to 16.4% black and 80.2% white
statewide), resides in a small area within the city of Alcoa. Approx.
58% of the county[base ']s black high school students attend Alcoa High School
(30% black and 70% white)... The others remain mostly white (Heritage
High 98%, William
Blount High 96%, and Maryville High 93% white enrollment). Given those
statistics, you[base ']d think the recent racial tensions began in Alcoa.
You[base ']d be wrong."
- Doing some original interviewing: Six questions for Tennessee State Senator Rosalind Kurita.
- Hosting "comment" discussions at the end of each post. (Comments aren't the full-blown "Bubba Blab" of old, but here's its independent successor, KnoxBlab.)
- Sharing excellent original photographs, now at "rviews.com."
The first three items I've listed (and more) are SKB's contributions as
a guest blogger this week for the "Facing South" blog in Durham,
N.C.
The rviews photo journal appears to be his new online home, and I
certainly look forward to more birds, more nature and travel shots, and
(I hope) a return of his funny, pointed Photoshop creations or
captioned collections like his tourist photo-essay of Pigeon Forge he
had on his old site.
Journalism students should take a look at all of the above. Unlike the
"news writing" we start you out with in journalism schools (the style
that traditionally can help you find a newspaper or broadcast news
job), most bloggers don't miind mixing personal or political opinions
with their reports -- but most who do mix it up also make it clear
where they're coming from. (Note the not-subtle subtitle of Facing
South, "blogging for a progressive South.") The "older media" often
portray bloggers as couch potatoes in pajamas typing out political
rants or personal trivia, but there are many who do try live , personal
reporting in fresh ways.
Some local blogs for comparison include law prof Glenn Reynolds' Instapundit
(clear perspective, but no reader-comments -- legions of link-followers
probably would sink the computer), and pro-journalist bloggers like Michael Silence and Katie Allison Granju.
Here's a whole Rocky Top Brigade of links for further inspection.
8:56:42 PM
|
|
|
|
© Copyright
2008
Bob Stepno.
Last update:
7/19/08; 1:08:19 PM.
|
|
|