Bob Stepno's Other Journalism Weblog
Explorations of personal and community journalism...
Traditional, Alternative, Online...
The new TAO of newspapers?























Subscribe to "Bob Stepno's Other Journalism Weblog" in Radio UserLand.

Click to see the XML version of this web page.

Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.


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    comment []


Click here to visit the Radio UserLand website. © Copyright 2008 Bob Stepno.
Last update: 7/19/08; 1:08:19 PM.
August 2005
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
  1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31      
Jul   Sep