Home

Jan. 2nd, 2008

blackbooks, verb, raft, marat, mystic, healthcare, party, turtle

Must-read

Via Adrian Monck:

"You Don't Understand Our Audience"
What I learned about network television at Dateline NBC.

By John Hockenberry (Techonology Review)

I can't recommend it enough, especially if TV is your main news source. And there are just too many choice quotes.

At the moment Zucker blew in and interrupted, I had been in Corvo's office to propose a series of stories about al-Qaeda, which was just emerging as a suspect in the attacks. While well known in security circles and among journalists who tried to cover international Islamist movements, al-Qaeda as a terrorist organization and a story line was still obscure in the early days after September 11. It had occurred to me and a number of other journalists that a core mission of NBC News would now be to explain, even belatedly, the origins and significance of these organizations. But Zucker insisted that Dateline stay focused on the firefighters. The story of firefighters trapped in the crumbling towers, Zucker said, was the emotional center of this whole event.

[...]

This was one in a series of lessons I learned about how television news had lost its most basic journalistic instincts in its search for the audience-driven sweet spot, the "emotional center" of the American people. Gone was the mission of using technology to veer out onto the edge of American understanding in order to introduce something fundamentally new into the national debate. The informational edge was perilous, it was unpredictable, and it required the news audience to be willing to learn something it did not already know. Stories from the edge were not typically reassuring about the future. In this sense they were like actual news, unpredictable flashes from the unknown. On the other hand, the coveted emotional center was reliable, it was predictable, and its story lines could be duplicated over and over. It reassured the audience by telling it what it already knew rather than challenging it to learn. This explains why TV news voices all use similar cadences, why all anchors seem to sound alike, why reporters in the field all use the identical tone of urgency no matter whether the story is about the devastating aftermath of an earthquake or someone's lost kitty.

On advertisers understanding TV audiences better than news anchors:
That disjunction remains: at the precise moment that Apple cast John Hodgman and Justin Long as dead-on avatars of the PC and the Mac, news anchors on networks that ran those ads were introducing people to multibillion-dollar phenomena like MySpace and Facebook with the cringingly naïve attitude of "What will those nerds think of next?"

Entertainment programs often took on issues that would never fly on Dateline. On a Thursday night, ER could do a story line on the medically uninsured, but a night later, such a "downer policy story" was a much harder sell. In the time I was at NBC, you were more likely to hear federal agriculture policy discussed on The West Wing, or even on Jon Stewart, than you were to see it reported in any depth on Dateline.

There's more, so much more about the stories that get dropped from the news. Link to the article
Tags: ,

Oct. 6th, 2006

blackbooks, verb, raft, marat, mystic, healthcare, party, turtle

Wake up!

It wasn't the Sharon Harris Nuclear Plant, thank god, but the air and ground water and everything in and around Apex, Cary and probably the Triangle area is going to be screwed for a while:

BREAKING: Chlorine Gas Cloud Threatens NC Suburb

(CHLORINE? CHLORINE? I know Chlorine is bad, but you're kidding me if you think that's the worst thing that's going to be released from a fire at chemical facility. The fire has even spread to a petroleum plant next door. Yum.)

[info]jlundberg is less than 10 miles from the fire, I'm over 3,000 miles away and wound up being the one waking him with the news (I started reading about this at 4am his time) and urging to get the hell out of there before the rest of the populace wakes up. Unfortunately, he can't get a hold of his parents, who are even closer to it.

Link to map

Aurgh, the shit that happens when I'm not around! I hope everyone in the area wakes up soon, is OK, and then gets out of there!
Tags: ,

Aug. 16th, 2006

blackbooks, verb, raft, marat, mystic, healthcare, party, turtle

NWA

Northwest Airlines is the carrier that Jason and I travel on most often. It's not the greatest, but it's not the worst, either. (And for whatever reason, the planes we travel on within Asia are always nicer - even within the same airline - than those Stateside and the ones traveling between Japan and the US. I have no idea why. But the difference is quite large. I actually wonder if it's because Asian travelers now have higher standards for air travel.)

Anyway, see this news story:
Bankrupt Northwest Airlines Corp. advised workers to fish in the trash for things they like or take their dates for a walk in the woods in a move to help workers facing the ax to save money.

The No. 5 U.S. carrier, which has slashed most employees' pay and is looking to cut jobs as it prepares to exit bankruptcy, put the tips in a booklet handed out to about 50 workers and posted for a time on its employee Web site.
Can't afford to pay you more, please shop at Wal-Mart or dumpster-dive for your needs.

Hey, I think dumpster-diving is awesome for environmentalists, but to recomment it to one's full-time employees...?

Jun. 12th, 2006

blackbooks, verb, raft, marat, mystic, healthcare, party, turtle

Woot

Can I just say that I absolutely LOVE this poster:



It's awesome, awesome!

TV News gets mocked for its gimmicks in this Washington Post article
Freakin' hilarious! John Kelly covers the headless teens, the "LIVE! coverage" stories (honestly, the local news is horribly guilty of putting their reporters in the dumbest places for this), and surrealist camera techniques.

And from Stick Your Neck Out, America!:
We are, for the most part, blissfully (perhaps studiously?) unaware of our own power -- the power we still enjoy as Americans, even as the claws of fascism creep steadily closer. We in the dominant culture often feel impotent, despite the power of our inherent privilege. Perhaps it's a subconscious thing. Maybe we prefer to remain in denial because, otherwise, we would have to look in the mirror and decide whether we have the courage to put that power into play.