As digital platforms become more complex, journalists no longer simply ask themselves how best to portray a story with words and pictures. The digital medium provides unique and dynamic opportunities for stories and data to come to life. Data visualization — graphs, animations, interactives, and more — is increasingly becoming one more tool in a journalist’s storytelling kit. This week, we’ll be joined by Len de Groot, the new director of data visualization at the Los Angeles Times, to discuss how media outlets are pushing the limits of visual storytelling. We’ll also take a more philosophical turn on this episode and discuss the tricky issue of defining a journalist, especially in the context of penning shield laws that protect journalists from identifying their sources. To make sense of that debate, we’ll be joined by MediaShift contributors Jonathan Peters and Josh Stearns. We’ll also be joined by our regular panelist Andrew Lih of American University, new media consultant Sarah Evans, and our host Mark Glaser of MediaShift.
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Mediatwits Bios
Special Guests
Podcast Topics:
1. Data visualization and new storytelling tools:
Ever since the New York Times’ John Branch won a Pulitzer Prize for his epic multimedia “Snow Fall” narrative, more media outlets have been jumping on the rich visualization bandwagon. It’s not just a matter of making narratives pop with video and multimedia elements; stories are also being told with dynamic graphs and other infographics that make information accessible. Recent examples have included the LA Times’ graphic display of earthquake-prone buildings, the Washington Post’s interactive breakdown of the government’s “black budget” and NPR’s “Unfit to Work piece jam packed with graphs. How is the boom in data visualization changing the way journalists tell stories? Are the days of exclusively narrative journalism numbered?
2. What is a journalist, anyway?
For many, the word “journalist” might conjure up an image of a shoe-leather reporter with notebook and recorder in hand, employed by a mainstream news outlet to chase after politicians daily. But what about someone at the scene of a crisis live-tweeting information — is she a journalist? Or a college student who writes a political blog? Is Wikileaks a journalistic organization for disseminating information? Defining who gets to call themselves a journalist isn’t just semantics: Journalists are protected by some shield laws that exempt them from having to testify against their sources in court. In a recent study, Jon Peters found that journalists are commonly described as “someone employed to regularly engage in gathering, processing, and disseminating (activities) news and information (output) to serve the public interest (social role).” He argues in a recent article that this widely-accepted definition is dangerous for excluding so many other actors in the media ecosystem, such as bloggers and citizen journalists. Meanwhile, in a response article, Josh Stearns argued that we shouldn’t bother trying to define and protect journalists, but acts of journalism. These acts might be defined along ethical, behavioral or service-providing behaviors, Stearns writes.
Other stories:
Netflix might release movies same day online and in theaters (All Things D)
AP releases new Lingofy plug-in to check for AP style automatically (Associated Press)
CBS developing streaming channel (New York Times)
Claire Groden is the podcast intern for PBS Mediashift and a current senior at Dartmouth College. You can follow Claire on Twitter @ClaireGroden.
View Comments (2)
Am I missing something? The podcast is cut-off at around 8 minutes. Is there more?
The LA Times stopped being a creditable source for news, when it was taken over by blue suit Republicans.