• J-Source

    Saving journalism, a farthing at a time

    “Ever since Rupert Murdoch announced plans to put his digital titles behind a paywall, claiming the “free” web was dead, the rest of the media have either pooh-poohed his proposals, or nervously wondered if they should do likewise.”

  • J-Source

    Changing media: The future of broadband, journalism, and public media

    On May 14, policymakers and media activists gathered at the Newseum in Washington (DC) to discuss America’s communications future. Keynote speakers noted that we cannot think about the future of any one media policy in isolation. For too long, our media system has been shaped by policies – for media ownership, broadband deployment, public media…

  • J-Source

    Science for the Mediacene age

    Scientists get media-savvy? It’s about time. The New York Times reports on “science for the Mediacene age, the unveiling at the American Museum of Natural History of a 47-million-year-old fossil that some claim “could revolutionize the understanding of human evolution.” Coinciding with “the publishing of a peer-reviewed article about the find (the event) is the…

  • J-Source

    Local hero?

    In its latest tussle with the CRTC, broadcaster CTV has launched a multimedia fueled campaign à la Greenpeace, complete with testimonials, ads and an online petition. What’s it all about? The feud between cable companies and conventional broadcasters masks the fact that both industries are headed for trouble, says Kelly Toughill in Carriage fees are…

  • J-Source

    Why newspapers don’t innovate

    Newspapers have come under a lot of criticism for not being innovative enough in transitioning from dead-tree to digital and social media. A new survey of editors by the Associated Press Managing Editors (APME) group may help explain why newsrooms find it challenging. Asked what stood in the way of change, 67.7 per cent of respondents said they didn’t have the staff and…

  • J-Source

    Carriage fees are just the beginning

    The feud between cable companies and conventional broadcasters masks the fact that both industries are headed for trouble, writes Kelly Toughill. The battle is over $300 million in carriage fees, but the war is about who will pay for “all the old-fashioned stuff”: broadcasters, cable and internet companies, taxpayers or consumers.

  • J-Source

    All in a day’s work

    April 17 was a pretty good day for the St. Petersburg Times in Florida. It won two Pulitzer Prizes, it began publishing a major investigative series, and it won recognition from a grand jury that its work was crucial in providing evidence of alleged wrongdoing by a former House Speaker. Other media outlets should pay…

  • J-Source

    The future of news: Two perspectives

    Here’s something to ponder: Two new investigations into the future of news that couldn’t be more different.   1. Moving Into Multiple Business Models: Outlook for Newspaper Publishing in the Digital Age. This report authored by PriceWaterhouseCoopers asserts that newspapers must keep on reducing costs, increase outsourcing of “generic editorial” functions, further centralize newsrooms and ad salesforces and continue consolidating ownership while putting more emphasis…

  • J-Source

    Paulémique

    Un dessin ou une caricature par jour sur la politique nationale, internationale et les travers de la société sur le blogue de Paul Therrien.

  • J-Source

    When your fixer’s a foot soldier

    Many fixers and interpreters used by Western journalists in Gaza are foot-soldiers of Hamas, says outspoken Jerusalem Post reporter Khaled Abu Toameh in this interview with J-Source. The Arab-Israeli journalist, a keynote speaker at the upcoming CAJ conference in Vancouver, believes telling the truth is his best shield as he covers the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.