• J-Source

    Hommage à Villedieu

    Mario Roy, La Presse | L’animateur de l’émission Les années lumière à la Première chaîne de Radio-Canada, Yanick Villedieu, vient d’être fait chevalier de l’Ordre national du Québec. On signale ainsi sa grande contribution dans le domaine du journalisme scientifique au Québec.

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    MediaPart et le journalisme citoyen

    Thierry Ternisien, MediaPart | Le concept de journalisme citoyen, porté sous des formes diverses par de nombreux sites citoyen, me parait, pour au moins trois raisons, être une impasse. Restant dans le paradigme actuel du journalisme, il met au centre de son projet la collecte et la vérification de l’information. Or, ce dont nous souffrons…

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    Give up on youth?

    Data on young people’s news habits has been mostly pessimistic, to the point where delegates to the recent World Conference of Newspaper Editors wondered if it may not be worth the energy to chase young readers. But young people are an audience in search of substance according to a recent post on J-Source by Alan…

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    Web archive of public policy research launched

    Researchers and others should check out Policy Archive, a new searchable, indexed website that hosts public policy research papers from more than 220 think tanks and research institutes. The site – created by the Center for Governmental Studies and the Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis University Library – has already collected 12,000 policy and research…

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    Tim Russert, icon or poster boy

    The explosion of news about deceased U.S. broadcaster Tim Russert (at one point in the week a Google news search returned some 10,000 hits) reminds me of how O.J. Simpson burst into the global public consciousness in 1994 via a live televised police chase of Simpson in his white Bronco. Simpson, I maintain, was previously…

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    Floating feet

    “Why,” asks the Globe and Mail, “are newshounds around the world so enraptured by a grim West Coast story about human flotsam?” OK, it’s a rhetorical question — every reporter and reader knows it’s an engaging story; the fact that it’s engaging is why the Globe devotes yet more ink to a story about the…

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    The American Blogopticon

    Vanity Fair has published a delightfully visual yet highly functional introduction to the busy American newsy blog scene. Media-politics-celebrity blogs are situated in quadrants according to how they rank along continua of news-opinion content and earnest-scurrilous tone. You can hover your mouse pointer over each blog for a mini-review and click to visit the ones…

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    Researchers explore the geography of online news

    All news is local – that’s a truism of journalism. Does the Internet change that? Do newspapers expand their notion of community when their potential readership goes global? Are news nets cast further to attract a wider readership? Those are among the questions researchers involved in the Geography of News Project are working to answer.…

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    20 questions about polls

    The American National Council on Public Polls has a piece on its website that looks like a worthwhile read: 20 Questions A Journalist Should Ask About Poll Results. Hat tip to the U.S. discussion list,IRE-L, of Investigative Reporters and Editors.