The press elites failed us on health reform

NYU professor Jay Rosen likes to talk about the “church of savvy” in political journalism. Diane Winston has a pretty good breakdown of the term, but essentially it describes how the journalism elite shape the news in cooperation with sources. The result is a contextless news presentation, with focus on horse race, tactics, gamesmanship, and “how will this play politically?” rather than verification and hard questions, rigorous reporting, and a focus on getting it right.

This is necessary in elite political journalism, of course. It shies away from tough questions because tough questions mean no guests for Sunday morning talk shows. Wash, rinse, repeat, frustrate your audience.

Markos Moulitsas of DailyKos.com likes to describe the outcome a different way, such as how he did during his SXSW panel when he argued that journalists have become “stenographers for those in power” rather than people who fact-check.

I was thinking about this as I followed the Twitter stream last night during the health care vote. The endless coverage on the cable nets had to fill airtime somehow, and so we got a fair amount of the usual stenographer action. Republicans say X, while Democrats say Y, meanwhile there’s an actual bill online against which we can check such claims. The result is repeating two contradicting statements, at least one of which by definition is actually false, rather than verifying both claims and reporting only the correct one.

In other words, the press didn’t really learn from the Joseph McCarthy problem. (more…)

SXSW: “This is your tribe,” churches, and idea exchange

I already posted some of my lessons learned from my first SXSW, but I didn’t want to let the moment get away without chronicling my thoughts in general about the experience. I already said I should have done this a long time ago. I should add that I definitely will be back. This is a brain dump, in a way, trying to get at some of the sense of why I just liked being in Austin for this thing.

On the first day I attended a session called “How to rawk SXSW Interactive.” Much of it was fairly run of the mill (wash your hands to avoid the dreaded SXSW SARS, etc.), but one part stood out. They said that the best parts come in conversation, not in panels, and so doing it right means networking. A lot.

“This is your tribe,” one of the panelists said. “This is where you can talk about ideas and projects you’ve got and people won’t get glassy-eyed or want to run away.”

I thought the statement was silly. Tribe? Really?

Really. (more…)

What I learned at my first SXSWi

I should have done this sooner. If there’s one lesson ringing in my head as I’ve immersed myself in the awesome experience that is South by Southwest, it’s that. Although I was a poor grad student, I should have done this sooner.

I’m back in town and have a few more blog posts bubbling about things that interested me at SXSW. But for now, since I like lists here’s my running list of things I learned at my first SXSWi …

Noobs call it “South by Southwest” or “ESS-EX-ESS-DOUBLEU.” The wily veterans call it “Southby.” I was tagged the entire time. Must spend all year practicing.

Drink. A lot. (of water) … and don’t forget to snack. Energy is vitality here.

At the same time, go the extra granola bar. Easy way to strike up conversations and network between sessions. You have to eat, but having an extra to share is good karma and will make you friends.

It pays to know a veteran. The illustrious Jen Reeves gave me great advice beforehand so I was a little more prepared, but she knows the tricks. Bring a powerstrip to charge the laptop and make some friends by not being an outlet hog. Talk to EVERYONE. She even knew where all the free food was.

Make the plan minimal. I planned a lot of panel surfing, but I found myself sticking to it less and less. Find your 4-5 core sessions and plan for those. After that, be the ball and let it come to you. Ask what sessions others are hitting

For journalists, try to stay away from panels on your discipline. Honest, most of the journalism panels su-huuuucked save for a couple. The sessions that blew my mind were in the areas of gaming, marketing, PR, social media, and augmented reality. I found threads in the keywords based on stories and storytelling, but they weren’t about journalism. And it makes a lot of sense; I’m not at AEJMC, I’m at Southby (a-ha!). I want to think about new avenues for doing journalism, not think about the same old stuff. I’m here to get my mind blown.

There are a lot of stickers here. A lot of them. This isn’t sustainable.

Talk to anyone who will talk to you. I met people doing all kinds of stuff that isn’t in my area, but that’s OK. At worst you practice networking. At best, you’re making it possible for serendipity to take over.

Know when to arrive. If it’s in a small room, get there 10 minutes early. If it’s in a big room, make it 15.

Don’t forget to blog. I had bigger plans for blogging, but it was overwhelming to find time. I finally found a rhythm with the schedule toward the end. I’ll have a better idea what is realistic next year.

Big-time everyone not at SXSWi. Make sure to mention in every conversation via e-mail and Twitter with people not there that you’re at SXSWi in Austin. Just kidding, don’t do that. That would make you a jerk. Seriously, though, totally do this.

Play! Seriously, try new stuff. Some of the most fun I had was playing with apps that were being promoted there. I did a walking tour of Austin on Gowalla and won a Hot Wheel car (and a little love on iReport). OK, so the Hot Wheel car isn’t great, but one of the nice things is that you can TRY new stuff because it’s available and companies are careful to make sure the experience is good. I got a lot of ideas for journalism courses just from doing a walking tour. Where else can you try so many things like this with a journalist’s eye?

Plan meetups. I did a horrible job at this. I met really good people and waited to catch them again to do some sort of coffee or lunch gathering. But there are thousands of people there, and the chance of running into them isn’t as good as it could be. Set up plans in advance. And maybe even organize a meetup beforehand. I think we need a journalism educator meetup for sure, unless one happened and I didn’t know about it (which is totally possible).

Look for student connections. While I was sitting in on sessions, looking through the schedule, and networking I had one of our students, Andrew Daniels, in the back of my mind. He’s a graduating senior and the current editor of the student newspaper, and I think he would thrive in places like this. There were a few people who would have liked to have gotten to know him too, I think. So I’m wondering if there’s a way to identify students who would benefit from this experience and then figure out ways to get them to SXSW (fundraiser, grant, etc.). This festival isn’t for everyone, but the ones who are interested in interactive media and have that natural curiosity that is impossible to teach would have a good time here.

Tacos! They’re excellent and abundant in Austin. Seriously. Tacos.

Transmedia stories and the future of context in news at SXSW

I have to be honest: I was pretty disappointed by most of the journalism-specific panels I attended at SXSWi. It’s not that the info wasn’t good or vital, it’s that I expected a lot more forward-looking or cutting-edge stuff. I blogged about a particularly disappointing one (not so much the panel’s fault, I think, as much as it was the tone set by the questions), but that was fairly typical. The best sessions that I could use were in non-journalism arenas such as gaming and marketing.

One panel I have been looking forward to actually exceeded my high expectations. “Future of Context: Getting the Bigger Picture Online” with Jay Rosen, Matt Thompson, and Tristan Harris was everything I was looking for here at SXSWi: important questions, big ideas, and a focus on discussion and solutions. No teeth-gnashing over stale questions like “Will bloggers replace journalists?” and other such important chatter from 2005.

I’m not going to reinvent the wheel and recap this thing. Elise Hu at the Texas Tribune did an excellent liveblog summary of the panel and discussion, and if you want to hack the raw tweetstream check out what the audience was doing with the #futureofcontext hashtag. What I want to do here is briefly sketch out the argument and where my mind has been going with this since the panel spoke.

Rosen had the best visual description of the context problem facing our journalism today. Imagine, he said, downloading a software update to your computer for a program that isn’t installed on your machine. The absurdity of such a situation should be self-evident. The update does the user no good because it’s an add-on to a program that doesn’t exist on the machine. It’s a waste of the user’s time, it’s a waste of resources, and it doesn’t accomplish the mission set out for the software patch. (more…)

Shirky: A tension between media business models and human nature

The highlight of SXSWi so far for me has been Clay Shirky’s presentationMonkeys with Internet Access: Sharing, Human Nature, and Digital Data on Sunday afternoon.

You can get a good rundown of his main points from Liz Gannes at Gigaom. My takeaway was a little bit different, but then again I’m coming at this from the side of people creating content and so I think about business models a little bit more.

As I see it, here is the thread of logic in Shirky’s presentation …

1. We are wired to share information. Shirky noted that from an evolutionary standpoint we are wired to hoard physical goods or products, things that are tangible and have scarcity. At the other end of the spectrum, we are inclined to enjoy sharing information. It comes at no cost to us, but it has value to both the person sharing and the person receiving.

2. We have a word for not wanting to share information that comes at no cost to us: It’s called being spiteful

3. Media has gone from being a physical commodity to being information. The newspaper in my hand or CD in my possession is hard to give away or even loan out. As the owner, I lose control of the product. Digital media, though, is easy to give away. You can give away copies, and thus it comes at no cost to the giver. Shirky notes that “abundance breaks more things than scarcity.” I loved his point that the original aim of the printing press, for example, was to print indulgences, something that should have entrenched the Catholic church. In fact it had the opposite effect; the abundance of indulgences led to backlash that was part of the seeds of the Reformation.

4. Media companies are freaking out about this change, but rather than realigning to a new reality they are trying to protect the old one. He noted that businesses create workarounds to problems, but part in parcel with that is that this builds in a desire to not solve the original problem lest the solution make itself obsolete. There is no profit motive in fixing something once and for all.

5. User behavior, which is motivation filtered through opportunity, is being rewritten as access opens up. In light of #4, Shirky aked a salient question in light of this: What kind of society will we create if the media companies win? If we are wired to share information at no cost, and the opposite of that is being spiteful, then in essence media companies are trying to encourage us to behave in ways that make us more spiteful through the act of denying ourselves the enjoyable act of sharing information? This comes at an enormous cost to society.

So where’s the value in systems that figure out how to use open information? It’s in the co-creation of civic goods. Shirky noted a couple examples that illustrate that thinking.

Patients Like Me is a site that crowdsources symptoms and medical ailments among a user base, and the aggregate is essentially a knowledge base that might help people better figure out what is going on with their health. This flies in the face of the U.S. medical system, which has privatized patient information and made a good living off of it (i.e. why switch doctors when they “know” my medical history and are an expert on it?). PLM is creating a public good using medical information, but Shirky argues it won’t be successful unless it completely changes the health care industry. I saw a lot of parallels between that example and media companies, and all of a sudden a light switched on. The intense fight being put up by healthcare companies in the latest reform debate is a lot like the RIAA suing illegal downloaders.

Pickup Pal was another example. It uses information sharing between users to arrange rides for people going to the same places, saving money and maybe even a slice of the environment. The service was so successful that a bus company in Canada successfully sued the site for breaking the law. You can read about the details if you want, but the general point is that businesses are going to protect their model when a new idea comes along that fixes an idea too well. Fortunately the public outcry was so strong that it changed the law.

Both examples highlight a basic point of Shirky’s talk: We use free information sharing to create public goods through better efficiency, but at some point it’s going to trip over business models that depend on the problem not being solved. Abundance of information, in this case, breaks a lot of business models based on scarcity.

The upshot of all this? Shirky says that we’re going from a society that emphasizes “doing big things for money and little things for love to point where we can do big things for love.” The best, the coolest stuff we are doing with interactive media happens when we create these civic goods using information.

This lecture drove home a number of things for me. I’m teaching multimedia reporting at Lehigh, but I’m reminded there are a wider array of projects I can be doing. What are we doing to create civic goods in the Lehigh Valley through data-driven projects that are built on users sharing their own stories?

In a larger sense, the talk crystalized the feeling I’m getting after four days here in Austin. Journalism has a bright future, but the traditional players are so screwed. They’re chasing the wrong solution. I just don’t see a future for them when they’re trying to protect information as a scarce commodity. The scarcity, in truth, is in media companies trying to create civic goods via user sharing.

The info-must-be-free thought process has been argued against for some time even though it lacks specific proponents. Shirky was not making that kind of claim about information either, although I think it might be plausible to conclude that he made a compelling argument for the info-free notion from a sociological point of view: we’re wired this way, and what are we doing to ourselves by trying to restrict this type of behavior?

Other things that stood out from the Q&A:

Innovation: If you’re a company wanting to innovate, take the person who has one big idea and lock them out of the building. Tell them they can’t come back until they have 10 medium-sized ideas or 100 little ideas. Try a lot of everything, and double down on what works. Brilliant.

Education: The same transformation happening to media companies is coming at education like a freight train (and in fact from sitting in on other sessions I think it’s happening now). Shirky noted that we have cognitive dissonance in how we sell education. We tell students they’re joining a community of scholars, and we’re telling the private sector we’re managing the student mind such that when we churn them out they’re going to be excellent creators and workers. There is an inherent tension (and disconnect) between these two sales pitches.

It was a fantastic presentation. Thanks, Clay Shirky, for blowing my mind (again).

SXSW Saturday: A day of alternative press ideas

Although SXSWi got going on Friday, Saturday was really the first full day here. I hit a number of interesting panels, all of them dealing with different ways of doing media.

Community Funded Reporting” with David Cohn was excellent.

Cohn is the founder of the excellent Spot.Us, a site that allows the audience to fund stories that are meaningful to them. Lots of useful info here. First, I didn’t realize that Spot’s code was free for distribution, meaning that if you wan to replicate what they do then you can. And in fact Cohn basically dared someone to try this nationally, saying that it’s more lucrative than the hyperlocal project he’s doing.

The more meaningful stuff to me was how Cohn talked about the concept of CFR. He sees each story, pitched by the potential author, as a type of campaign. You’re selling the value of the idea and the audience gets to vote. It’s a model we don’t do enough in media. Second, he noted they’re working on other ways of funding, such as having users interact with advertisers so they can earn credits, and those credits are ad dollars that users can spend to fund stories. Really interesting.

The standout: Users don’t fund ideas that suck or are obvious. This is something tradmedia could do more.

Universities in the “Free” Era” with Glenn Platt and Peg Falmon was intriguing.

They argued that as we go toward more networked ways of learning and information exchange, we are facing either a complete remaking of education or a total meltdown. The disconnect, they say, is that we sell a mountaintop-with-the-guru experience even while information and specialization are flattening in a digital world. They offered seven tips for being a new kind of professor. The standout was that professors need to be linking students with collaboration and lab experiences, and be “experience creators” with students (i.e. helping them create the education they need). And they also shredded the idea of tenure. Really fascinating time.

Media Armageddon: What Happens When the New York Times Dies” featuring, among others, Markos Moulitsas of DailyKos and David Carr of the NYT

I was provoked by the panel title, but really disappointed with the questions. They spent too much time asking the stale old question “Can bloggers do investigative reporting?” types of questions that are so five years ago. I didn’t like the moderator’s questions at all. It seemed a bit dismissive of the blogosphere (typified by him referring to Gawker’s Nick Denton as a “former journalist.”). Fortunately the panel was saved by the banter between Markos and Carr. I think Carr is more new media savvy than he was getting credit for, but Markos made a good point: the blogosphere wants the NYT to survive and succeed so long as it does its job.

I have a separate post bubbling about a session on augmented reality. It was probably my favorite of the day, but I want to collapse it with another post so that is coming.

SXSW schedule: A fun work in progress

I finally made it to Austin. The only travel thoughts to share here is that Detroit’s airport is horribly boring. But I did finally earn the Jet Setter badge on Foursquare. So I have that going for me, which is nice.

Tomorrow is the first day of SXSW Interactive, and I’m like a kid on Christmas Eve. Before I dive in I wanted to pound out some thoughts about how I compiled my schedule and a few panels I’m psyched about going into the festival.

Generally, I’m here to learn. I want to hear more about some of the ways people are using interactive media to create content and share information, but I also want to get a lay of the land about SXSWi in general. With stuff lke this I use the same approach I do when I’m new to listservs: I lurk a little and slowly dip my toe in as I learn how things work.

At the same time, I am here to network. I want to make some contacts with people that will help us put smartphones in our students’ hands for Multimedia Reporting at Lehigh. I’m also hoping for networking contacts that will help me in the research realm. So I’m here to lurk and network, which will be a challenge.

SXSWi has a bazillion different offerings and it was overwhelming to go through the schedule. The panels have to number in the 500s or so. Given the time constraints, you can’t hit them all. So my process in narrowing it down was twofold. It made the cut if the topic was interesting for my work or teaching, or it made the cut if the people presenting were interesting.

Social networking, online communities, Government 2.0, citizen journalism, and multimedia reporting were common topics that made the cut. Two new topics also cut my eye: augmented reality (AR) and transmedia storytelling. I’ve heard of AR before but don’t know much about it, so I’m really looking forward to learning about it a little bit more. I also have some qualms about it making its way into journalism based on how it’s been described to me, but I don’t claim to be an expert on it so I’ll be doing a lot of listening. Transmedia storytelling is a term I’ve heard before but it seems like it’s gaining steam as our technology options get better. I added a few sessions on both these topics.

The second category is interesting people who see the media differently than a lot of journalists, and I think it’s helpful to hear people who offer that different kind of perspective. The panel I’m most looking forward to is the provocatively titled “Media Armageddon: What Happens When the New York Times Dies” featuring DailyKos founder Markos Moulitsas. Other interesting folks I want to see include Ana Marie Cox, Clay Shirky, Mark Briggs, and Jeff Jarvis.

Obviously there’s no way I can hit everything on my schedule, but here are a few key panels that are on my list of definites:

Looking for inspiration at SXSW in Austin

Digital media? Social media? Interactive media? Yes please!

This week I get to cross something off of my bucket list.

I leave Thursday for my first-ever trip to South by Southwest (SXSW) in Austin, TX. This one has been on my to-do list for a while but the costs just weren’t workable for someone in graduate school during my PhD student days (even if you are an early bird the conference alone is still about $400). So I am thrilled to be going; this is my own personal Nerdstock.

What is SXSW? From what I’ve been told (and from looking at the awesome schedule of events) it’s something like a cross between a conference and a festival with a focus on media. There are three facets to this thing that run together: one is a five-day portion called Interactive followed by another five-day portion called Music. Running concurrently with both of those is the Film portion. You can buy an individual badge for one of these three portions or an über badge that gives you access to all of them.

The event is a little bit of everything. It brings in leaders from each of these areas, practitioners, educators, devlopers, theorists, and so forth for panels and demonstrations. There is also plenty of time to network during some of the daytime happy hour events and the socials at night. If you’re a newbie like me, my colleague Jen Reeves at Missouri has a bunch of helpful tips about how to rock this event. (more…)