Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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The danger of journalism that moves too quickly beyond fact | Poynter.

The best thinking about journalism’s future benefits from its being in touch with technology’s potential. But it can get in its own way when it simplifies and repudiates the intelligence of journalism’s past.


That is happening, to a degree, in a discussion gaining momentum lately that journalism should now largely move beyond fact gathering and toward synthesis and interpretation.


The NSA story is just the latest case that shows the importance, and the elusiveness, of simply knowing what has really happened.


In a Nieman Journalism Lab post, Jonathan Stray made the case recently for moving beyond facts, or what might be called The Displacement Theory of Journalism. “The Internet has solved the basic distribution of event-based facts in a variety of ways; no one needs a news organization to know what the White House is saying when all press briefings are posted on YouTube. What we do need is someone to tell us what it means.”...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Thoughtful post from Tom Rosenstiel about the challenges of journalism and need for interpretation, context...  Journalists need to do more than interpret the stream of nonsense in the social media channels whether from official sources or the public.

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CNN's Citizen Journalism Plans Expand

CNN's Citizen Journalism Plans Expand | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
Last week, CNN sacked over 50 staffers, many of them camera-lugging photojournalists, in part because it will lean more heavily on its citizen journalism outfit iReport for more, better content.

 

With Monday's relaunch of iReport as a "social network for news," CNN's strategy of shifting various tasks from its paid journalists to the five-year-old network of iReporters is coming into focus. We doubt that CNN will soon replace news anchors with holograms any time soon, but the network is trending towards giving its citizen journalists more assignments, surfacing more of their content on TV and generally making iReport content more of an editorial fixture. And feature-by-feature, there's little doubt that CNN wants the new iReport to be a money-saver as well as a scoop factory....

Alison Epstein's curator insight, October 31, 2014 6:25 PM

The Wire is a branch of The Atlantic, an authoritative source on business, domestic and global news, politics, tech, entertainment, education, and health. Citizen journalism has become a large participatory network in the digital age, and traditional institutions such as CNN are beginning to adapt to this phenomenon.