Posts from May 2008.

Spokane Falls bellow with runoff

People around the newsroom are saying they haven’t seen the falls this powerful in years. I went down this afternoon to take some pictures and wound up shooting an impromptu video using my Sony point-and-shoot and editing it in Final Cut.

If I’d planned this better, I’d have taken a video camera. But then I’d have been duplicating what my co-worker Thomas Clouse is working on. I’ll post that up when he’s finished in the next few days so you can compare.

Anyway, here’s 10 seconds to give you a taste of how much water is moving.

One of those things I do from 7 to 4

spokesmanreview.com on May 21

I figured I’d post something basic about the work I’m doing as the online editor. Packaging, to be specific. Certain stories lend themselves to grouping words, pictures, resource links, video and other multimedia, and when that happens I get to bring it all together as attractively as possible.

The image is an example from today about some extra water floating around the region. (Note: This being one of the tamer inundations in recent memory, one of our city editors has dubbed it the “Amish flood.”)

Our site is undergoing a redesign, so the vertical page we present will not be around forever. But while it is, I face certain limitations. For instance, all of our breaking news items are presented in a stack, leaving something to be desired aesthetically.

We’re also hampered in terms of workflow. The links gathered under “Flood coverage” were created through hand-coding. Our next content management system will do a lot more with tagging, and I hope to see some of this packaging automated.

When that happens, the person in my seat will be able to put more energy into editorial decisions and less into typing hyperlink tags. The story you find when you click on the headline above is long – a pastiche of new information as it came in today. With more time, each new version could have been a rewrite: short, to the point, and complete.

Happy graduation! Don’t panic; we can help

I remember walking in my grad school commencement a couple years back. Like most fellow graduates, I was smiling. Unlike quite a few fellow graduates, I was smiling about the achievement AND the fact that I’d already lined up a job.

This week, my former adviser Daryl Moen noted in an email to his listserv of Missouri J School grads that he’s noticed more anxiety among graduating seniors/grad students and fewer of them heading into a full-time job right away. This shouldn’t be surprising if you’re following the industry news.

Fortunately, there are some good collections of advice floating around out there. And they’re not limited to how to get a job. If you’ve got a minute between writing cover letters and updating your resume, check these out.

  • Journerdism: “Make organization and the elimination of clutter (especially information clutter) a life long process. Twitter is neat, but addicting and dangerous. We lost a lot of good men in the war to Twitter.”
  • Innovation in College Media: “Look beyond what job you’ll be doing and take a look at the snapshot portrait that’s being developed right now about the profession.”
  • Online Journalism Blog: “As you do your job, as you walk the streets, as you read the newspapers and browse the messageboards, keep your news sense about you: is something happening that is newsworthy?”
  • JournalismJobs.com: Besides publishing tons of help-wanted ads, this site has some good career articles.
  • My previous post, while a little tongue in cheek and not about getting a job, offers 15 observations I’ve gained in 24 months in the field. “Somewhere, somehow, there is a perfect nexus of efficiency and quality, and it takes more than two years to find it.”

15 things I’ve learned in two years

Today is the two-year anniversary of my full-time status at the Spokesman. That means two years as a full-time newspaper journalist, plus several months of part-timing it in Spokane and Stockton, Calif. I thought I’d take the occasion to note, only somewhat irreverently, a few things I’ve learned along the way. Please add to them.

  • It’s wise to pick your battles. Whether you be the newest copy editor or a high-level manager.
  • Some people are just afraid of the active voice.
  • Play good photos big. Play bad photos even bigger.
  • We are supposed to frown upon horse race stories in election years, but sometimes that’s secretly what we really want to read.
  • Somewhere, somehow, there is a perfect nexus of efficiency and quality, and it takes more than two years to find it.
  • Pay extra close attention when editing stories with repetitions of the word “public.”
  • It’s safe, but not advisable, to eat the pizza with the sweaty cheese.
  • It’s hard to give hope to journalism students during layoffs.
  • If you can learn to talk to readers on the phone with sincerity, respect and conviction, you will be an asset to your newsroom.
  • When asking a co-worker to do something, it helps to sit down by them.
  • The demand for hopeful news out of Iraq far outstrips the supply.
  • Gallows humor has its place when talking about the news, and that place should be full of fellow journalists.
  • It’s terrifyingly easy to become inured to body counts and stories of suffering from wars and natural disasters.
  • If that happens, take a step back and let the tragedy move you.
  • Amid the carnage, take comfort in AP pictures of baby animals, but don’t assume your readers will do the same.

Spring comes to Spokane. Finally.

20080507spokanevista.jpg

Here’s a little eye candy after my more pensive post the other day. I took this from a cliff on Spokane’s lower South Hill (see map below) with my simple-but-reliable 6-megapixel Sony Cybershot. For Wordpress geeks out there who use Flickr, I posted it using a recently acquired plugin called “Wordpress Media Flickr” and designed by Yu Ji.


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