Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Can we be your friend?

It reminds me of the last time the ITV regional franchise for Wales was up for grabs (and how long ago does that seem!). Rival bidders seeking to get Cardiff's Centre for Journalism Studies on-board to demonstrate their commitment to journalism and training.

This time it's the second regional radio franchise for South Wales that's at stake. Two of the consortia seeking the nod from Ofcom (bids have to be in by December 12th) are knocking at the door. Both are planning heavily speech based bids - UTV (big in Swansea quite apart from Talksport etc.) are apparently going for an all speech format. Town and Country Broadcasting (who own stations from Pembrokeshire to Bridgend) are going for an 'older audience' but still with a predominantly speech mix.

I would have thought the BBC's Radio Wales already had the older audience pretty well sown up but maybe they don't mean quite that old.

Nonetheless the stakes could be high. There's a north and mid Wales regional licence coming along soon so the possibility opens up of an all-Wales commercial radio operator.

Now that would be competition for BBC Radio Wales which has alone, since its inception over 25 years ago, been able to claim to be a national voice (along with Radio Cymru of course).

I hope the eventual winner does have a strong commitment to quality speech and news. It can only broaden and deepen democratic processes in Wales. And along the way, I'd hope, provide employment for a few more young Welsh journalists.

Oh - and when HTV did win the ITV franchise all those years ago, they set up a couple of scholarships for young journalists to study at Cardiff - I think the first of the ITV regional companies to do such a thing. Sadly, but not surprisingly, today's ITV News has seen fit to delete the Welsh language one.

Thursday, November 23, 2006

It's happening everywhere

Last week in our online lecture series in Cardiff, Pete Clifton - Head of BBC News Interactive, aired some of his thought about how his online journalists might in future get closer to the rest of the BBC's journos. He's apparently developing a strategy for future integration which might, quite conceivably, be a strategy for deleting his empire; subsuming it into the general run of what BBC journalists do.

How interesting that today's speaker, Sarah Radford from NewburyToday - the award winning web presence of a weekly Berkshire newspaper, brought along a video of her boss, Martin Robertshaw, describing almost exactly the same organisational, managerial issue.

From one end of the online spectrum to the other - the issue is the same. And I'm sure neither Sarah nor Martin, with their twenty or so journalists, would mind being described as being from the other end of the spectrum to the BBC with its thousands of hacks.

How do you integrate the online operation into the traditional "day-job"? Those who get it right will have a profound impact on the working lives of all today's journalism students.

Saturday, November 18, 2006

HAIR

I think I've found my first niche TV channel. Someone shaving all the hair off an endless stream of willing victims. Fascinating stuff. Why are the victims allowing this to happen? What do they think this is doing for them?

It appears to be BBC3's contribution to Children in Need. And it's miles better than Wogan on some sort of souped up embalming fluid.

I'm interested because I know I recognise people by their hair rather than their face. It may seem odd but psychologists tell me I'm not alone, lots of us rely on hair for our primary recognition algorithm.

As a journalism teacher, every year I need to get to know fast a large number of faces. Every year I get fooled once they start pulling on beanies etc. when the cold weather sets in.

When I was 20-something hair mattered, it defined you. There was even a musical called "Hair".

One of the most iconic images of 'loosing your personality' comes in the opening sequence of Kubrik's "Full Metal Jacket" as recruits are given a #1.

So you see why I do find it hard to understand why so many men today wish to voluntarily surrender this 'pride and joy'.

As a child I was regaled by family stories about how my father was bald by the age of 21. As it happens I survived obvious baldness till about 50.

These days old freinds don't recognise me when I wear a hat.

Saturday, November 11, 2006

The 'newsroom of the future'

Thanks to Richard Sambrook for drawing attention to an interesting memo from Gannett CEO Craig Dubow posted on one of the Poynter forums outlining the company's plans to roll out 'information centres' - or probably centers.

It pays to follow the 'continue' links which lead to much more informative FAQ style pages.

It would be interesting to try a pan-diploma experiment with something like this in Cardiff. Given the will, and the co-operation of all (including the PR people), I think we could make it work.

On a not very different note, I was interested in what Kevin Marsh had to say to the Society of Editors this week (reported in the Press Gazette) on the subject of blogging. 'Replace columnists' - well maybe. He's reported as saying:
"The future journalist - if such a thing exists, and I very much hope it will - will be distinct from the ordinary citizen armed with the same publishing tools."

And he said the distinction journalists will have is "trust".

Absolutely. Plus, I would hope, the good professional skills that we teach in Cardiff which are the source of that trust.

Friday, November 10, 2006

Convergence

So the National Council for the Training of Journalists (NCTJ) and the Broadcast Journalism Training Council (BJTC) are to work more closely together (couldn't find an equivalent article on the NCTJ website).

In many ways not before time. The trick will be for each body to learn from the best aspects of the other.

Here in Cardiff we have a problem with the NCTJ and could possibly give up NCTJ accreditation for our newspaper Postgraduate Diploma. As Peter Preston wrote in last Sunday's Observer.
It’s basically a question of exemptions, from the public admin and legal bits of the courses. Why should long-suffering students be required to sit exams twice over, with a pile of shorthand thrown in? And why should the finest academic essayists have to play tick boxes and short, sharp answers to start on a local weekly at £13,000 a year? If Cardiff, say, were to go it alone, would any of their students really suffer?
City University have already abandonned the NCTJ and the University of Central Lancashire are also close to pulling out too.

The BJTC has so far not attempted to introduce its own qualifications. It has based its accreditation of courses on observed outcomes along with a set of guidelines to which it expects courses to conform.

This approach suits the wide variety of academic institutions which offer BJTC acccredited courses though, most agree, cracks are beginning to show.

A wider variety of courses from a wider range of course providers seriously challenges the BJTC's approach which was developed in response to a handful of pioneering University based postgraduate courses.

Now similar University courses are challenging the NCTJ approach which comes from a very different starting point.

There is massive room for a meeting of minds here.

Cats and dogs

Much the most striking analogy that has emerged from our 'Online' guest speakers this year has come from ex-editor of the Telegraph online, Richard Burton.

He characterised traditional newspaper readers as loyal 'dogs' and online users as fickle and cynical 'cats'.

Probably been around for years - but I haven't heard it before.

Jon Snow and those poppies

Is sporting a red poppy in the run-up to remembrance day really something that compromises the impartiality/objectivity of a journalist?

That seems to be what Jon Snow is saying.

Interestingly the BBC's Controller Editorial Policy got himself into a right tangle on Radio 4's PM this evening when asked to defend what appears to be a long-standing and, importantly, unquestioned policy of allowing (encouraging even?) newsreaders and reporters to wear poppies - a more or less unique privilege allowed to this charity.

World War One has now passed out of living memory, it won't be long before the 2nd World War follows it into the history books. How long can it be before the whole paraphanalia of official remembrance on November 11th each year follows?

It will be a while yet I suspect. But as the parades of veterans diminish, the question has to be asked.

The trick is going to be to find a new way to honour the sacrifices made by members of the armed forces in smaller and less universally popular causes.