Top five viral videos

3 Dec

It’s been a long time since I posted anything (blame the Leveson Inquiry). In the meantime, November was the month of some seriously funny viral videos.

From Benton “Jesus Christ” the dog to Jon Huntsman’s rapping daughters, millions of us have been glued to YouTube, giggling on the bus and wasting time at work by watching the latest clips to take the nation by storm.

Here’s my round up of the top 5 viral videos of the past month..

Bizzle the half-man-half-dog:

 

The Jurassic Park parody of “Fenton” the dog:

 

..and of course a link to the unmissable original video.

The flour avalanche:

No embeddable videos of this one but you can watch it here (although latest reports suggest it might have been a set up)

A personal favourite – stage collapse at Belfast MTV awards:

 

Finally, to get you in the festive mood, here is Paul Toole’s AWESOME annual Christmas lights display:

 

Got any other favourites? Post them in the comments box below. 

Over and out.

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‘Journalists are snakes’ – or are they?

6 Nov

21 years ago, in an article in the New Yorker magazine (and later in a bestselling novel), journalist Janet Malcolm wrote ‘The Journalist and The Murderer’, based on the story of non-fiction writer Joe McGinniss and his relationship with former doctor Jeffrey MacDonald, on trial for the 1970 murders of his two daughters and pregnant wife.

Malcolm’s opening statement was as follows:

Every journalist who is not too stupid or too full of himself to notice what is going on knows that what he does is morally indefensible.

All journalists suffer moral dilemmas. But when Malcolm’s piece was serialised in the New Yorker in 1989, it caused a mass outcry. She argued that McGinness was forced into the conclusions that he made through the subject’s “lack of vividness”, which pressed the author’s hand into portraying facts in certain ways to make him appear to be a more interesting character. But that didn’t go down so well. McGinniss’s rebuttal was fierce, other journalists criticised her for being melodramatic and unfair; while some accepted that what she said was valid, begrudgingly accepting it as the “necessary evil” of the trade.

21 years later, I’m going to go out on a limb and say that Malcolm’s thesis still stands. In the two decades that have passed, I doubt there are many who could have missed the declining respect the general public have for journalists and their profession. The phone hacking scandal was just one (albeit very large) symptom of a world that is no longer seen as a force fighting for good against bureaucratic evils. Instead, journalism is often seen as a web of deceit, tricksters, unnamed ‘sources’, invented stories and money-grabbing reporters who will stop at nothing to get the story they want, in the way they envisage it will appear. For those within the profession, obviously the above is unfair and untrue – for most of us. But Malcolm’s harsh thesis bears a certain amount of truth even today.

This weekend, Bloomberg journalist Michael Kinsley wrote a fantastic retrospective on Malcolm’s work“For the record, journalists are snakes,” he writes. Kinsley takes the topic of anonymous sources, which he says is one of the weakest aspects of modern day reporting:

In the Age of Transparency, when government officials and business executives are supposed to fill out a form and put it on the Internet every time they scratch their behinds, why should journalists expect to be able to say simply, “trust us” when they report controversial information?

In search of some proof for this theory, Kinsley carried out some research on the content of the Washington Post and NY Times. He counted the number of times the phrases “requested anonymity” and “asked not to be identified because” appeared in the papers over the course of two weeks. Among the 22 examples he gives are: “because of the delicacy of the situation”, “because they were not authorised to speak on the record” and “for fear of retribution”. Continue reading 

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Words of wisdom from Dan and Dan

17 Oct

Over the years, the comic duo Dan and Dan have brought us many YouTube gems, including the brilliant ‘Requiem for a Wardrobe’ and ‘New Facebook’.

But who could forget their wonderful tribute to everyone’s favourite national newspaper..? It’s been over a year and a half since they released it, but the Daily Mail song never gets old. For anyone who missed it first time around, or who wants a Monday morning-cheering reminder, here it is:

 


Whatever you read in the papers today, just remember: “It’s absolutely true because I read it in the Daily Mail…”

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Just call her Suralan: You’re hired

5 Oct

While all the media talk this week is about Foxy Knoxy, the tragic murder of Meredith Kercher and that episode of The Wright Stuff, this gem of a story has slipped under the radar..

In August, the Guardian featured a piece by freelance education journalist Janet Murray, who took the drastic step of advertising for an apprentice. Yes, you heard right: a journalist (and a freelance one) with their own apprentice. Janet’s idea raised a few eyebrows – not least because she argued that journalism has become a graduate-entry profession, which, she argued, doesn’t guarantee entrants’ ability – but her main point was as follows:

Over my 10 years as a freelance journalist, I’ve become adept at juggling the demands of different editors, even when it has meant working into the early hours or getting up ludicrously early to meet a deadline. But in recent months, I’ve realised I need help. I have a stack of story leads, but no time to do the research and I’ve been turning work down – something no freelance wants to do. I’ve decided to recruit an apprentice to assist me with research, transcription, developing story ideas and – once they have enough experience under the belt – possibly even the writing of articles.

So, the big news this week: Janet’s found her coveted apprentice. After receiving a flurry of applications via the National Apprenticeship Service, she whittled down the candidates and chose Rhian Jones, a 22-year-old student who is giving up her studies at Lancaster to work for Janet. Controversial, maybe, but Rhian will earn the princely sum of £6.08 an hour for 30 hours’ work a week. And it’s not a bad gig – for either of them.

While Janet’s new apprentice gets all her worldly wisdom and some extra-curricular experience on top; Janet finds someone who has the time to read documents, put in FoI requests, interpret complicated numbers, and research story ideas – on her behalf. It’s a lot of trust to put in someone else – but if Janet’s found the right combination, it might just work.

Maybe Janet's apprentice will drive her around in a snazzy car

Having an apprentice is, I reckon, a stroke of genius. It’s like suddenly doubling the time you have, as a journalist, to do journalisty things. And still get your articles written on a deadline. If I ever make properly make it in this big bad journalistic world, I might have to get myself one.

Let’s hope – after all this – she doesn’t end up just making Janet’s tea..

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The Onion: peeling back the layers

29 Sep

Twitter got a little bit angry this afternoon (OK, quite a lot angry) after satirical news organisation The Onion posted a fake story claiming that a group of armed congressmen on Capitol Hill had taken 12 schoolchildren hostage.

The Onion is known for its witty, parody-filled take on the day’s news – and, indeed, completely invented news stories – but for many readers, this time it went too far. Many Twitter users assumed the account had been hacked, while others slammed whoever was compiling the Twitter feed for being “unfunny” and “insensitive”. Police on Capitol Hill have had to confirm that the claims are false, and have even launched an investigation, while a spokesperson for The Onion has stepped forward to explain that the news ploy was entirely intentional.

So what on earth is going on? The ploy started with the following tweet..

BREAKING: Witnesses reporting screams and gunfire heard inside Capitol building.
 

And, of course, Twitter immediately went mad. With more than 100 retweets, some users were quick off the mark to question what The Onion was playing it. The hashtag #CongressHostage took off, and The Onion quickly backed up its alarming claims with a full story on its website. The content of the story is changing constantly – perhaps in a bid to mirror breaking news..or perhaps in response to almost-universal criticism – but the site claims the ‘kidnappers’ have decreed: “if any attempt is made to stage a rescue ‘all the kids will die’.” There’s also a horribly photoshopped image of the Speaker of the House, John Boehner, holding a gun to the head of a schoolgirl, alongside another man dressed in a ski mask and holding a rifle. The latest addition to the crude joke story is a video of whimpering schoolchildren supposedly ‘held hostage’ on Capitol Hill.

Here’s a screengrab of the page as it looks now.. just in case they decide to take it down:

The Onion's fake story about a hostage situation on Capitol Hill in the US

Continue reading 

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Poll time: Met Police vs the Guardian

21 Sep

We woke up this morning to the news that the Met has decided to drop its bid to order the Guardian to disclose its sources behind the NotW phone hacking stories.

The plans – invoking the Official Secrets Act – had been controversial from the outset, drawing a host of critical voices from journalism, politics and campaign groups in the UK and across the world. There were editorials in the Daily Telegraph, the Times, the Daily Mail and the Independent, while a contributor to the Columbia Journalism Review said – if successful – the decision would have…

“a chilling effect on sources’ willingness to expose corruption”

…which, as we hacks know, would be a Very Bad Thing.

After being put through the ringer itself during the #hackgate scandal, the Met  had planned to apply for a production order this Friday, in a bid to secure the handover of documents relating to sources for articles published by the Guardian newspaper, including the alleged hacking of Milly Dowler’s phone.

But today, it backtracked, and pretty dramatically. The official statement released by the Yard read:

“This decision does not mean that the investigation has concluded. Despite recent media reports there was no intention to target journalists or disregard obligations to protect their sources. It is not acceptable for police officers to leak information about any investigation, let alone one as sensitive and high profile as Operation Weeting.”

The force also made it clear that the legislation involved in the application for the production order was under the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984, not the Official Secrets Act as the media had concluded. The OSA, it said, was only mentioned in relation to one particular issue – the arrest of the police officer on September 18 in relation to Operation Weeting.

Mr Rusbridger was pretty happy. But it’s time for your thoughts. Was the Met right to withdraw its application? Or should it have stuck to its guns and pursued the Guardian at the expense of journalistic freedom? Votes below please:

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Johann Hari: “an unscrupulous little hustler”?

15 Sep

He’s finally done it. For those of you who haven’t seen it yet, here’s a link to Johann Hari’s eagerly-anticipated apology for all the ills he has committed in the journalistic world.

And I quote:

“If it was the other way round – if a journalist I disapprove of had done something analogous – I’d be withering. I’d say, it’s not hard: get your quotes right, and don’t be mean about other people in a way you find painful when it’s directed at you. Spare me the self-pitying excuses.”

Hari: great at karaoke (Image from Jason Alvey, The Guardian)

Not only did the Independent journalist say sorry for (a) replacing direct quotes with interviewees’ written words, and (b) making up the pseudonym ‘David Rose’ to edit his own and other journalists’ Wikipedia entries in a malicious and underhand way, but he’s given back the Orwell Prize AND he’s going back to journalism school to learn all the things he seems to have forgotten on the road to success.

Hari has pledged to leave the Independent immediately,  unpaid, and will be allowed to return by new editor Chris Blackhurst only when he has completed his training (which he will fund out of his own pocket) in 2012. His interviews will then be posted online accompanied by audio transcripts and guarantee from the interviewee that what Hari has written is fair and accurate.

It’s quite an undertaking – but as Hari says (quoting Christopher Hitchins):

“If you don’t want to sound like the Pope, who apologises for everything and for nothing, then your apology should cost you something.”

Surely that’s due a pat on the back?

Not quite. It seems that even promising to sit on the naughty step for a while hasn’t got Hari out of trouble with his hacked-off peers. Continue reading 

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And the award for best hurricane reporting goes to…

29 Aug

Hurricane Irene may not have brought the destruction New Yorkers were expecting – but what it did bring was a whole load of great reporting from around the world.

There were live blogs galore, some serious infographics and visual storm trackers, and brilliant pieces of first-person journalism from those caught up in the eye of the storm. It’s also been a great time for local news, as well as an impressive amount of citizen journalism, which stepped up to the mark during a crisis and supplied major news channels with eyewitness accounts, photos and videos of the devastation.

But the award for the best hurricane reporting, by far, goes to Mr Tucker Barnes, an unsuspecting meteorologist for Fox News, who found himself right in the middle of one of the more disgusting effects of Irene during his report from Washington DC. If you haven’t seen it already, here’s the infamous video:

Opinions are still divided as to what the murkey brown goop actually is. Hurricane backwash? Sea foam? Raw sewage? Irene poo? Nobody quite knows. Not even Tucker Barnes, who says in the clip:

It’s in my face as well, as you can imagine, it doesn’t taste great… It smells like ocean, it’s some sort of organic matter, plankton or something, mixed in with sand and salt. I can tell you first hand, it doesn’t smell great. Continue reading 

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Broadcast vs intercast: where do we go from here?

21 Aug

During a bit of a slow Sunday afternoon, I came across this brilliant graphic comparing top-down and bottom-up news. It’s from the We Media project of the Media Centre at the American Press Institute, and explores the idea that we are currently in a transitional phase between so-called “broadcast” and “intercast” news.

While everyone’s eyes are on the emergence of informal forms of media, including crisis journalism and citizen reporting, the mainstream media outlets continue to be constrained by the mundane pressures of editorial control, financial and advertising limitations and basic page space.

The two models are as follows:

Continue reading 

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After three nights of riots.. some good news

9 Aug

This evening, after three – and the threat of a fourth – nights of violent rioting and looting, London is in lockdown. Distraught locals have been left terrified, angry and bereft after a scourge of mindless disturbances by young thugs intent on causing chaos on our streets.

The latest reports say the violence has spread across the rest of England, with news that rioters have been spotted tonight in Birmingham, Wolverhampton and Manchester. More than 16,000 officers have been deployed on the capital’s streets, with officers from across the country joining forces with the Met, and the PSNI even sending armoured vehicles from Northern Ireland.

Citizen journalism, mobile reporting and social networks have all proven vital tools during the riots, which were sparked after police shot Tottenham father Mark Duggan last Thursday.

Blackberry messaging has been blamed for helping the rioting youths communicate and organise themselves, while social networking has been targeted as a catalyst for inciting and spreading the rioters’ message.

On the positive side, the web has come to the fore in sharing news, views, photos and videos of the rioting. With some news organisations suffering intimidation and violence on the so-called ‘front line’ of the riots, bystanders and onlookers have often been the only source of information.. and have posted some incredible pieces of information, as well as warning others about danger zones.

And when this insanity eventually ends, social media will once again prove crucial – as it has in helping seek out perpetrators (see the Met’s official Flickr site) and organising local clean-ups, under the hashtags #prayforlondon #riotcleanup and #riotwombles.

Two photos that stood out from the past few days – with many more like them on Twitter, Facebook, Flickr and YouTube accounts – are the following:

A woman takes flight from the flames in Croydon (Image: Reuters)

Continue reading 

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