What types of local news stories should be automated? The Toronto Star is figuring it out
Thursday, November 3, 2022
What types of local news stories should be automated? The Toronto Star is figuring it outIn the case of break-and-enter stories, “everybody recognized that a poor execution of the idea would be a problem.” By Hanaa' Tameez. |
Are journalism intermediaries getting too much foundation money?More money should go to news organizations directly — even if that means making hard choices. By Richard Tofel. |
What We’re Reading
Twitter / Matthew Yglesias
Thread: “A few years ago The New York Times made a weird editorial decision with its tech coverage….” →
“This was a very deliberate top-down decision.” (This take is corroborated by others.)
Columbia Journalism Review / Kyle Pope
How much coverage are you worth? →
“If you're young, white, female, and a resident of a big city, the coverage you'd receive if you went missing is vastly out of proportion…To highlight the scale of the problem, CJR has developed a tool to test your own newsworthiness.”
TechCrunch / Sarah Perez
Substack targets Twitter with launch of discussions feature, Substack Chat →
“The feature could benefit those who spend a lot of time reading on Substack or those who want to more closely network with fellow creators or readers. However, it isn't really a direct replacement for tweeting more publicly as it lacks Twitter's reach.”
Vanity Fair / Joe Pompeo
Blue-check havoc: Elon Musk’s Twitter takeover fuels a media meltdown →
“Some journalists are painstakingly deleting all of their DMs and asking contacts to do the same because, well, who knows what could happen with that? I received one such request the other day, and when I asked the person on the other end whether I should also consider a mass DM purge, they told me they were doing it because they'd been asked by several people to delete their DMs. And so the cycle goes.”
Twitter / Insider Union
Insider’s union demands management bargain over changes to metrics goals and job roles →
“They're also now saying they will only bargain with us in person and will stop our members from observing. Seriously? Coming from a newsroom that prides itself on a permanent ‘work from anywhere’ policy, these demands are hypocritical and insulting.”
Wall Street Journal / Alexandra Bruell
Alabama’s three largest newspapers are going digital-only next year →
“Advance Publications, which owns 24 newspapers as well as the Condé Nast magazine-publishing empire, plans to announce it will end the print operations of the Birmingham News, the Huntsville Times, and Mobile's Press-Register in February.”
Press Gazette / William Turvill
Facebook will replace News Tab’s human editors with AI →
Press Gazette first reported this was happening in the UK; Gizmodo confirms it’s happening everywhere.
New York Times / Rebecca Robbins and Benjamin Mullin
Les Moonves and Paramount to pay $9.75 million in state case tied to sexual misconduct →
“The New York attorney general's office said in a news release that its investigation had found that the company's leadership knew about the allegations against Mr. Moonves and concealed them for months before they became public.”
Popular Information / Judd Legum and Emily Atkin
A New York Times columnist went to Greenland and discovered fossil fuel talking points →
“The Times marketed Stephens’ piece as if it were a fresh and important new approach to tackling climate change. In reality, it is a collection of discredited talking points from the fossil fuel industry, and a prime example of delay discourse.”
Digiday / Sara Guaglione
How The Washington Post, NBC News, and SmartNews are retooling their apps ahead of the midterms →
“Vertical video will also be a key part of midterms coverage for The Post and will be shared on the app.”
Washington Post / Jeremy Barr
Two Fox journalists were killed in Ukraine. A widow still searches for answers. →
Pierre Zakrzewski, 55, was killed in March, along with a 24-year-old Ukrainian journalist on his team, Oleksandra Kuvshynova. The third member of their reporting team, Benjamin Hall, then 39, was alive but suffering grave injuries that would cost him a foot, an eye and part of his leg. Two Ukrainian soldiers they were traveling with were killed as well, The Washington Post discovered.
Fortune / David Bauder
A BBC reporter created 5 fake American identities on social media to try to understand the midterm elections →
"We're doing it with very good intentions because it's important to understand what is going on," [BBC reporter Marianna] Spring said. In the world of disinformation, "the U.S. is the key battleground," she said.
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