Thursday, November 17, 2011

Week 11: Journalism Next: Chapter 5 "Mobile Journalism" Summary




In reading Mark Briggs’ Journalism next, I found Chapter 5, “Mobile Journalism”, the most engaging. Briggs modernizes many concepts of journalism through technology trends and reconstructs the popular beliefs of certain rules of journalism to fit in with the efficiency of mobile devices. 

The chapter opens with the benefits of mobile journalism, the number one benefit being immediacy. Mobile journalism increases nightly deadline pressure common in traditional news organizations because the deadline according to Briggs is always “right now.” Although this new responsibility adds to the stress of the journalism field, the text explains that mobile technology provides flexibility to crowdsource the audience for tips, content, and comments.

A very interesting quote from chapter 5 is how Briggs describes mobile devices, “Mobile devices are like electronic Swiss Army knives, arming anyone and potentially everyone with an all-in-one media tool that can view, capture and publish or broadcast” (Journalism Next).
Although while reading it’s hard not to assume that the developments in technology will take over traditional journalist, the text explains that mobile journalism however is best used as a supplement along with traditional, in-depth reporting.

Briggs’ also qualifies his opinion of mobile journalism and an importance concept in journalistic principles, “It’s important to remember, however, that the journalism should come first, the technology second” (Journalism Next).

“Mobile Journalism” does emphasize subject matter that is more appropriate for mobile coverage than others. Here is a list of the most suitable mobile topics
  1. Criminal or civil trials
  2. Important speeches or announcement
  3. All breaking news (natural disasters, crimes, or accidents)
  4. Public gatherings (including protests, parades, or rallies)
  5. All sporting events
  6. Grand openings (shops or restaurants)
7.       Not all content works on mobile- Think about how the story benefits from immediate coverage
8.      Promote mobile coverage through text messaging- Deliver the most important information and draw customers to the organization’s other channels
9.      Think outside of the newsroom- Mobile journalism provides different deadlines and expectations of content
10.  Give the audience a voice- This includes understanding what is important to your specific audience and mobile crowdsourcing

Briggs also provides a list of equipment for journalists who are technology savvy or have to use mobile reporting on a daily basis. However, for traditional journalists who will be reporting from the field infrequently, there is only one essential piece of equipment: the smart phone.
Which was particularly interesting to read was that Briggs’ stresses that textual content is the most important element. Although multimedia elements initially catch the readers’ attention, written content illuminates the story on a deeper level.

My reasoning for choosing this chapter was twofold: Journalism and the immediacy of news is forcing journalists to be experts in technology; and although journalism is becoming mobile, the fundamentals of journalism are essential for sound news reporting.

In reporting for the Arizona Daily Star, I am required to attend and report high school football games which start at 7 pm. and end at 9:30 p.m. and my deadline is 10:30 p.m. If I did not have mobile technology, I could not have completed my articles before my deadline. I needed my mobile phone to write drafts of my articles, send my editor score updates, and research teams on the go. 

 Briggs, Mark. Journalism next a Practical Guide to Digital Reporting and Publishing. Washington: CQ, 2010. Print

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