As dots connect, whole emerges for future of news

First published Huffington Post, June 12, 2010

The online dots are quickly connecting. Gov2.0 entrepreneurs are building a strong backbone for a hyperlocal new stream. And much of the innovation is seated here in Chicago.

Everyblock and SeeClickFix have formed a partnership.

Many Chicago alderman are signed up for SeeClickFix. We are forming new communication channels on the Web for talking to our governments, creating a crowd-sourced complaint system and measuring the quality of government’s response to our complaints and requests for service. [I’ve embedded it here on my website – so give it a spin.] More to come on the feedback systems that could drive all this.

I haven’t talked with OutsideIn for a while but I see that the creators of the conceptual framework of the Emerging Ecosystem of News Delivery have a robust stream of information coming in from news blogs.

There’s no formula for bringing all this together and making it all work like a well-oiled machine. But – as was evident from a panel on models for news and the optimistic viewpoint of Steve Rhodes about revenue models at Chicago’s Community Media Workshop last week, we have many reasons to look brightly to the future.

We also have the “Big” thinkers now stepping forward and touting tools for getting the information you want, many of which James Fallows outlined in this June piece in the Atlantic Monthly. Give GoogleNews a spin – you’ll like it. Even the New York Times Magazine is taking notice of the plight of New Journalism Entrepreneurs in this May 10 piece by Andrew Rice “Putting a Price on Words.” It’s something I first noted in a ChuffPo post last year.

At this rarified high level of information exchange online, there’s much going on front stage and behind the scenes. There are more moving parts than can be counted.

I was reminded last week that all this blue sky can quickly go gray from the clouds cast by the lack of online access for underserved communities. Committed community news activists and journalists (no longer news-room bound) gathered in Detroit for “Create or Die” an open space on Journalism that Matters.

That’s a conversation that is continuing at a higher pitch and urgency June 24 at “From Blueprint to Building: Making the Market for Digital Information,” which Bill Densmore calls an action congress for trust, identity and Internet information commerce serving newspapers and beyond. Trust is our currency on the Web, and we’ve made much progress defining that since Pierre Omidyar made his first discoveries on eBay. Now even Omidyar has gotten the news bug and has launched Honolulu’s Civil Beat. Densmore hopes his “Blueprint” will dot the “i’s and cross the “t”s on the next phase of online trust. We’re hopeful and we will see.

As the Chicago News Cooperative continues to explore the idea of the low-profit limited liability, or L3C, business structure, the Pt. Reyes Light in Marin County says it is taking the plunge and will become a mission-driven newsroom.

As Steve Yelvington explained so well in this presentation last year at the University of Minnesota Economic Models for News, journalism has never had a business model of its own. My thinking is that it is about time it does, as I explained at Community Media Workshop panel last month. That’s why I am continuing to follow and braid the threads leading to a social enterprise news stream.

It can’t be long now before this all comes together, and when it does it will be in several robust forms that will provide access to volumes of information we’ve not had access to before. And it will be up to a diversity of journalists to do the job of helping to create, vet, sort and distribute these streams.

Hold on for a wild ride.

Follow Sally Duros on Twitter: www.twitter.com/saduros

Free Speech TV — Dish Network 9415

Found buried in my in box – a call for video journalists to collaborate with Free Speech TV at the US Social World Forum in Detroit next week.

Dear Colleagues,
Free Speech TV is proud to provide live coverage of the upcoming 2010 US Social Forum in Detroit, June 22-26. Extensive daily coverage will be broadcast both on the network and online at www.freespeech.org. Our USSF reporting will reach into millions of homes across the country. We want to collaborate with you by providing a platform to share your voice and interviews directly from Free Speech TV’s US Social Forum headquarters.

Free Speech TV will provide the space, equipment, and crew for you to conduct your interview and report directly from the People’s Media Center in Cobo Hall. FSTV will promote your story on Facebook & Twitter in real time, your video stories will be archived (so you can access them after the event, and all content is shared, so you can embed the video feed into your social network and onto partnering Web sites.

Bonnie Gross, Outreach & Member Services Manager for Free Speech TV, says they have spots available for reporting at the Forum. If you’d like to contribute to the reporting please contact Gross at bonnie@freespeech.org or cell 415. 531. 9078. In your email give a quick one liner on what you are planning to cover or attend.

“We will be covering plenary sessions with C-Span-like coverage,” Gross said. Free Speech TV is interested in “Any workshops that journalists think will translate well on TV.”

Gross said: “We have 13 journalists as part of our editoreial team. I have slots that we are looking to fill of about 10 minutes long.” All the content generated will be shared and you can get an embed code from the Free Speech TV.

Web: www.freespeech.org
DISH Network Channel 9415

Journalism that Matters Detroit

For those of you who were in Detroit last week for Journalism that Matters, I thought I would share the link for the Mobile Neighborhood Tours I just helped produce here in Chicago.

Produced by community leaders, LISC-Chicago Mobile Neighborhood Tours are — I believe — the first community driven and created media of this kind.

To date, you can only see them in your smart phone.
Visit this address in your phone’s browser:
tours.lisc-chicago.org

Our sell copy reads:
“A project of LISC’s Chicago Community Showcase, our Mobile Neighborhood Tours connect visitors with the exciting futures of Chicago’s neighborhoods. Whether an ethnic eatery, a local landmark building, an historic site or a place where the future is being planned and birthed, our destinations have been selected through the collective wisdom of the community that values, preserves and creates them.”

As dots connect, whole is emerging for future of news

Chicago Journalism Townhall
Chicago Journalism Townhall (Photo credit: sally garden)

As dots connect, whole is emerging for future of news

The online dots are quickly connecting. Gov2.0 entrepreneurs are building a strong backbone for a hyperlocal new stream. And much of it is happening here in Chicago.

Continue reading As dots connect, whole is emerging for future of news

Free training for journalists on redistricting

You can pick up a copy opf the classic The Struggle for Power and Influence in Cities and States or you can learn enough to write the latest chapters.

Here’s some training to help you do it. This announcement doesn’t have a deadline for applying.

REQUEST FOR APPLICATIONS FOR JOURNALIST TRAINING “Reading between the Lines: Unraveling Illinois Redistricting” June 17 & 18, 2010 If you need additional info, contact Terry Pastika, Executive Director, Citizen Advocacy Center. tpastika@citizenadvocacycenter.org Phone: 630.833.4080