Thursday 24 May 2012

Assessment - Annotated Bibliography


ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY



Reese, S., Rutigliano, L., Hyun, K. & Jeong, J. (2005) Mapping the blogosphere: Citizen based media in the global news media. Austin, TX: University of Texas School of Journalism.

The authors, researchers at the University of Texas, analyse the link between weblogs and mainstream media internationally. They investigate this by specifically analysing the top 6 major news and political blogs that generate the most traffic, as well as track the sites they lead to. Their findings suggest that globalisation and the internet have in fact lead to a more complimentary relationship between weblogs and traditional journalism than previously assumed. The journal article discusses how weblogs act as an important secondary market for material to push readers to what they otherwise might not have read as blogs can be aligned with individuals and/or communities. Conversely, the commercial journalism traditional role is that of being unable to take readers off their own web pages. The study found weblogs have also allowed for a greater encouragement among readers to discover more about an issue as the location of ‘authority’ has been changed promoting higher citizen interactivity and a shift in the global news agenda. The opposing view of our reliance on blogs is also included greatly reducing bias. The significant use of citations throughout the journal article and access to the findings in comprehensive tables adds credibility to the view of blogs and citizen journalists improving media.


The following 3 annotated works are all online articles in relation to the announcement of the selection of the Australian Wheelchair Rugby team. Through different means of webpages they have all taken different approaches in announcing the selection, and subsequently different reactions to readers.


McDonald, M. (2012, May 21). Ryley Batt spearheads Australia's tilt for wheelchair rugby glory. The Australian. Retrieved from http://www.theaustralian.com.au/sport/london-games/ryley-batt-spearheads-australias-tilt-for-wheelchair-rugby-glory/story-e6frgdg6-1226362772913

Margie McDonald, the author, works as a sports journalist for The Australian, giving her decent credibility particularly related to sports reporting. The article outlines Ryley Batt’s recently announced selection in the Australian team emphasising his goal to win a gold medal in London 2012. The article is mostly direct quotes from Ryley Batt, and as a result further emphasises credibility as it is straight from the source. However, the article on the website does not make use of any ‘tags’ and has not once been ‘shared’ on Facebook social media plug-in. This lack of tags makes the article inaccessible and unless someone was specifically searching for ‘Ryley Batt’ or ‘wheelchair rugby’, it is very unlikely they would find this article. The only other person quoted in the article is Jason Hellwig, APC chief executive and London chef de mission, from a press release regarding the completion of Paralympic Stadium days earlier that subsequently add no additional value to the article regarding Ryley or the Wheelchair Rugby team. The author concludes with further quotes from Batt, leaving a bias impression as the article showing no significant indicators of research or fact checking by the journalist reflecting the tabloid nature of The Australian and the large amounts of news articles they are required to produce daily.


Steelers set for London Paralympics. (2012, May 4). ABC News. Retrieved from http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-05-04/steelers-set-for-london-paralympics/3992242

ABC News is a public news company, rather than commercial, gaining credibility immediately. The article outlines the selection of the Australian Wheelchair Rugby team and has interviews from the team coach, star player Ryley Batt and Jason Hellwig (Australian Paralympic Committee CEO). The article also contains tournament results, dates of the Paralympic and concludes with a list of all selected team members. This article is greatly informational and by providing information on a whole team instead of singling out one player it balances the weight of the article. Accessed online, this article makes use of multiple ‘tags’ and has been ‘shared’ on Facebook social media plug-in once. By also being part of the 24 hour news cycle, the focus is less on feelings, and mostly on facts regarding the team and their goal for gold at the Paralympics. However, the author has chosen to include that the Australians can’t afford to be complacent about the early stages of competition, emphasising that there is still competition and no victory yet. The article is also accompanied with an on location photo of Ryley Batt playing Japan (during the tournament the team was announced) further adding credibility of the article.


Bond, C. (2012). Chris Bond: Training to medal, not just to impress the girls. International Paralympic Committee. Retrieved from http://www.paralympic.org/blog/chris-bond-training-medal-not-just-impress-girls

Chris Bond has written this blog post in first person about his own journey and feelings regarding his selection on the London 2012 Paralympics team for Wheelchair Rugby.  This style of writing adds credibility as we are privy to the stream of conscious style writing including what they feel is important from one of the players rather than a journalist’s interpretation and editing. As a new player, rather than returning star Ryley Batt, Chris’s opinion is different to any currently available in the news as other players are often overlooked.  This works in favour, as the article is fresh and new, yet the comparison of himself to Batt gives readers someone to identify with and become interested in the article. Bond makes use of a light-hearted approach discussing how he never expected to be in a wheelchair, let alone represent Australia providing again a subject to relate to and empathise with, rather than just straight facts. This page has been ‘shared’ on Facebook social media plug-in 79 times. By being on the Australian Paralympic Website, the article is also directly available to people most likely to be interested, while adding even further credibility for a story surrounding the Paralympic games.


Having read these 3 citations, it is clear the use of ‘citizen journalists’ with aid from globalisation and the internet can in fact influence journalism in a positive way. The angle of the last story by Chris Bond was so easy to understand and relate to that it had the most ‘shares’ on Facebook, which in turn means its audience was much larger, particularly to that of the first article which did not even use tags for the article to be found online. However, regardless of platform or author, all articles maintained credibility and provided audiences with different and appealing approaches to the same story whilst somewhat proving the “Mapping of the Blogosphere” idea that blogs and news articles are becoming blurred, true.

Saturday 12 May 2012

The Highly Sensitive People Network

This morning I decided to check the Highly Sensitive People Network Facebook group. A few days ago I shared my video to the admin of the page, hoping that if even one person watches it, I will have succeeded with what I set out to do, and that is help people who identify with H.S.P. traits.


To my absolute surprise, not only had the pages shared it on the wall (with then other people sharing the page from that post) but there were some really heart warming and wonderful comments left by people who had watched the interview.


I went to the YouTube channel to see how many people had watched it, and for something I thought maybe a dozen people would watch, it's almost sitting on 200!!


It made it even more special that my dad found the link and has become someone people can identify with, and relate to. And, I honestly can't believe there are people who are sharing my video with their doctors! I am absolutely overwhelmed


For a first time interview, and telling someone's story - even if for the assignment I may have lost marks because of the length, I do not regret leaving in a single second of this YouTube video after seeing this result.


And this is why I want to be a journalist!


What a wonderful way to start a morning!