Monthly Archives: July 2009

Healing Rwanda (with Gorillas!)

If you haven't already, you should check out Phil Carpenter's video from Rwanda, where he travelled for the month of May as part of a program to teach locals about multimedia journalism.

Climbing a Thousand Hills from Phil Carpenter on Vimeo.

It goes with a feature in Saturday's paper about how the country is recovering 15 years after a devastating genocide. You can read his dispatches from Rwanda, with more photos, on the Gazette's photography blog The Lens.

Astral ditches Energie for NRJ

NRJ

Astral Media, the folks who decided to bring Virgin Radio branding (and programming) to stations including Montreal's CJFM 95.9, has decided to do something similar with their French-language Énergie network, dumping that brand in favour of France-based NRJ Radio.

The press release (also on their website) reassures listeners about keeping local hosts and promoting local talent, but also talks about new programming that would come from this international network that operates in more than a dozen countries around the world.

There are just so many hours in the broadcast day, so expect some of the non-vedettes at Énergie (CKMF and what's left of regional stations) to lose their jobs as Astral finds more efficiencies bringing in cheap, syndicated foreign content instead of paying locals to act as DJs.

The changeover is scheduled for August 24.

UPDATE: More from Les Affaires.

Montreal Geography Trivia No. 43

Montreal Geography Trivia No. 43

What is this the shape of?

UPDATE: It's the bike path around the St. Michel environmental complex, rotated about 90 degrees to fool you, but apparently not successfully.

St. Michel hill

You can see a complete PDF map of Montreal bike paths (and lanes and designated streets) here.

“This is not journalism”

GlobalPost, the Boston-based startup of foreign correspondents that is trying to make money, is supposed to be "high-quality journalism" covering stories that are "left aside".

So would an 1,157-word report about the Daily Show and Colbert Report that summarizes the shows, links to articles elsewhere, embeds some videos and apparently can't count to four be too unprofessional for this high-quality organization?

Apparently not.

Beware auto-Twittering

Oops.

Oops.

The problem with programs that do things automatically is exactly that.

Long bare arms and the long tail

The Gazette always covers the Jazz Festival pretty hard. This year, as they have for the past few, they send a bunch of people (some professional music critics, others who just like jazz) to various shows and have them blog their impressions on the Words and Music blog. It's averaging between eight and 13 posts a day, which is a lot for any blog.

This week Jeff Heinrich, who just recently left the city department and moved into features (a.k.a. arts and life) wrote a not-so-nice review of Maria Schneider. The post has been "burning up the web" (and Twitter), leading to a staggering 56 103 comments so far, every single one of them insulting.

I'm left wondering: is it really that bad? Is Heinrich's descriptions of "irritatingly stiff body-language" or "middle-aged women in the audience" really sexist and ill-informed? Or are these commenters (most of whom, to their credit, use what appear to be their full names) just a bunch of people who disagree with a bad review (and never saw the long feature piece previewing the show, because they're Maria Schneider fans who were pointed to the post, not Gazette readers who came across it on their own)?

And do you need a degree in musicology to review a jazz show?

Discuss.

UPDATE: As more and more bloggers are linking to the post, and more hate-filled comments come in accusing Heinrich of not being nice (including one apparently from Maria Schneider herself), the author responds in a comment, in which he explains that he's not a music critic and it wasn't a review:

Read More »

Dimanche vide

"Bienvenue aux lecteurs du dimanche" reads the Gazette

"Bienvenue aux lecteurs du dimanche" reads the Gazette

Well that's it. There's no La Presse today, and there won't be any next Sunday, or the Sunday after that.

The painful decision to cut out the most expendable of the seven daily editions, made last month, has finally seen its effect. Except for a blog post from Chantal Guy, there isn't much mention of it today, probably because everything has already been said.

I'll note a couple of things though, both involving my newspaper. First is that today's cover has a note which I'm sure some old lady in the West Island will ask to have translated for her, welcoming former La Presse readers who are so desperate for a paper to read on Sunday that they'll grab the anglo rag. There's no article inside or anything, just the banner.

It certainly wouldn't be the first time a newspaper has tried to move in on the Sunday market left empty by another:

The other is a notice in yesterday's paper that warns readers in some far-away areas that the delivery of their Sunday paper will be delayed because The Gazette subcontracted delivery in those areas to La Presse and now there's no one to bring their newspapers to them. It's one of those little secrets of newspapers that often the same person will deliver competing papers to an area (especially when there are few readers in that area, as one would expect for Trois Rivières and Sorel). La Presse's cancellation of its Sunday edition was sudden and caught my paper a bit flat-footed.

UPDATE:

... and again the next week

... and again the next week

STM offers bus schedules by text message

There's been no press release yet, but the STM has quietly launched two new systems to get bus schedules on mobile devices, and recently unveiled it to employees, Fagstein has learned.

UPDATE (July 14): The STM launched both services today as a six-month pilot project.

Text LA-STM

The first is by text message. Send a message to 52786 (which works out to "LA-STM") with the bus route number followed by the stop code and you'll get one back with the next three departure times for that bus. So, for example, to find out the times for the next 80 bus northbound at the Place des Arts metro station (stop #52552), text "8052552", and you'll get a message like this:

Stop 52552 (07/03/09) Line 80: 21:52, 21:59, 22:06.

The first time you use the service, it will ask you whether you want it in English or French by texting "E" or "F".

m.stm.info

m.stm.info

m.stm.info

The second method is through a new mobile website at m.stm.info. A simply-designed page asks you to input a stop code and route number (or just the route number so you can search for the code), and spits out the time of the next three arrivals. There are also bare-bones pages with fare information and metro closing times.

This isn't the first time that someone thought to make it easier for mobile users to get bus times (outside of the AUTOBUS voice-menu system). There's the STM Mobile iPhone application, busmob.com mobile-friendly site and this site which mashes up with Google Maps. There's also, of course, Google Maps itself, which has had Montreal-area bus schedule information since October. The STM told The Gazette's Roberto Rocha in August that it was planning something similar "in the fall", but it seems they've been a bit behind schedule.

UPDATE (July 5): Some linklove from Rue Frontenac and a citation from Agence QMI. Amusingly, both invent new examples to use, QMI's in the more francophone area of the Joliette metro. The QMI piece is also on Page 3 of 24 Heures of July 6:

24 Heures, July 6, 2009, Page 3

24 Heures, July 6, 2009, Page 3

UPDATE (July 14): More coverage from The Gazette, Metro, Technaute and Canoe (again) after the system was officially announced.

Your homework for today: readings from the RRJ

I'm working mornings the next couple of days, which means when I'm not working I'm either asleep or in a semi-comatose state, so to make up for the lack of posts here's some reading material from the Ryerson Review of Journalism's spring 2009 issue:

The most interesting one is Lora Grady's piece on the battle of Canadian news websites (I was interviewed for this piece though I'm not mentioned in the online version, still it stands as the only time I've ever been contacted by a fact-checker). The piece is spot-on on a lot of things, such as the fact that CBC.ca got a head start on its online operation and until recently handled elections (or at least election results) a lot better than the private sites. It also points out that sites like the Globe and Mail have played catchup and have a lot more long features and just-for-web multimedia content. And yet, there's a bitterness over the fact that CBC.ca gets more traffic than those private sites.

Also:

I know that you want to be Canadian

Happy Canada Day, folks.