Not having anything better to do, might as well liveblog the leaders’ debate tonight. Will there be enough snide sarcastic comments about the leaders and TV networks to sustain a whole post? We’ll see.
Other liveblogs:
Not having anything better to do, might as well liveblog the leaders’ debate tonight. Will there be enough snide sarcastic comments about the leaders and TV networks to sustain a whole post? We’ll see.
Other liveblogs:
This is what I love about Facebook: A “Facebook Blackout,” which basically translates to “don’t use Facebook for a day”, is being organized on Facebook. The rationale for such a pointless exercise:
Don’t you adminstrator remember that we are the one using facebook ??
Makes Buy Nothing Day look brilliant by comparison.
For obvious reasons, I always cringe when people make fun of others’ family names. This is at constant odds with my job as a headline writer, which half the time involves exactly that.
And yet:
Mitch Joel talks about a recent lecture given by David Simon, the guy behind that series that nobody watched called The Wire. You can watch the lecture here, though the player is the most rudimentary one I’ve ever seen, and doesn’t even seem to include a seek function.
The point that Joel brings out of the lecture is kind of a passing remark Simon makes, that the idea that so-called “citizen journalists” being able to replace the work of professional journalists is absurd, because these people are mere witnesses and don’t delve into the “why” question that’s much more important than just recounting something that happened.
Simon reserves most of his distaste, however, not toward bloggers or new media, but toward the owners of newspapers (and, by extension, TV and radio) who treat their media like a commodity, a product that needs to be created as cheaply as possible. This, he argues, is the main reason for the downfall of newspapers in an age where the Internet can all but eliminate production and distribution costs.
It’s amazing how much of the daily news cycle is lazy journalism. So many stories originate from press releases, which a company or organization has paid to have distributed to media outlets. So many short news stories are one-source stories with no critical analysis. So many journalists waste so much time phoning the police, asking them what happened and then summarizing it.
And as bad as newspapers are, TV and radio are even worse. They can’t cover as many stories, and they can’t cover the stories they do very well. They have to worry about getting good video or audio, making sure a guest is in studio, and filling airtime.
Plenty of good journalism can be done using these media. The New York Times has lots of feature articles that delve deep into the “why” that takes so much work to find out. NPR, PBS, 60 Minutes, etc. do similarly using the advantages of their media. But these things are expensive and time-consuming, and a manager who comes from a manufacturing industry and sees that an investigative reporter produces only about a story a week will probably consider that person a liability instead of an asset.
Simon’s almost throw-away suggestion about the business model newspapers should adopt is interesting: charge people for access. Sure, you won’t get hundreds of thousands of subscribers, but you also won’t have the kind of expenses you do with a physical newspaper. 15,000 subscribers paying $10 a month is enough to keep a small crew of journalists working on important stories that people want to read.
Very few newspaper companies are embracing that idea. They want control and influence and advertising money. Of the major Canadian newspapers, only one still charges for access to its articles. It also happens to be the only one that’s independent: Le Devoir.
Instead, the megalopoly corporations including Canwest, CTVglobemedia and Quebecor are trying to reduce the cost of producing journalism. They’re slashing reporting staff, centralizing operations and trying to morph into something that resembles Facebook more than it does … uhh … I’m trying to find an example of an online news operation that values quality over style and populism. They encourage people to send their own news (and make sure they sign give-us-all-your-rights-forever-for-nothing EULAs first), and they don’t care that most of that news is church bake sale notices and pictures of dogs in funny sweaters.
Simon seems strangely optimistic about the future of journalism, in that he thinks companies running toward the lowest common denominator will eventually plummet to their deaths, and that people will flock to where they can get the stuff done by professionals.
I’m not sure what’s going to happen. Will big media go bankrupt, and be replaced by small highly-specialized groups carving out their own niches with excellent journalism, or will they manage to float just barely enough to survive and stumble their way into a business model that works, even if most of what they’re selling is junk?
Chris Hand, formerly of Zeke’s Gallery, gave an interview to CKUT recently in which he talks about art in the metro. Worth listening to if you have 11 minutes and 53 seconds to kill.
It’s amazing how many people will write songs about their local sports team. I listed some of them during the playoffs last season, though I’m sure half of those links have since gone dead. Many of the songs are professionally produced, and feature catchy music, inspiring lyrics and on-key singing. Or they’re just funny.
The following is none of those things:
Sorry.
You’ve seen Il fait beau dans l’métro and Attention la terre, pollution.
The following videos are … not nearly as cool. They’re from the dark period of lame 80s/90s Quebec song commercials. All three have the same message: the bus and metro are much faster, cheaper and less stressful than driving a car and dealing with traffic and parking and accidents and stuff.
Canwest (disclosure: my employer) has announced that it has signed an online streaming agreement with Fox which will give it Canadian online distribution rights to Family Guy, 24, Prison Break and Bones. This is in addition to House, Heroes and .. uhh … all those great Canadian programs that Global produces, like … uhh … that thing about the hair salon… yeah.
The full episodes are streamable on Global TV’s video site here, which a lot of people still don’t know about. CTV has a similar site at watch.ctv.ca for its programs and programs owned by its specialty channels, such as ER, Grey’s Anatomy and the Daily Colbert with Stephen Stewart.
From Readers Matter (overamplified and distorted sound warning):
A spoof on the Gazette’s “words matter” TV campaign (not the first one either), to get people to pay attention to what’s going on in contract negotiations and sign a petition (now with over 5,000 signatures) put forward by the union. A Facebook cause has also been setup with 343 members.
UPDATE: Another video has just been posted.
Meanwhile, CTV News Montreal covered the Gazette union situation last night during its noon-hour and evening newscasts (Windows Media video). It includes an interview with Bernard Asselin, the VP of marketing and reader sales, who says that pagination is a “technical” job, and so it shouldn’t matter if it’s centralized in another city. He also says that “our goal, which is the same as the union’s, by the way, is to protect local content.”
Dans ma télé has an interesting 20-minute interview with Dominic Arpin, who discusses Vlog, his unhealthy obsession with Quebec-based online video series, and whether he feels he could ever go back to being a “real” journalist again.
Well here’s a shocker: The New York Times endorses Barack Obama. Really? The paper that hasn’t endorsed a Republican for president since Dwight Eisenhower in 1956 is lining up behind Obama?
At least it provides a history of its endorsements for us news junkies to feast on. Some of its favoured candidates have included losers Hubert Humphrey, George McGovern, Walter Mondale, Michael Dukakis, Al Gore and John Kerry, as well as Republican Thomas Dewey, who sadly did not defeat Truman.
Well, at least Ron Howard’s endorsement is cute. Will the Fonz vote put Obama over the top?
An eagle-eyed netizen tells me that Google’s Transit service, which allows you to choose “by public transit” when finding directions via Google Maps, has been updated to include route and departure information for the STM’s buses and metro.
For an example, here’s a route by public transit from Fairview Pointe-Claire (where all the anglos hang out, didn’t you know?) to The Gazette’s offices on Ste. Catherine St. downtown. (Et, bien sûr, c’est aussi disponible en français)
The service, which is also available in Vancouver, Ottawa, Fredericton and dozens of U.S. cities, and had previously included AMT train service (which was much easier since there are much fewer departures to put in a database), is effectively a competitor to the STM’s existing Tous Azimuts service, which although revolutionary when it was introduced is now over a decade old and doesn’t meet today’s usability standards. Google Transit is slicker, faster and easier to use.
Like Tous Azimuts, Google Transit suggests alternate routes, says how long they’ll take, and provides the time of departure and arrival of each bus or metro.
This is no simple undertaking. Google requires the transit agency to provide a database of all departures for all routes in a specific format. We’re talking thousands and thousands of departures here.
This might also make other third-party STM trip-planning services obsolete, as Google Maps becomes a must-have application for cellphones.
UPDATE: I’m told by a helpful reader below that this also includes off-island transit networks like the Société de transport de Laval and the AMT-administered CITs, but not the south shore RTL network yet RTL data just went live so it now includes all the networks.
UPDATE (Oct. 29): Google, the STM, STL, RTL and AMT are making the joint announcement today, 10am at Google’s Montreal HQ (1253 McGill College) (Thanks Jean). Google Transit has already been updated to list all the transit agencies in the area (thanks Dumitru).
Expect media coverage of the new service during the evening news. Some technology media are already covering it. UPDATE: more pieces from The Gazette, Branchez-Vous and RadCan. And Tristan Péloquin has some background about this project.
Google has also setup a special page with an introductory video in French and English, thought the English version has a British narrator and uses New York as an example.
Little did I know, Patrick Lagacé in Americanese is Patrick Lagacé.
I’ve always wanted an ampersand and semicolon in my name.
In case you missed it, last Thursday’s Gazette included a four-page insert called “Champlain’s Gazette”, which showed what a fictional newspaper might look like back then (mind you, it wouldn’t have had pictures or process colour, nor would the text have lined up perfectly, but you gotta take some creative license).
Editor-in-chief Andrew Phillips explains the history of the project in his blog. He also links to the associated website, as well as a page with teaching materials for educators who want to make this part of their classrooms.
You know, every time I see Prenez Garde aux Chiens, I wonder: What are these people doing on VOX?
The video above is a good parody of the whole TQS situation with the CRTC that I found on Richard Therrien’s blog. (Incidentally, there are some people – mostly male – who wonder if Bleu Nuit will return to the airwaves.)
Also be sure to check out member David Lemelin’s interview with Christiane Charette on Première Chaîne.