Here’s the interesting article from First Draft News.
Posted by Tim Morrissey
Here’s the interesting article from First Draft News.
Posted by Tim Morrissey
More evidence that “journalism is not stenography” – in this article from Poynter.
Posted by Tim Morrissey
Please join us during Free Speech Week on Friday, October 20, 1:30pm to 3:00pm EDT, for an important discussion on the First Amendment and reporters’ rights that will be hosted at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., and streamed on Facebook Live at https://www.facebook.com/RTDNA.RTDNF.
RTDNA, the National Press Club Journalism Institute, the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, and Reel Media Group are co-sponsoring the event, at which student and professional journalists will have the opportunity to learn from media law experts and experienced reporters who have encountered legal or physical threats while reporting.
RTDNA’s Voice of the First Amendment Task Force, launched this year, has been tracking increasing vitriol against reporters working in public, including verbal and physical harassment and even arrest.
“Journalists have a Constitutionally-guaranteed duty to seek and report the truth, and actions that prevent reporters from doing so are often unjustified,” said Dan Shelley, RTDNA Executive Director.
The panel will include Ellen Crooke, VP of News for TEGNA and an RTDNA Director-at-Large, veteran investigative reporter Seth McFarlane of NBC Washington, and Adrianna C. Rodriguez of the prestigious Washington law firm Ballard Spahr, among others. It will be moderated by Reel Media Group co-founders Stephanie Tsoflias Siegel and Bram Weinstein.
“Now is the time for student and new professional reporters to understand how far they can go when it comes to finding great stories and getting answers,” said Siegel. “It is our duty as journalists to know our rights and use that as power to dig deeper than ever before given the current political climate.”
“We are delighted to be co-sponsoring this event,” AEJMC President Paul Voakes said. “It has never been more important than now to raise our students’ awareness of their First Amendment rights, both as journalists and as citizens. We’re fighting for the future of freedom of expression.”
“Good journalism means being polite and professional but persistent in the public interest. We’re proud to host an event that supports young journalists do the work that supports democracy,” said National Press Club Journalism Institute President Barbara Cochran.
Media law and journalism classes, as well as professional journalists, are encouraged to tune in and submit questions via Facebook Live at https://www.facebok.com/RTDNA.RTDNF/, or reserve a seat in the studio audience. The video will also be archived online for viewing later.
In Wisconsin, the legislature is considering a bill which would redefine protest gatherings. A number of other states are also attempting to dial back First Amendment guarantees.
Read RTDNA executive director Dan Shelly’s column about it, here.
Posted by Tim Morrissey
A single fake news story turned this small Idaho community upside-down. Read the New York Times story here.
Posted by Tim Morrissey
Here are some thoughts from the American Press Institute. Feel free to add your opinion.
Posted by Tim Morrissey
The Knight Foundation is making the investment. Read about it here.
Posted by Tim Morrissey
Do you understand your First Amendment rights as a reporter or photographer? If not, Poynter has a free seminar/tutorial on the topic, and you can register here.
There is also a special section of the WBA Newsroom site with information specific to Wisconsin’s laws regarding news media access, which you can find here.
Know your rights and responsibilities!
Posted by Tim Morrissey
An interesting piece from the Nieman Journalism Lab at Harvard: the future of news.
Read it here.
Posted by Tim Morrissey