Reporting from Iran: a blend of mainstream and newstream media

In the days since the Iranian election and the protests that followed, much has been written, broadcast, tweeted and blogged about how Iranian citizens have seized the power of social media to report what is happening to the outside world. In the United States, the mainstream media has picked up on this phenomenon, but sadly most of the reporting has been about the cool factor of Twitter, amateur video, etc.

But a few mainstream media outlets are getting the hang of new media. They’re aggregating the citizen-journalist reports, lending context, and sharing with the rest of us. Mark Jones of Reuters highlights a few of them in his blog post about running web commentary on Iran.

The challenge of providing the latest to a world hungry for the news from Iran “is to match what TV stations can do when they switch between news bulletins to rolling 24 hour coverage,” Jones writes. “Only the web ought to be able to do so much more given its scope for interactivity.”

In an ideal world you’d want to provide the fastest, most thoroughly verified reports around the clock whether they or not they are from conventional journalists. And as a user I think you’d also want to be pointed in the direction of where you can find out more. If all this was easy then it would have been done by now. But it’s a lot of work. And all news organisations have had to strike compromises on one or more of those counts.

Live blogs that attempt to document the unrest in Iran — such as The Guardian’s and the New York Times lede blog — help to meet some of that need for information and blend the accounts of citizens on the ground with journalists’ analysis and annotation. Jones also discusses (briefly) reporters logs, which rely on the news organization’s staffers instead of citizen journalists, and “the most interesting approach,” aggregated information streaming in from “validated” citizen journalists, such as what Sky News is doing.

“None of these approaches has entirely nailed it,” Jones writes. In his perfect scenario, the ideal blend of mainstream and social-networking media would include:

  • Direct publishing by sources validated by the news organization
  • The ability for live blog anchors to republish and annotate external contributions
  • A means by which participants could add to or critique particular elements of the commentary

What about you? How do you think mainstream and newstream media should converge to cover this unfolding story?

Friday Five: the bad news bearer

Welcome to the Friday Five, Doom and Gloom Edition.

Woe is us.

Nothing like a little negative energy to kick off the weekend, I always say.

Hey, don’t blame me. I’m just the messenger. Kinda like those newspapers that are dying left and right these days.

Anyway, here we go. Bad news. We’ve got bad, bad news…

  1. ‘When Bad Times Come, Your Hand Is Forced’. Just how bad is the economic outlook for higher education? It’s bad. Very bad. Watch this video from The Chronicle of Higher Education and be afraid. Very afraid.
  2. Your clients hate you. How’s that for telling it straight? The story really isn’t as bad as the headline would lead you to believe, so go ahead and click it.
  3. MySpace becomes Murdoch’s MyProblem. “Rupert Murdoch was hailed as a visionary when he paid the then-bargain price of $580 million for MySpace in 2005, but now it appears that the newspaper mogul may not know that much about running an Internet community after all.” Earlier this week, MySpace laid off some 400 employees — more than 13 percent of its work force — and forecasters expect a 15 percent drop in ad revenue for the company this year.
  4. Feedback: the creativity killer. The sources of negative feedback and 12 excellent ideas for dealing with them. (See? I’m starting to get more optimistic already. The clouds are lifting. Blogging is good.)
  5. And to end on a positive note: There’s too much negativism in journalism. I totally agree. Why does everybody have to be so negative all the time?

And to end on an even better, ahem, note: The Hold Steady – Stay Positive (audio).