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Sunday, September 30

If you had to choose one global online news source ...
by
Bill Doskoch
on Sun 30 Sep 2007 05:32 PM EDT
What would it be?
I ask the question because I came upon the very same one on LinkedIn, a social networking service for professionals.
My go-to website for global news is BBC Online. Here's the answer I posted on LinkedIn:
My first choice as an online news destination is BBC Online. The site is staffed 24/7. The Beeb's website can draw on its TV and radio reporters around the world, and those working for foreign-language services such as the Urdu-language one targeting Pakistan.
Besides breaking news in text form, the Beeb offers high-quality analysis and multimedia.
The Beeb also has the advantage of not being American -- not that there's anything wrong with being American! :)
But with the NYT or CNN, to just use as examples, you're getting an American take on international news, not a true global perspective.
I find stories I can't find anywhere else on the Beeb, and that makes it my first choice.
Scanning the 80 responses in addition to my own, the Beeb appears to be the runaway favourite.
Without doing an in-depth analysis, Google News does fairly well (other aggregation services were also mentioned, such as Yahoo News, Digg and so on. Some fellow named a newspaper aggregator named PressDisplay).
CNN has its fans, as does the Guardian, the Economist plus Reuters and AP.
Some honourable mentions include the International Herald Tribune, the Times Online and the Financial Times.
A question to readers of this blog: What website would you recommend as the ultimate one-stop-shopping experience for global online news?

Reporter caught up in anti-gang sweep
by
Bill Doskoch
on Sun 30 Sep 2007 06:54 AM EDT
Decidedly middle-class NYT reporter Solomon Moore got some first-hand experience in how the police of Salisbury, N.C. go about busting street gangs. more »
Wednesday, September 26

CBC Radio oopsie
by
Bill Doskoch
on Wed 26 Sep 2007 12:01 PM EDT
I'm listening to a 5 p.m. newscast on CBC Radio 2 on Monday afternoon.
The lead story is about Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's address to the United Nations. The announcer intones that here are the Iranian president's words, as offered through a translator:
"We have 80,000 workers in Canada (blah, blah, blah) ..."
And that left me immediately asking myself the following question: Why is Buzz Hargrove translating for Ahmadinejad?
He wasn't. The announcer apologized for the error. The clip from the Canadian Auto Workers president came later as part of an item on the just-launched GM strike in the U.S.
Saturday, September 22

'Delay, denial and stonewalling still clog FOI system'
by
Bill Doskoch
on Sat 22 Sep 2007 08:14 AM EDT
The latest survey of government openness finds the same-old, same-old -- namely, that you have to pry even basic information out of a bureaucrat's cold, dead hand. more »
Friday, September 21

Indian journos jailed for story on judge
by
Bill Doskoch
on Fri 21 Sep 2007 11:28 PM EDT
From the BBC:
The verdict has been criticised as an attack on the freedom of press |
A court in the Indian capital Delhi has sentenced four journalists to four months in prison after they accused a former chief justice of corruption.
The court ruled that the allegations, which appeared in an India tabloid newspaper, Mid Day, constituted a contempt of court.
The journalists have stood by their story and say they will appeal against their sentences.
The verdict has been criticised as an attack on the freedom of press.

Charges laid against Politkovskaya murder suspect
by
Bill Doskoch
on Fri 21 Sep 2007 11:24 PM EDT
From the BBC: Prosecutors in Russia have charged a former Chechen politician with being an accomplice in the 2006 murder of Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya. more »

In defence of Dan Rather
by
Bill Doskoch
on Fri 21 Sep 2007 04:26 PM EDT
Mary Mapes, who lost her job as a producer with CBS News' 60 Minutes over Memogate, defends Dan Rather -- who is suing their mutually former employer -- and the story itself. more »

Cruickshank on his new CBC job
by
Bill Doskoch
on Fri 21 Sep 2007 08:03 AM EDT
John Cruickshank, new publisher of CBC News, sees his job as being focused on strategy -- but people at the John/Front bunker can expect to see him in the newsrooms there. more »
Thursday, September 20

India suspends TV channel that broadcasts false report
by
Bill Doskoch
on Thu 20 Sep 2007 08:27 PM EDT
From the BBC:
There were violent protests in Delhi after the TV report |
An Indian television news channel has been taken off air for a month after broadcasting a false "sting" which led to riots and a woman being jailed.
India's Broadcasting Ministry said the report on Live India had been "defamatory, deliberate and false".
Delhi teacher Uma Khurana was accused of forcing students into prostitution. Police later said the report was faked.
Live India is the first news channel to be banned in India. The station says it was misled by its reporter.
The case follows a number of other so-called stings in which people allege they have been framed and has led to renewed calls for India's media to be regulated.
Experts blame a highly competitive media environment where 24-hour news channels are fighting for revenue and viewers' attention.
For background, see this post: The wacky world of Indian TV news.
Here's a 2006 BBC story: Sting journalism under fire

Newspaper website readership growing faster than newspapers
by
Bill Doskoch
on Thu 20 Sep 2007 07:08 PM EDT
From globeandmail.com:
An increasing number of Canadians are reading their newspapers online, according to the latest readership numbers released yesterday by the Newspaper Audience Databank Inc. more »

Sifton named CEO of Sun Media
by
Bill Doskoch
on Thu 20 Sep 2007 07:05 PM EDT
From CP via globeandmail.com:
Newspaper executive Michael Sifton has been appointed president and chief executive officer of Sun Media Corp., owner Quebecor Media Inc. announced yesterday.
Mr. Sifton's appointment is effective immediately, the Montreal multimedia company said in a news release.
Quebecor Media's CEO Pierre Francoeur said Mr. Sifton, a former chairman of The Canadian Press, "brings a unique combination of a long family history in Canadian newspaper publishing, and extensive experience to address the challenges in today's tumultuous media industry."
"I could not imagine a more highly qualified successor for the positions I have occupied at Sun Media," Mr. Francoeur said.
Quebecor acquired Sifton's Osprey Media, which primarily operates small-market daily and community newspapers, earlier this summer.

Cruickshank named 'publisher' of CBC News
by
Bill Doskoch
on Thu 20 Sep 2007 07:02 PM EDT
On Wednesday, veteran editor and publisher CBC named John Cruickshank as the new publisher of CBC News. more »

Rather sues CBS
by
Bill Doskoch
on Thu 20 Sep 2007 04:50 PM EDT
Dan Rather launched a US$70 million lawsuit Wednesday against his old employer CBS, which forced him out over the memogate affair. Rather thinks he has evidence that will vindicate him. more »
Wednesday, September 19
Toronto Life names new editor
by
Bill Doskoch
on Wed 19 Sep 2007 07:53 AM EDT
From TheStar.com:
Sarah Fulford, 33, will have the challenging task of refreshing a formula that has worked for four decades and bringing it into the brave new media world of the Internet and the 21st century.
Fulford is the chosen successor of John Macfarlane, a dominant figure in Canadian magazine journalism for the past 35 years, who is stepping down after 15 years as editor of TL.
"This has been in the works for a while," Macfarlane says. "I felt it was time for a change."
In case you're wondering, Sarah is indeed the daughter of writer Robert Fulford, who once edited Saturday Night magazine.
Tuesday, September 18

Paid content and newspapers
by
Bill Doskoch
on Tue 18 Sep 2007 11:52 PM EDT
Romenesko linked to a few other good tidbits in reaction to the NYT TimesSelect decision in addition to the WSJ item immediately below. more »

Murdoch on free Wall Street Journal access
by
Bill Doskoch
on Tue 18 Sep 2007 11:39 PM EDT
From PaidContent.org via Romenesko:
Murdoch gave his strongest statements to date the WSJ.com will go free following the purchase. He says they haven't made up their mind completely, but that the company doesn't feel it would hurt subscription revenues and that any lost revenue would be more than made up from increased readership and search engine traffic.
--When asked about Wall St.'s fears that News Corp might make another big, costly move, Murdoch mused "well I might make another good move", referring to MySpace and Fox News, both of which were deemed foolish, but have turned out rather well.

'Times to stop charging for part of its website'
by
Bill Doskoch
on Tue 18 Sep 2007 12:10 AM EDT
As reported earlier this summer, the New York Times will stop charging for access to columnists and will allow free searches of a large proportion of its archival material. more »
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