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who employs me
I am a staff writer with CTV.ca News. That operation is part of CTV News, which is of course nestled into CTV Inc. and CTVglobemedia.

I don't speak for my employer on this blog. I don't comment about the internal affairs of my employer.

Any views expressed here are my own.
View Article  Great tsunami interactives

The BBC and the Guardian both have interesting interactives showing how the tsunamis developed.

If you come across any other cool interactives, please leave a note below. [ /30 ]

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View Article  Yet more Auld Lang-Syne-ing about blogs

The BBC also did a section in its year-in-review on blogs. I use the story as an opportunity to do some opining of my own.

First things first. The last two paragraphs of the BBC story might well be the most salient:

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View Article  BBC reporters reflect on Africa in 2004

Four BBC journalists look back on the year that was in Africa: The good, bad and amusing news.

They also try to identify the emerging news from there in 2005.

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View Article  The bright side of Chechnya, in photos

A BBC journalist, who is Chechen, has put together a photo essay to try and show the human side of her damned little republic.

Here is the introduction:

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View Article  How can we improve medical reporting?

The Globe and Mail's Andre Picard, an award-winning public health journalist and author, has written a useful article on how to make medical reporting better.

However, substitute the word  'health' or 'medical' for virtually another ...   more »

View Article  Only three hours per day? Dilettantes.

This NYT story talks about a new U.S. survey which finds that the average U.S. Internet user spends about three hours per day online -- a block of time which is cutting into (gasp!) TV watching ...   more »

View Article  Poor, pissed off (and pissed on) in China

This NYT article tells an interesting story about the gowing social instability in China over the ever-widening gap between rich and poor -- one exacerbated by corruption and cronyism.

Welcome to capitalism, folks!

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View Article  Rating Canada's political columnists

Just saw this at Ianking.ca:  This Magazine's blog ranks Canada's political columnists -- I'm presuming it's a collectivist effort. :)

Here's the top of the class:

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View Article  Has the reader well for magazines been drained?

CTV colleague and fellow blogger David Akin posted a link to this article to CAJ-L. It's from Direct Marketing and it's about the U.S. magazine industry

An excerpt:

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View Article  The disaster in pictures

Here's a few links to photo galleries showing the destruction. Please post a link below if you know of more.

Thanks.

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View Article  'The head rules the heart'

That's the subtitle of a BBC story on why Asian stock markets essentially shrugged off the biggest catastrophe in the continent's history.

An excerpt:

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View Article  If you need a fridge ...

There's a bar-sized one near the intersection of Kensington and St. Peter's St. It has lots of colourful stickers on it.

They would include: Hashish: Mind chocolate; Work-free drug place and  Thank you for pot smoking.

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View Article  Top 10 cool 'Net tools as picked by J-Net

Journalismnet, if you don't know about it, is a deep resource for journalists, helping them make the best  research use of the Internet. The site was created by author and consultant Julien Sher.

Here's his top 10 list for cool Internet tools for 2004:

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View Article  The Take

Argentina's been back in the news again. The New York Times had a Dec. 26 story entitled Argentina's Economic Rally Defies Forecasts.

The story was about 1,300 words long, and didn't use any of them to talk about the workers' co-operatives that sprang up as a result of the country's economic meltdown in late 2001. That's why you need films like The Take.

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View Article  Blogging THE story in OJR-land

No sooner do I ask a question about how blogging would rate as a media development than I get an answer. At Online Journalism Review, blogs are the biggest thing since the Big Bang.

An ...   more »

View Article  Blogging doesn't trump outsourcing in tech questionnaire

In a WashingtonPost.com online questionnaire, the biggest tech story of 2004 was outsourcing. IPod mania was number two, but bloggers trumped the Google IPO.

See the graphic below or view it online (I'm not sure ...   more »

View Article  Craigslist costing newspapers millions

Humble little Craigslist was started as a free service back in 1995 -- about the same time that visionaries in the newspaper biz were wondering if their papers should even be on the Internet.

Craigslist ...   more »

View Article  Blogging from the disaster zone

This NYT story talks about some of the vivid reporting coming out of the disaster zone around the Indian Ocean as a result of Saturday's earthquake and resulting tsunamis.

An excerpt:

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View Article  Inventing the online persona of a soulless lawyer

This NYT article looks at the person behind anonymouslawyer.blogspot.com, supposedly a highly-paid partner of an L.A. law firm.

While people in the U.S. law biz swear it reflects their reality to them, the blog is actually ...   more »

View Article  Blog-gate revisited

This is an imperfect but useful look at some of the issues surrounding 60 Minutes II and the infamous memos about Dubya in the Texas Air National Guard.

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View Article  Saving Journalism

Philip Meyer, a pioneer of computer-assisted reporting in the U.S. and a sage commentator on the economics of the news business, is back with another essay, this time in Columbia Journalism Review.

In some ways, it's a re-working of an essay he wrote for American Journalism Review about nine years ago on the need for publishers to accept lower profits. Anway, read them both, then you can decide. :)

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View Article  Zerbisias rates the year in media

Toronto Star media columnist Antonia Zerbisias looks at the year in North American media and rates it better than 2003. Among the victims she IDs: Kitty Kelley (?!?!).

Here's an exerpt:

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View Article  Hey Toronto: Clean your ##$$%@@!!! sidewalks!
The headline says it all. [ /30 ]   more »
View Article  Hey World: Merry Christmas!

I'm taking a Christmas break from blogging. I'll likely be back on either Boxing Day or Monday.

In the meantime, have a great Christmas! While I'm approaching it as a secular humanist, that still goes for those who view it as a religious occasion. :)

Peace on earth. Goodwill towards everyone. May the guns and bombs be silent for a day -- just as a start. [ /30 ]

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View Article  Lucky to see another Christmas

This is the first-hand account of Frank Gardner, a BBC reporter gunned down in Saudi Arabia earlier this year by Islamist militants. His cameraman was killed.

It's sobering and not very festive, but it reminds you of the tenuous and precious nature of life -- and how destructive blind hatred is.

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View Article  The last 60 hours

If there's two screaming kids on a three-hour-plus flight from Edmonton to Toronto, what's the odds both of them would be one row behind me?

Apparently, pretty good, to which I say: Happy flying, Charlie Brown! :)

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View Article  Go to the Kensington Market Festival of Lights! Now!!
It'll be dark in Toronto in about two hours (I'm writing this at 12:10 p.m. MST). For God's sake, go to the Lantern Festival in Kensington Market tonight!!   more »
View Article  Britons tops in G7 for Christmas boozing

While our Brit friends may quaff the most in the G7 at Christmas, Germany and Canada come in strong second, says a BBC story.

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View Article  The freedom to offend

A BBC story on the issue of limits to freedom of expression in the wake of a play's cancellation in Birmingham, England following violent protests by some members of the Sikh community there.

It's a competent ...   more »

View Article  Punishing the press

The NYT has weighed in on the recent court judgments jailing U.S. reporters for failing to identify to the courts sources to whom they had promised confidentiality.

An excerpt:

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View Article  Washington Post Co. to buy Slate from Microsoft

Microsoft has rid itself of Slate, the online publication it created in 1996 as part of its corporate plunge into the content pool.

I believe Slate and MSNBC are the only ones of Microsoft's content efforts to survive from those heady days  (see the comments below).

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View Article  Change coming to Sunday Star; N-P tabs it up

The Toronto Star's Sunday edition is getting ready to unveil a new look and the National Post already has, but both papers deny they'll be jumping on the tabloid bandwagon, says a Globe and Mail article.

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