23-Year-Old Blogger Lectures Class
“If any of you are ever offered a job covering politics and asked to start the day before Election Day, don’t do it. It’s a bad idea.”
Jimmy Vielkind, 23 of Troy, NY, spoke to a group of journalism students tonight at UAlbany. Vielkind, former cops reporter for the Times Union, recently took a position as a blogger for politickerny.com. Vielkind covers all things upstate New York politics for the site.
Vielkind admits that his recent career choice has its risk.
“I left the Times Union, bastion of stability and important part of community, to join an online media outlet that might not be around in 153 days,” said Vielkind.
Some of his colleagues at the Times Union thought he was nuts, but Vielkind would argue it was a well-reasoned move.
“Online media appeals to me. I’m convinced online media is the way to go. Every morning you wake up and get the newspaper delivered to your door, its state of the art technology as of 100 years ago,” said Vielkind. “You don’t have to just use words; you’re not constrained as a writer to just use words. It’s a more powerful medium.”
The new challenge of using photos, links, and videos to supplement his work is not the only perk of his new job. Vielkind said that during his time at the Times Union he worked the night time cop shift from 4 p.m. to midnight.
“The only people I would socialize with were the old women at the library where I would check books out in the morning,” said Vielkind.
His new job at politickerny.com offers him more regular hours.
Overall Vielkind couldn’t have seemed happier with his new job, and his optimism about the field of online journalism was inspiring to the room full of students.
“I’m seriously convinced that this is the future. As we as a society figure out how we are going to consume news and information in the future, and we as journalists are deciding how to report news in the future, I want to be a part of it,” said Vielkind.
Voter Fraud
So Rolling Stone has released a list of top 100 singers of the rock era. I spent a few minutes browsing through it a few days ago and thought it was pretty interesting. The list features a number of testimonials written by other artists. For example Patrick Stump of Fall Out Boy praises Michael Jackson, number 25 on the list.
A conversation with my brother led my back to the list today to see whether or not Etta James made the list (she did at number 22), and I found a more interesting feature. Rolling Stone released the ballots of 24 of their voters.
Here are my favorite ballots. Check out the ego on these four: Courtney Love, James Blunt, Sebastian Bach, and Maynard James Keenan.
Aside from these four, Rolling Stone did put together a pretty interesting list of credible voters. I wonder if these four feel any embarassment about having their ballots posted for all to see.
Do not add. Do not deceive.
In my time studying journalism, the most talked about topic in each of my different classes has been ethics.
The book Telling True Stories devotes a section to ethics with passages from a number of different writers.
I have never seen the issues journalists face described so simply and as completely as Roy Peter Clark has in his essay “The Line Between Fact and Fiction.”
“Do not add. Do not deceive.”
I really think that most any ethical debate or dilemma can be resolved by following these two principles. If a journalist has created a tone to a story that is meant to deceive the reader, if photos are altered in a way that is meant to deceive the viewer, or if any quotes or facts are added, it is wrong.
I think that journalist should always keep Clark’s words in the back of their minds while working on a story.
I don’t think Debra Dickerson’s essay “Ethics in Personal Writing” belongs in a section of Telling True Stories devoted to ethics.
Dickerson tells a writes about a story she wrote about her own nephew who had been shot. She ended her story about her nephew’s shooting with a terribly personal few sentences.
“Alone, lying in the road bleeding and paralyzed but hideously conscious, Johnny had lain helpless as he watched his would-be murderer come to stand over him and offer this prophecy: “Betch’ou won’t be doin’ nomo’ wavin’, motha’ fucker.”
Fuck you, asshole. He’s fine from the waist up. You just can’t do
anything right, can you?”
I don’t agree with what Dickerson did. I think that she was being exploitive of her nephew. It is a story that deserves to be told by an impartial writer. And it was a terrible tragedy. Certainly a journalist who is not personally connected to the victim could still show the reader what a sad act of violence this was.
What Dickerson did was make the story about her. She put her personal feelings in it in a way that overshadows the story itself. The reader is forced to react to how she feels, not decide how they feel themselves.
Finally one of my favorite passages from the section on ethics in Telling True Stories is the short passage written by Katherine Boo.
Katherine Boo writes about ethical decisions in choosing who or what to write about. She writes about colleagues telling her that they can’t walk in certain neighborhoods because they wrote something unflattering about that area. Boo’s response is that if one can’t face their subjects then they should ask themselves if they really told the truth.
I think this is a great test for a journalist. I don’t ever want to write something that I am ashamed of and can’t stand in front of someone and own it.
Campus Reacts to Obama Win
Last night Barack Obama won what was being billed as the most important election of our lives.
Nearly 24 hours later some students on UAlbany’s campus are still feeling the excitement, while for others it’s just another day.
Kyra Pearson, 20 of Mount Vernon NY, had just woken up when she heard about the results last night. “I wanted to cry, but I couldn’t. My eyes were dry.”
Pearson joined a celebration of students in the Empire Commons section of campus.
“I ran outside yelling and screaming. There were a lot of people outside. It was pretty crazy,” said Pearson.
Students also celebrated by the Campus Center.
“I have never seen every single person in one place so elated,” said Fola Badejo, 20 of Hudson NY. “people were running and dancing by the fountain.”
Badejo was not registered to vote. “If I could have I would have voted for Obama 100 percent. I cried for 20 minutes last night,” she said.
Badejo got the good news via text message. “When I woke up this morning I cried again,” she said.
For Max Rubinstein, 19 of Marlboro NJ, it was just another day on campus. Rubinstein voted for John McCain over a week ago using an absentee ballot.
“I was a little disappointed. I expected it to be closer,” said Rubinstein. “Some people seemed pretty happy about it, for me it was just another day.”
Will Jackson, 19 of Houston Texas, also voted for McCain. “It’s like a silent majority. It’s taboo for young college kids to not like Obama.”
Holly Smith an 18-year-old freshmen has a unique perspective on the election. Smith is from Staffordshire, England. “I couldn’t vote. Back home we all wanted him to win though. He has gotten all the press.”
Smith thinks that Obama’s win might help how European countries feel about the United States.
“I think it will make people more attracted. I don’t like America being the world police. And I don’t think Obama will act that way,” she said.
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