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Wonderful article via Reuters on the rise of citizen journalism, the power of people armed with cell phones and differences in the American and British business environments that leaves this emerging media seeking to define itself despite its recent highlights during the London subway bombings last fall and advantages of virtually unlimited news sources.
"Videos shot in smoke-filled, bombed-out London underground trains, photos of body-strewn roads -- the July 7 bombings on London's transport system brought the arrival of a new advance guard of amateur reporters. Media commentators described it as a sea-change in journalism as mobile phone photographers, text messagers and bloggers dominated initial coverage of the bombings that claimed lives of 52 commuters. But while those momentous events raised public awareness of how eyewitness-generated content can dominate the mainstream media's initial coverage of a big story, citizen journalism is still trying to establish itself, analysts said. "It hasn't got a proper foothold here yet -- citizen journalism hasn't carved out a niche for itself like in the United States," Roy Greenslade, a professor of journalism at City University and former editor of the Daily Mirror, told Reuters. But more and more news reports in the "old media" have taken their lead from submissions by ordinary citizens and a new wave of political bloggers is challenging media commentators. "It helps us tell the story truthfully and accurately," said BBC Interactivity Editor Vicky Taylor, referring to the BBC's use of images sent in by witnesses of the London bombings. Mainstream media owners also have rushed to tap into the phenomenon by setting up blogs written by their own journalists. But unlike in the United States, where bloggers have claimed credit for major political upsets, including the resignations of broadcaster Dan Rather and Senate Republican leader Trent Lott, British newspapers remain in charge for now of exposing the misdemeanours of public figures and institutions. "The citizen journalist here is a snapper who happens to be passing somewhere where something is going on," Greenslade said. "What we haven't developed yet is the citizen journalist who goes out and writes and reports." NOT MUCH TO BLOG ABOUT? Like citizen journalism, blogging has received a lot of coverage in the media. Globally, there has been a massive growth of web logs, or personal online journals. According to Technorati, a search engine for blogs, a new blog is created every second of every day. But in Britain, despite a rapid uptake in broadband Internet connections, only 2 percent of Internet users publish a blog, a recent survey by the British Market Research Bureau (BMRB) found, while another study said most bloggers quit after three months. The BMRB also found that only 10 percent, around 2.8 million people, of Internet users read blogs. "There has been disproportionate coverage of blogging -- still only a tiny proportion of people publish them," said Paul Milsom, a senior associate director at the BMRB. "A lot of media attention has been paid to blogs, which looks a bit overhyped given how few people actually blog," he told Reuters. But, as trends in many other countries have shown, bloggers potentially wield a hugely disproportionate influence in setting trends, as those who do publish blogs are more likely to be opinion formers. "It is definitely set to grow in Britain (but) it will take time to filter through in terms of people having to learn how to publish a blog," said Milsom. In the United States, the fastest-growing area of citizen journalism is the so-called "hyper-local" coverage of high-school sports or petty neighbourhood crime, usually too small even for local newspapers. That trend is also shaping up in Britain. "I expect citizen journalism to really take off at regional and local level: citizens reporting about what goes on in their area, on their street," Greenslade said. The Press Gazette, a magazine dedicated to journalism, is leading the charge in honouring the best in citizen journalism for the first time with its Citizen Journalism Awards, to be announced on July 14. Among the entries are photographs and films of a local pub siege and of a local teenager being threatened by a knife-wielding man." |
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