We've spent our share of time commenting on the fact that you can restrict, but you simply will not be successful in blocking a determined blogger. There's also no better way to exacerbate a public relations problem than daring the B&B crowd.
The rules change, however, when you are a government -- oh, say China -- or if you are a media organization -- in today's case, the Los Angeles Times.
Those darn internets strike again as Slate's website hits LAT square in the face with a memo distributed to suppress the mention of a certain National Enquirer story about a certain Democratic politician. I'll be coy too; not out of fear of the editors but out of respect for the person involved.
This sets up a classic new vs. old media battle, and one that just might be inside the house. It cuts to the heart of what journalism is becoming today.
Is the Enquirer a "legitimate" media in the old-school sense?
Is it appropriate to gag your own staff?
With a multitude of sources, does the LAT do itself a disservice by not participating in the frenzy surrounding the rumors? In a business sense, a huge YES. They are driving readers away to find the story. In a reputations sense, an undecided maybe. If the Enquirer proves wrong, the LAT gets the kudos for holding back. If the rumors are true -- and other news organizations now jumping on this are finding independent verification -- it is another blow to the reputation of the LAT.
Friday, July 25, 2008
Blocking Bloggers
Monday, July 21, 2008
There are no Secr3ts
Kudos to the posters on Hogville and Woopig for slipping under the splash screen covers. I hope the house wasn't too messy in the last 24 hours before launch. Reminds me of the day I just walked into the open door of Starbucks in Fayetteville on the Wednesday before it opened -- here, have a cup of coffee on us.
Again, thanks to those who did a little unofficial testing (yes, we needed to fix that pre-production banner Razorback, and seriously, thanks for reminding me).
Never amazed, but some of the folks I work with wondered who leaked the URL. It was a live server build -- no real shock here.
Over the next few days, I'm anticipating lots of corrections. This was not only a complete redesign -- including some new coding in the database -- but a merger of two distinct data bases (that's a first for our vendor). It went pretty smooth, and looks reasonably clean.
In the meantime, don't be a stranger with the error reports. Let's call it, cloud proofing.
Bonus points today for the movie reference in the title.
It is Done
Note the time stamp. Last parts in that can go in before tomorrow -- strike that, today's -- launch. I'm going for a nap. With any luck, regular postings will resume Tuesday or Wednesday. Thanks for the patience of readers while we finished out ArkansasRazorbacks.com.
Friday, July 11, 2008
The Not So Anonymous Internet
This story set will lead to further posts, but I'm marking it for readers right now. In case you missed it, a Nebraska fan decided to get even with some message board posters by creating a fake story about the arrest of some Oklahoma players.
Thanks to solid Photoshop skills, the faked story and front page image of the OU student newspaper website was too good. The hoax got out of control in a hurry, and now James Conradt faces the very real prospect of legal action.
Coverage in the Oklahoma newspapers and a very solid commentary from the NCAA's blog.
As Drudge would say, developing . . .
Thursday, July 10, 2008
End of Days
This week's TWIT repeats a story -- too good to perhaps not be apocryphal -- about the press room reaction to the last round of firings at the Tampa Tribune. The remaining staff was told bluntly to stop thinking of the website as the adjunct. The print edition was now the adjunct to the website.
At the Houston Chronicle, mentioned earlier with their on-line database of salaries, the writers are instructed to use their blogs to do their primary work. In other words, it's news -- the textual equivalent of 24-7 cable news channel.
You Must Find Your Own Path
Yes, Grasshopper, the path to enlightenment is the walk, not the answer. As your university decides how to engage the blogosphere, remember that your answer may be to not engage. From our good friends at WOMMA, and their on-line daily feed, comes this very good pitch from Search Marketing Gurus about not blogging.
Wednesday, July 09, 2008
Databases: Even More Fun than FOI
The Houston Chronicle posts a search engine that can be used to search the salary of every public employee in the city and county. If you really want to know, click here.
No longer need to file the FOI. Don't even have to go to the public library. The public records on your desktop.
Colleague at a public school remarked this wasn't fair. How can they get phone records? How can they see salaries?
Until you go to work in the private sector, guess what -- "they" are the people, and "they" pay the bills.
Tuesday, July 08, 2008
Ch-ch-ch-ch-changes
If you keep up with Arkansas you know we started the countdown clocks on our current men's and women's athletic websites. The new ArkansasRazorback.com starts July 21.
It's the next evolution for our school, and I hope the fans and media find it useful. There are some lofty goals set -- more streaming, broader gameday presentation, quicker stories -- but we hope that we can become the place fans look to first. Comments after? Well, that's up to them.
For the regular readers, I will beg your indulgence over the next two weeks. Posts here will be less frequent. Anybody want to build some HTML nested tables for fun?
Monday, July 07, 2008
It's About (Your Other) Family
As we get back into the grind after the holidays, I'm reminded once again that it's important to have friends and a good support system for this kind of job. Tonight is Monday, and when I'm in town, that means calling the weekly county weather spotters net.
Couple of the folks on that net had commented to me during the annual Field Day how much their ham radio family meant to them. None of the folks involved in storm spotting here are really into the Razorbacks, or athletics for that matter. But they wanted to know how it went in Tampa, because I'm part of their family.
Jack Buck, Jr., really got shelled by the national media for saying he was more into checking out The Bachelorette than whatever MLB game was on TV. On the one hand, Jack, you probably shouldn't have said that out loud. In this business, they don't take kindly when they think you might have other interests -- Jack just found that out.
But you need something that isn't college athletics. Some place where everybody knows your name . . . or in my case, your callsign.
Friday, July 04, 2008
Happy Fourth of July
While you're enjoying the firecrackers, we'll be taking 360-views of athletic facilities for the new Arkansas Razorback website. Oops. Did I say that out loud? Delete that. Instead, enjoy a quick take on Fan First philosophy and how that relates with the presentation earlier this week at CoSIDA.
The internet is a community, and the community grows through sharing. At the same time, through sharing others may profit from our creative work. Protecting digital rights and monetizing the eyeballs are the immediate goals, but if we place too many restrictions between our institutions and our constituents we stand to lose more than a few bucks in on-line memberships.
Thursday, July 03, 2008
Crickets
I'll open the comments while I'm airborne for home. Interested in feedback from other SIDs on the presentation.
Wednesday, July 02, 2008
Key Terms for the Future
If I haven't already, I'm putting my copyright marker down on these concepts:
B&B -- That's message boards and blogs, the heart of the new media group that we are trying to influence through our efforts. They are drivers of opinion, both fans and media.
"Not since the invention of written language has the barrier to mass communication been lower in human history" -- Quote me on that. "This is a fundamental change in communication theory, one that we struggle with on a daily basis."
Not exactly the shortest concept, but one of the keys for tomorrow:
"It is written, it is spoken, it is visual – it exists in all three planes at the same time. That’s a paradigm shift in the classic sense, but the shattering of the barriers to entry into the mass media to the general public results not in change but destruction. When the medium becomes so pervasive, so complete, what differentiates one entity from another – it’s the message. The thermonuclear impact of this mode of communication effectively turns Marshall McLuhan’s great parable on its head: He who controls the message controls the medium. McLuhan imagined a global village led by tribalism, but messengers rule in the new medium. By not engaging the B&B, we concede the control of our message to others."
Happy trails to all as I head back home to Fayetteville. Let's root for no storms and not another voyage on the SS Minnow.
Pot, Kettle; Kettle, Pot
Rolling through the post-event comments, one of note was a pretty strong shot at Spencer Hall for sitting at the dias and blogging while the session went on.
Well, he's a blogger. What did you expect?
Here's the hook. The comment on Spencer's blog started with, "You're so unprofessional for blogging . . . ."
A) I think Spencer made it very clear, he gets paid for blogging -- ie, he is a professional -- but by no stretch of the imagination did he claim to be a professional journalist.
B) Um, why are you sitting in the audience reading a blog while we're at the podium making a presentation that your institution is paying for you to attend. And posting on it.
One of the very interesting side notes -- there were at least four persons in the room, fellow SIDs, that were posting to Spencer's blog during the event. In a way, that speaks to the coming change in events.
In answer to the worries about the transactional blogger violating the rights agreements of our various companies, ponder that exchange. I know it is almost impossible during time outs at Razorback football games to send or receive texts. In large part, its friends commenting to each other about the last plays. Once again, a digital community within the real one.
As we see broader roll-out of 3G and Edge devices, more and more text becomes descriptions of the events. Instead of worrying about whether this undercuts the rights holders, maybe the rights holders could sponsor community groups to engage that discussion. And sell ads.
One of the running comments during the week on other panels went something like this: I don't know who those people are who are playing along with TV on their laptops . . . or I don't know who those people are answering the surveys during the commercials on TV.
Entertainment networks wouldn't take the time to create those interactives if they weren't capturing time and views for ads on those pages.
It's something to think about. Hello, Stat Crew? Yes, could you rebuild the media view with a chat window and port it to Windows Media 6.0 and iPhone SDK . . . .
By the way, my intellectual property attorney would like you to know that by that statement I have claimed initial patent on the concept of any statistical presentation of college sports linked with the idea of chat windows for interactive fan communities at the games, and those mated with targeted advertising based on existing profiles, cell phone number and SNW harvested data.
No. Seriously. I mean that.
No, Thank You
The presentation is over, and I'm a little disappointed I didn't make to the room faster.
My great thanks to Dan Gillmor, who I think everyone could tell just how sick he was from the audio, and Spencer Hall, who is really a human being, for participating.
The goal was to create discussion. That's why we spoke short, and we're looking to get the questions going. I think one of the best follow-ups I had after the fact was from one of the questioners, a major conference office rep, who said that it was a bit scary.
Yes. It is. The new world order in this completely open posting word is, well, new. It's a jarring, system-wide change. We must evolve to respond to it, both as an organization and as institutions.
Let me repeat what I said at the podium -- this is a community. We must have discussions; among ourselves, with our fans, with our administrators.
I can't stress this point enough: have the conversation internally about what you will do to engage with the B&B world. Know that the answer for your institution may be we are not going to interact with them. That's OK -- it is your message and your school.
That, however, is the key. You must be the master of that message, the conduit through which the message flows. It is our future.
Don't fight the future. Never really worked out for Fox Mulder.
And lets see how many of you are reading -- the password is Afghanistan Banana Stand
Shhh! Don't Tell Anyone Else
Here's a little langiappe that isn't going into the presentation or the handout. Just for the cool kids here on the blog:
If you want to know what the impact of technology is having on the creative business, consider the release of Radiohead’s latest album. They made it a free download, pay what you think it is worth. They made about $1 million off the release. Sure, not everyone paid; but many paid more than if Radiohead had distributed it by disk or other on-line services. That fact is well noted in the on-line business community. I have another take not spoken. To me, it’s less about the giving up of control over the price or the digital rights management. It’s the fact Radiohead could create and produce its own album without the need for the record label, and distribute it through their own marketing channel. There is a reason why the networks, the providers – cable, satellite and IP-based; and the conference offices are racing to sign up athletic departments and lock away content for big money and very broad control rights. They know it too. My prediction: the schools that retain control will make the Notre Dame move to become Team NBC in the 1990s incredibly small potatoes.
Tuesday, July 01, 2008
Why Bother with the B&B Anyway?
The fifth and final W in the Rules of Engagement
Why engage? Call this the Jesus effect: you go where the sinners are. If a group is spreading misperceptions about the coach, a player or a situation, often the best way to deal with it is by direct discussion. Just over a decade ago, SIDs sat round and complained about those non-journalists on the radio, fomenting trouble, reporting rumor and, gasp, letting callers on the air to say whatever they wanted. Today, would anyone let a sports call-in host run without challenge? And how many encourage the talk radio host through press credentials and access? The Southeastern Conference established Radio Row at football and basketball media days. Why? To organize the growing numbers who wanted to just show up and grab interviews, but there is no small extra benefit of bringing them inside the big tent of “respectable media.” Plus, if you don’t think the sinners and the saints are together on the boards – ask one of your board owners for a demographic of the membership. Chances are very good that some of the highest level donors to the program are hidden in those screen names. Even if your administration does not believe these are good reasons, here’s the kicker: the media reads it. Let me introduce a side concept – force multiplier. One reporter can sit in the office and scan the information just as easily as you can. No need for dozens of beat reporters when you have hundreds of citizen journalists out there. Gannett calls it crowd sourcing; Dan Rather calls it unemployment
Listening to Others
I've got this quote on my coda sheet tacked to the wall over my computer that says what you think of on your own is at best monotonous. You learn from taking your thoughts and meshing them with what you learn from others.
Listening to Michael Moran, the Knight Chair in Sports Journalism and Society at Penn State, talk about the once upon a time relationship of the SID and the young media person. The SID was a mentor, explaining the rules, helping guide the newbie along. It wasn't manipulation, it was vested interest. The school doesn't want uninformed opinion in the paper. Newspapers didn't want to have to clean up stupid mistakes that made it to print.
Let me take Michael a step further -- interacting with the B&B community can be the same. Many of the board owners do not have a good understanding of the legal nature of athletics. NCAA rules are often misunderstood. HIPPA and FERPA even less. Sometimes, explaining why things can't be said is as important as saying things.
At the end of the day, most of the people in the blogs are fans. They may have less tolerance for error, they may be essentially darker in their outlooks, but they want to help. They want to be a part of the program. Not unlike the good old days and the cub reporter on the beat, we need to find ways to relate to the B&B.
There are Some Signs You Don't Expect
This sign was found:
A) Yosemite National Park
B) Devil's Den State Park, Arkansas
C) Lookout Mountain, Tenn.
D) Lighthouse Park, West Vancouver
The answer, disturbingly, is D. Yes, and the neighbors in the very urban parts of West Vancouver -- we were all of 15 minutes from downtown -- are constantly worried about the bears coming down to hit the garbage cans.
Frankly, I think this is terribly cool. It reminds me a bit of Fayetteville, a town that while quite small urban is still very much a part of the Ozarks and is maintaining that nature feel.
When Libby and I moved to Fayetteville, one of the stories in the paper was about a Black Bear cub that was hitting the dumpsters on the main road, obviously separated from its mother. That was 1989. Guess what -- we had bears in the city limits just last year.And for those traveling, Lighthouse Park is second only to the world-famous Capilano Suspension Bridge Park. Both feature old-growth trees, but I really liked Lighthouse for the quiet trails. Of course, the sign was cool too.
Here's a glimpse of the lighthouse of the part of the same name.
And -- a Happy Canada Day to my colleagues in BC that were so helpful this year on our "foreign" tour and my good friend Jack at University of Calgary. We'll all miss you today in Tampa at convention.
Monday, June 30, 2008
Where to Engage?
The fourth W in the Rules of Engagement
Where will you engage? There are several angles here, each with its own strength or weakness. Consistency is important again in whichever approach is taken. There is a certain power in doing the work directly on the offender B&B. While it does inject you into their area and bring a certain credibility to them by your appearance, it has two important benefits. First, it places your correction of fact or message right next to their original misperception. Second, it provides clear evidence that you are watching, and listening to what is said. Remember, the two-way communication is a hallmark of Web 2.0. Making the response through your own on-line vehicles helps drive traffic back to the official web site, and can be considered an important factor in a Fan First philosophy. Links to the response can always be posted on the original board or blog. Statements to the traditional media can be used. There remains tremendous power in the press release in print or on the
Laugh 'Cause Crying's Not an Option
Sunday, June 29, 2008
An Open Letter to Mr. Cheers
Once upon a time, I was you. Hard charging, up in the gate agent's face. Working the phone; working the angles -- by God I wasn't going to be left behind.
Let me share something with you -- the flight to Tampa was full. Full even before the weather put things behind. Full before your agent told you they put you on the flight an hour ago.
Good work, you got the gate agent's name. And you've mocked her sufficiently and her ethnicity to whomever you're browbeating on the phone.
At the end of this day, you'll be right with the rest of the chumps who didn't take the time to try and fight their way on the the last flight to Tampa: stuck in Atlanta.
Oh, there's one difference -- the rest of us have seats tomorrow. Don't know about you. Probably because we took care of business earlier, or didn't scream and yell.
The college student who shifted nervously, pitifully back and forth, worrying quietly if she'd get on the plane to catch up with the voice on the other end of her almost out of battery phone -- guess what, she got on the plane. And, Mr. Cheers, because she was so obviously upset yet maintaining a level of dignity, I'd have given her my seat. In fact, several folks would have. You? Good luck with the concierge level as we'd each stride onto that last middle seat.
So when Delta gets that report about the gate agent at A17, remember there was another side to that story.
And seriously, dude, Cheers was done before you were born. Chill.
When They Zig, Unfortunately I Zag
From in the air to ATL
Today’s long trip to
At this point, fatalism takes over, a sense of God’s will. Either this trip will work out, or it won’t. The presentation will go off, or it won’t.. Even Field Day turns out that way with some of the worst operating conditions in my eight years of events. We came up four contacts short of equaling last year’s total, but the sheer effort it required – long, painful work to get those 256 contacts – made it seem like we’d scored 500. Still, the score will be down.
Who Engages?
The third W in the Rules of Engagement
Who will engage? Here a department should have very specific rules, and enforce them without a lot of flexibility. If only the head SID, or only the sport contact are cleared to engage, they are the only ones. If student workers in the office are not allowed to post, remove them when they are discovered violating the policy. This will be a tough discussion with administrators who do not value the existing impact of the internet on shaping public opinion or worse, those who “don’t care” what the media says. The counter argument will be “you are giving credibility” to the B&B. Refer back to the chart on public trust; the bloggers already have it.
More Flooding Bad News
Saturday, June 28, 2008
What to Engage?
The second W in the Rules of Engagement
What will you engage? This is an area of great variation. Some advise challenging everything. Others consider acknowledging something exists on the internet as giving credence to all rumors. My rule of thumb is when factual errors exist that are significant it is the responsibility of the public information officer to step in and correct those errors. The added benefit is when factual errors are embedded in opinions that are driving misperceptions about the situation. This will undercut the opinion without directly attacking it, and it reinforces the authority of the spokesman.
When to Engage
First of the five W's from the Rules of Engagement of On-Line Media
When will you engage? Here there is a reasonably clear rule of thumb: as soon as humanly possible. There may be legal obstacles to overcome, but consider that lawyers often do not consider the public relations impact of their advice. Rapid response means that a monitoring system is in place. If you wait until the problem has reached the point the media or an admistrator is bringing it to the media relations office, the high likelihood is the Golden Hour is missed and the public opinion is already formed.
Friday, June 27, 2008
And It's Not Just Because He's the Boss
Today, Arkansas announced a new men's track coach. It was not the current assistant that a group of Razorback athletes started an on-line petition to support. Nor was it the person that board posters were pushing, using the student-athlete petition as underpinning support.
Jeff Long got asked earlier in the week by one of the local papers about the athlete's on-line effort. He stepped right up, and answered. Today, the other local paper took its turn.
"My decision out there was to hire the best coach for those student-athletes," Long said. "Was I concerned they started a Web site? No, I wasn't concerned as long as they represented their thoughts and feelings in an appropriate way. And they did."
Long's been consistent on this, and the key thought is right there -- as long as they represented their thoughts and feelings in an appropriate way. That's a welcome, forward approach to the brave new Web 2.0 world we live in.
Whole stories from today's hiring in the Morning News and the earlier story about the petition from the Northwest Arkansas Times.
The Rules of Engagement, Part Deux
More thoughts -- these from the conclusion of next week's CoSIDA presentation:
The key is engagement, not enforcement. There is a certain amount of policing of basic copyright. It is established that rights holders can claim the performance as their intellectual property, including the statistical representation. Here is where the real-time internet policies simultaneously get it and miss it. While for some it is about access and credentials, for the vast majority it is not. The greatest enemy? Maybe Steve Jobs and the iPhone – a dedicated transaction blogger only needs to see what is happening. A ticket and a 3G data plan takes care of that; or in the case of one prominent on-line media and the 2008 NCAA Indoor Track Meet, a free video stream and a couch. Commentary is the coin of the relm, and the B&B crowd want to express their opinion about events. The real power of the boards and blogs: amplification. Who’s message do you want to reinforce?
If I can encourage one thing, it is a frank discussion with the administration about the rules of engagement. Define them now before the opinion crisis begins. Consistency in using whatever policy is created is important. This has a legal component as well as a public relations component. There aren’t a pair of stone tablets with 10 rules to lead the athletic department. The solutions created when I was with the
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Well, There's Some Media Parking
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
Starting the Conversation
I mentioned this a few weeks ago, and will bring it up again at the panel. Every institution will have a different approach. Some will be direct. Some will use WOMMA-style groups. Some will continue to not engage. But even the decision to not allow your staff to officially post information or return "media" requests from citizen media is a set of rules of engagement.
In drafting your own rules, here are some parameters to consider:
Monitoring -- yes or no. For heaven's sake, I hope we've reached the point now where this really isn't a question anymore. The media reads it. The fans read it. Why on God's great internet would you want to be ignorant? This runs back to the old school thought that if we just don't acknowledge it, we won't give it any credibility. That didn't work with talk radio. It really isn't working with B&B. Perhaps the larger question is will you publicly admit your read and monitor the B&B. Better say yes -- any of those boards that require registration have your IP address (see posting for more).
Posting -- yes or no. If yes, will you post "in the open" under your own names. I have an opinion here -- my screen name is Bill_Smith. The reason? The smart B&B crowd already know your subnet. If they're FOI fiends, they probably have your IP table anyway. The likelihood of you being revealed as SuperHogDude is extremely high. When they do, it will shred the credibility you may have built up.
When and what to post. My personal policy was to only engage to answer a direct question (is there a press conference today? what time is the game tonight? did we sign anyone today?) or to correct an obvious factual error (no, the current coach's record against school X is not worse than the previous coach). I never, ever, tried to sway opinions. If I can correct factual errors that are underpinning poor opinions, that will achieve the goal. More important, it's they're opinion and fans are entitled to have them.
Credentialing. This is the next great hurdle. Tread with care. SuperHogDude is the correspondent for HogDudes.com, but he just might be a lawyer (or have lawyer friends as board members). Consider that the metrics are changing. Consider that you may want to have a blogger box or blogger board (as in group).
Consistency. The most important part of how you engage (or not engage) the B&B. Whatever you decide, stick with it and enforce it evenly.
Monday, June 23, 2008
Plain Language Signage
How Can You Keep Up?
More small chunks of thought going into the CoSIDA presentation:
Community is the essence of Web 2.0, and the same applies to monitoring. Building your athletic department’s community starts with trust. While there are legal limits even in a public institution, the more information that is shared the better educated both the monitors and the fans will be toward the athletic department. The insider group is a prime example. Not only can they share and support the message of the department, they can watch and listen for problems, particularly with the fan base. Tap into the sport staff. At most schools, the coaching staff is charged with monitoring the social networking activity of student-athletes. There is no need to duplicate that function within the media relations office as long as there is trust that the coaching staff will alert the SIDs. Here’s a hint for the coach: there’s no such thing as you caught that Facebook post in time. Poor Andy Robinson at
The key is distributed monitoring. No single person can keep up with every sport at your school, but as a part of the individual sport contact’s duties they can monitor what’s happening within that sport. This is more than checking the local boards that follow the institution. Encourage them to know where the national and regional boards are about their sport. Frankly, the less visible the sport the more important these communities are to the participants. Everyone wants media coverage, and absent traditional brick-and-mortar sportswriters the vacuum will be filled by pro-ams.
Saturday, June 21, 2008
The End for Old Media
Continuing on the early previews of the presentation for CoSIDA:
The current business model of traditional journalism is gone. The iceburg was struck two years ago, and only now are people beginning to understand the ship is sinking. Newspapers are slashing editorial positions with literally hundreds from some of the brand names of the business: New York Times, Washington Post, San Francisco Chronicle, Los Angeles Times. In the past month alone, the local news operations of one of the fastest growing segments – Spanish language television – were shut down by one of the largest Univision conglomerates. Layoffs and non-renewals of experienced, high-salaried television talent is a weekly event. In June, U.S. News and World Report announced they were going to a biweekly format, with daily reports on the website. Closer to home, the very next day, Sporting News announced they were going to the biweekly format and a Digital Daily.
Meanwhile, the unemployed are not going away. They are going on-line. The fired lead meteorologists in
This comes back to the legitimacy question. Since the beginning of Audit Bureau and Nielson, the importance of a media outlet was easily defined by common metrics: circulation and viewership. Both were functions of capital. Increasing either measure required lots of money. For decades, press credentials were dolled out based on this pyramid of importance: national dailies, statewide dailies, circulation over 10,000, and so on. What is the measure of internet legitimacy? Click through, page views, unique visitors, persistence on page – each has its place but none are universal. As a result, the blogger or board owner that builds up substantial numbers not only presents a threat to the institution’s reputation, they can make a serious legal case that they have similar audience standing as the traditional media sitting in the press box. Consider that the last time our hometown newspaper reported circulation to the ABC it stood at roughly 15,000; this year the leading message board had over 20,000 members.
Friday, June 20, 2008
OK, Choose One
More on the AP War
Jeff Jarvis of Buzzmachine.com was pretty clear in today's Washington Times:
"Back off, AP. Because we won't."
The blogosphere was set on fire by AP's plan to require pull quotes to be paid for by on-line media. In the Washington Times story, there are some more details on how the one-time alliance between new and old media has broken down.
But as always, the best stuff is the mudslinging. Michelle Malkin looked as the schedule of payment and estimated AP owes her just over $130,000 -- yes, that's six-figures. DailyKos labeled AP idiots. Back to Malkin: AP's "heavy-handed attempt to bully bloggers is schadenfreude-licious."
Oops. I guess I owe somebody about $10.75.
If back in the day, we once counseled coaches and ADs to avoid pissing battles with people who buy ink by the barrel, perhaps the traditional media should take the Dan Rather warning and not jerk around the mass that is the new media. There's a heck of a lot more of them than you.
Maybe I should recast that metaphor -- the AP just rolled into the Little Bighorn Valley.
Thursday, June 19, 2008
One Line Says It All
Finding ideas that reinforce your own is great. Sometimes I worry that this becomes one of the dangers of the internet -- if your physically immediate community doesn't agree with you, you can always find someone out there that does. Thus, the strength of the Web 2.0 SNW world -- the very Second Life aspect -- which leads to a weakening and fracturing of local communities.
That dark thought said, here's a perfect, one-line summation of the communication change. I discovered it while listening to one of my favorite podcasts, WeatherBrains. It's a podcast for weather geeks, but the guys that run it are very cutting edge when it comes to new media. A recent guest is the living embodiment of the problems with traditional media's financial model. He was let go as the staff weather guy in a major cutback due to falling revenue. As the highest paid, first to go.
Sounds pretty bad, yes? Not for him. He gets it, and was discussing that the future for weather in the media was directed content and on-line presentation. He's moving on, and had this very prescient comment:
Find ways to turn a speech into a conversation
V-8 moment. This is the essence of Web 2.0. It dovetails nicely with my posts (there's that reinforcement thing), but expresses the point better.
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
Some Local Press on the SNW
One of our local newspapers, the Morning News of Northwest Arkansas, ran a sports enterprise series this past weekend on social networking websites and college athletics. There are some very good stories for others to note. Ryan Malashock came up with one that was new to me that I found very important. University of Buffalo basketball player Andy Robinson made a one-hour mistake on his Facebook, frustrated over not getting an assignment done. Read the impact here.
You also get to see the impact of small Facebook changes, like the firestorm set off by one of our own basketball players making a post on his wall. The last part covers how new athletic director Jeff Long and men's basketball coach John Pelphrey are well in tune with the impact.
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
Some Signs are Just Unfortunate
I got nothing.
Actually, in fairness to Vandy, this is part of the sleep disorder center co-located in the Marriott near the athletic facilities.
This is reminiscent of one of the greatest directional signs of all time. It no longer exists, and the facility is now closed. At Florida, the original university-run hotel had a basement level that connected out to the parking deck. It was little more than a long, windowless narrow hall terminating in an elevator. Very Steven King.
Directly across from the elevator, where you could not miss it every time you got out, was a sign:
"FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY DEPARTMENT"
Parse that for a minute. It's late. It's dark. Maybe it's even stormy outside. Now, you've got to walk down this service hallway. The lights occasionally flicker. You're hoping that they're not working on Jason or Freddie.
When Words Cost
Associated Press is already backing away from an attempt to become the text version of the RIAA -- charging bloggers by the word for excerpts posted by non-AP members. Recall earlier we had AP making a deal for a new direct to iPhone service -- to which I immediately said, "and who pays for it?"
So in a pretty blatant attempt to crush fair use in the pursuit of the desperate need to pay for the services of AP, we get a rate card that calls for bloggers to pay a floating scale depending on how many words they use. Obviously, you get a heck of a discount when you buy over 251 words, a mere $100. A short quote is pretty pricey -- 5 to 25 words go for $12.50.
As a result, AP as served some cease and desist letters, and pulled them back according to the New York Times.
At the risk of blowback, here is the money quote from the NYT story, quoting Jim Kennedy, the VP and "strategy director" of AP.
“We don’t want to cast a pall over the blogosphere by being heavy-handed, so we have to figure out a better and more positive way to do this,” Mr. Kennedy said.
I can tell you where this is headed. Universities will begin to lock down the use of press releases by the B&B community. Pro sports have already broken the seal on these kinds of content restrictions on the argument that they "own the performance." That, after all, is the SOP in the entertainment community.
The end result -- everyone loses. Content gets locked up in digital gated communities. The free flow of ideas and information is lost. In the gap, cascades of fark and propaganda fill the vacuum.
It may not be a total loss. The Web 2.0 community might just take a page from the history books and employ an island-hopping campaign against the established media. Simply go around them and leave them to their own little domains, left to starve as their resources are cut off.
Monday, June 16, 2008
The Jesus Principal
Mark 16:15 tells you everything you as the sports media relations person needs to know about dealing with the bloggers and boarders:
Go into all the world and preach the good news to every creature
Now, I'm not about to put on a rainbow afro wig and start showing up in the endzone waiving a Mark 16:15 sign. Truth be told, I had to google it.
That does not make this point false: Jesus went to where the sinners were.
Simple. If you are concerned about what the B&B world is saying, you've got to do the dirty work and reach out to them. Every day I read or hear of another SID who has hardened his shell against the slings and arrows of the internet, and dismiss the people who make the posts as hiding behind anonymous postings.
This comes from experience. If you step into the room and turn on the light, the cockroaches will scurry and the angry dogs will growl. Very, very few dogs were born mean. Somebody had to make them that way.
Angry B&B traffic more often than not comes from a lack of information. Withholding information only makes it worse. And the only thing worse than that -- excuse-making spin.
In my classes -- both the SID one at UA and my history ones at NWACC -- I use Richard Nixon as the perfect example. In domestic policy, Nixon probably did more to shape the country we live in today than any recent president. He certainly did the same in foreign policy.
But Nixon lives in infamy because he screwed up massively in trying to game the system to his advantage then cover it up when his people made mistakes.
Ask yourself this question: Did Nixon get run from office because a bunch of over-zealous staffers broke the law, perhaps at his direction? Or did he lose his job because he worked overtime to cover it up?
Back to the B&B's. If you have owners that routinely allow false information to remain on-line, pick up the phone or send an email to politely correct the false information. Talking to these potential opinion shapers is no different than trying to correct errors with the traditional media. More times than not, they just want to be heard. Some of them won't listen, but the ones that do will become your allies -- your WOMMA group -- to help do battle with the fringe.
Our business has always been, and shall always be, about relationships. Even with Raman noodle and Cheeto dust sinners. So go forth and tell the good stories of your athletic department to every form of media.
Sunday, June 15, 2008
Another from the Bellows Beach
This was also at Bellows Beach in Hawai'i -- great personality to the oops guy on the warning.
There's also a lot of truth to this. We'd stopped at another beach on the way, and the locals said, listen mainlander, you might want to pick another beach because of the same warning sign. Except at that beach, they'd had a pretty regular run of broken bones from people crushed against the rocks and sea floor with the shore break.
We splashed a bit, got whipped by one of those breakers and decided yep, time to move on.
On the way back, we saw the rescue crew at that beach -- the sign was right.
Saturday, June 14, 2008
Vaulting Well is the Best Revenge
I get the same question from coaches and athletes, both at Arkansas and at other institutions: what do I do about negative message board posts? My firm belief is it's hard to openly battle opinions, but you can correct factual errors. Otherwise, let your performance speak for you.
Ladies and gentlemen, meet Katie Stripling, Arkansas pole vaulter. Two weeks ago, a horrible day at the regionals left one of the nation's top vaulters out of the NCAAs. Then her coach, Brian Compton, recognized a rule that could put her back into the nationals. He used it. She advanced. And the howling began, notably on one national vaulting message board.
Katie and Compton were called everything in the book. All on line. All for the world to see. Did they strike back? Not on the internet, but in Des Moines. From today's Arkansas Democrat-Gazette story:
"They were pretty angry," Stripling said, referring to some posts on the Web site PoleVaultPower. com. "It gave me more determination and motivation to prove people wrong. I used it to help me."
Here's a tip to the B&B crowd: Remember what you're high school coach said -- don't give them any bulletin board material. Instead of making Katie curl up into a fetal position with their stinging riposte, these anonymous writers inspired her.
Before we go much further, for those not up on NCAA pole vault marks, Stripling had the nation's No. 2 mark at 14 feet, 2 inches heading into the meet. That speaks less to the argument an obscure rule was used to advance her to the national championship than to the painfully obvious fact that it's not really a fight for the best in the nation if someone who was ranked second during the year was left home.
Stripling got the cold shoulder from competitors; she let her pole do the talking. Her coach added the punctuation. Again from the ADG:
"She shut the critics up on the pole vaulting Web sites and blogs," Compton said. "They don't understand the rules. If they knew them, they would have used them, too."
Let's parse it out. Stoic athlete ignores the jeers of the crowd on her way to success. Great, that's pretty classic. Why not take the full high-road approach and not even acknowledge the message boards? Even better, why pay any attention to them?
Because this is 2008, and that approach is not functional. First and foremost, the athletes read everything because they live in the highly integrated socially networked world.
When I'm asked by shocked colleagues about why I spend a portion of my day -- and encourage our staff to do so in their specialty areas -- reading what is out there, this is the perfect example. It's really not an option because the media is reading it. The B&B (boards and blogs) are a force multiplier for the ever shrinking manpower of the newsroom. I encourage the pros reading this blog to take in the full story at the ADG. The athlete and the coach didn't make the blog posting important, the media did when they asked them about it. And on this day, it became the story -- the headline was Stripling's Effort Answers Criticism.
16th century Welsh poet and clergyman George Herbert may have first penned the phrase "Living Well is the Best Revenge," but Katie Stripling's all-American third-place performance at Des Moines certainly updated it for the 21st century.
Where Do We Go From Here
The series of thoughts heading into the New Media panel at CoSIDA continues . . .
There are two main scenarios by which we move forward in our relationship with emerging media formats.
Wild West: All blogs, all the time. One gigantic ball of opinion and fact and lies and data that tumble like a 21st century rebirth of the Penny Press. Chaos ensues as the information multiplies to the point of absurdity, and we split the markets smaller and smaller into ever-shrinking niches.
Evolution: Skill sets not envisioned when even the current generation of journalists were in training begin to re-establish a new type of elite media that gains dominance over the masses. The traditional media companies figure out how to monitize the eyeballs and recapture their position at the top of the pecking order. Things return to the old days as far as the power relationships go, but with Jetson toys.
As usual, I'm looking for the third way -- one that recognizes the multiplicity of the coming dispersal of media power and provides a means of managing it.
WOMMA: The Word of Mouth Marketing Association. On its face, it seems a bit absurd. Peel back some of the info within this group, and you'll see they have a pretty important key to the management of the future. They see the way forward is to embrace some of the concepts of Web 2.0 and utilize them in open accountability means.
Let me contrast the WOMMA methods and code with the dark side -- astroturfing. WOMMA is about building grass roots marketing; quite frankly a populist buzz is the best marketing of all. If you fake that with hired posters and bloggers -- get it, astroturfing? -- you risk having it all blow back on your organization.
Why are building relationships with bloggers and boarders important? The B&B are your fans, your most passionate fans. When our women's basketball team is getting shelled for poor performance by the B&B, I don't worry. If someone is tearing up a coach, it's annoying. When they are saying nothing, I am scared to death. Why? Because they don't care any more, and that's the last step before finding something else to do on Saturday evenings.
The key to success with the B&B is the creation of very clear, very specific Rules of Engagement.
Friday, June 13, 2008
First in a Series
In Hawai'i, they know how to make a great warning sign. These were at Bellows Beach Park near the retired Bellows AFB. I love the help me wave in the icon.
Without a doubt, this was the coolest beach on the East Shore for a family. Lots of locals driving up with the full set of tables, grills, pop-up tents for an afternoon. Just enough pop in the surf for mainlanders and a very kamianne vibe.
Thursday, June 12, 2008
The Medium is Young; the Participants are Not
Picking up from my teenage parent analogy, the communication mode is valid -- the sometimes angry talking back through message boards, blogs and direct emails -- but the image is far from correct.
Yes, the new Web 2.0 world is driven by a young generation that has a completely different sense of what privacy means. They expose far more about their lives than previous generations. At times, they seem to lack any governor on telling you -- and the WWW -- what happened at the party last night. That comes from a conscious belief by some that with the intrusions of technology -- from CCD cameras on light poles to TiVo records of television shows watched -- have made their lives glass houses anyway. As an aside, they may be right. The older generations may be the foolish ones believing privacy exists -- but that's for another paranoid day.
The great mistake made by decision makers regarding who's behind the new media is assuming that the people involved are:
A) Slackers with too much time on their hands and too much Cheetos dust on their keyboards
B) Proletariat who are using the free internet to espouse their ill-opinions
C) Not real fans, cause real fans would never try to tear down the team
This profile breaks down really fast when you get some demographics from major boards and blogs. First and foremost, people with time for the internet have leisure time. They have a computer. Or they work in white collar industries with computer access. In other words, they have means.
I would be willing to wage the average college sports board or blog is frequented more often by fans with incomes over $50K than below. I'd also warn that they probably are read by or participated in by the major level boosters of the school -- the folks dropping $10K donations on a regular basis and have incomes well into the six figures.
They are also older than you think. They are not college students, or recent graduates. They mirror a recent study of who creates technology start-ups. Guess what -- it's not the genius kid out of school. Those tech startups? Average age was early 40s. Both personal anecdotal information and surveys and registrations logs back this up.
If you ask a university development director, keeping recent graduates attached to the institution, then beginning to build a relationship with them as they begin to reach their peak earning years are the key to cultivation of new "friends" -- read, donors.
Guess where that target audience is hanging out in the late afternoon at work and the wee hours of the night at home?
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
And They Mean It
No great humor in this sign, but a cool image outside the old WSB tower site south of Nashville, Tenn. For those interested in the history of commercial radio -- or just geeked by really cool tower sites -- this array sits right off I-65 south.
One can imagine just how much juice this monster can create. Needless to say, walking inside the perimeter risks a serious RF burn.The one part about this site -- it does butt up against a large youth sports park on it's east side.
Here's a look at the towers at dusk.
Monday, June 09, 2008
The Importance of the Internet
Building toward the CoSIDA convention program
This slide comes from presentations at the JumpTV Executive Users conference, and in turn from Annenburg School at USC research within the last year.
The question asked was what is the source for your information. Reinforcing the Web 2.0 aspect of community, personal sources and the internet were judged the top two answers. The traditional media were almost equal in the mid-60s.
Thus, when weighing the impact of B&B, we must consider that the rising generation and the internet-oriented part of the population may put more credence into the internet sources than we want to acknowledge.
It raises the important question: If our fans and end-users of information believe the internet, choose it as their No. 1 source of information, can we continue to ignore inaccurate, overblown, false information?
One Real Warning
In the continuing great signs series, I'm just happy to see this gas station getting a warning correct. No, your cell phone is not going to set off a terrible explosion. Yes, sliding back and forth into the car -- particularly in the winter -- will generate enough static electricity to potentially spark the fumes.
Every time I see the old "turn off your cell phone" warnings, I cringe at A) bad science, B) over lawyer-ing, and C) lazy sign administration.
Killer Apps Breaking Through on iPhone
The keynote address at WWDC has sent a pair of shots across the collective bows of college sports.
First and foremost, MLB.com At Bat looks like the full realization of portable streaming stats I've advocated for years. The question now -- is StatCrew listening?
Broader impact, and perhaps overlooked in the MLB hype, is the deal made with Associated Press. News straight to the consumer's iPhone. It is a free download from the App Store in July. Who is going to pay for the service? AP is a subscriber entity. To rehash some old ground, but who is paying for the journalism we need if you get your AP on the phone. Don't need that newspaper subscription (or USA TODAY) for national news.
Full details as given today in the WWDC keynote transcript.
Saturday, June 07, 2008
The Invasion is Over
Once again, the annual Invasion of the Wal-Martians has come and gone. I coined the term back in the early 1990s when the event was just old Barnhill Arena. It's grown into a monster event that brings people from around the world to Fayetteville. As I've told every new staffer, you have to experience it at least once.
This year was no exception. For the first time, we had the chance to attend the concerts which were outstanding. My favorite side comment -- I didn't think you liked cool music. Um, yes, and in fact I went Wednesday not as much for Journey (big in my high school years) as All-American Rejects.
Thursday with Keith Urban -- look, I could care less about country -- but he can flat play. I've not seen anyone in person play as well. Any style. While running and walking around Razorback Stadium. Giving guitars and microphones (literally) to the crowd.
Two Great Internet Quotes
One is fiction; one is not -- but they're great commentaries about those darn internets.
In National Treasure 2, Patrick Gates, played by Jon Voight, mutters woefully when the press conference is held claiming his ancestor was the mastermind of the Lincoln assassination:
"It's on the internet," Gates moans. "There's no stopping it now."
What's really interesting about that passage is he's watching a press conference on his laptop. That same content was obviously available on television, but the passage rings true. Here's a falsehood that now lives forever and gets its wings because it's posted as a viral video.
The second one comes from TWIT's last week podcast.
"People are turning to their computer now to answer questions, it is the library," Brewster Kahle said. "If it's not on the internet, its as if it doesn't exist."
Kahle is the man behind the Internet Archive and the Wayback Machine. The Internet Archive does exactly what you think -- vacuuming up back-ups of the internet. A more public version of the Googleplex that I've warned you about. Remember -- once put on line, nothing goes away.
"If we're raising a generation without our best stuff on the internet, we're raising the generation that we deserve," he continued. Somewhat self-serving for someone essentially in the on-line library creation business, but one should not argue with the logic behind it.
Taken together, they present more reason why institutions that feel wronged need to take their battle to the medium and why it is in the institution's best interest to be the one that tells all the news.
A Young Media for a Young Nation
OK, maybe this is a point in the thinking about "the new media" that ranges off, but as a parent of a high school senior, it makes sense. The boards and blogs represent a coming of age in the media -- it happens every generation or so with technology shifts.
The challenge for the institution -- whether it is a university's athletic department or a major private corporation -- is figuring out how it will engage the two-way communication path of Web 2.0. It's not enough to send out a message, you have to listen to the response and react.
Or, you have to realize you're dealing with a teenager.
For decades, athletic departments sent out their messages to their fans. It was a one-way communications portal. Feedback was available for the major boosters or politically connected. It also echoed through the attitude of the media covering the team. We -- college SIDs -- operated in modes that emphasized our ability to spread an outbound mass message.
So as a parent, we told out toddlers and pre-teens what to do. We expected them to do it. We brooked no talking back.
Funny thing is, when they grow up with a mind and an opinion of their own. The day they decide to tell you what you think, it can be jarring. You want to respond in kind, or with an authoritarian "do what I say" tone.
Guess what -- it doesn't work. Eventually, you have to converse with the teenager, respect their opinion, do you best to steer their opinion. That doesn't mean you don't discipline them when they are out of line. You can't have a shouting match and think you'll win by the force of being the . Eventually, they will tune you out.
Now -- replace every teenager reference with college sports fan. The Web 2.0 world -- from SNW to message board -- enables the fans to talk back to us. We have to learn to listen, and realize that the world in which we simply managed information or opinion through a one-way dialog -- we will tell you what's important, what's correct, what to do -- is over.
It's been over for some time for politicians. It's becoming over for local municipalities as they deal with citizen media. Some may argue whether or not the battle is done in college sports, and that might vary from market to market.
At the end of the day, they will grow up.
Friday, June 06, 2008
No Computer Zone
While a lot of folks point to the "Danger Gators in the Ponds" on the University of Florida campus as the disturbing warning sign, I've always been a little concerned about the designated Surge Areas. I assume they are for flood water, but there always other ideas. Computers should be scared of the Surge Area; also any insurgents should be concerned. Wait a minute. If you're a visiting athletic team, would that make you a dangerous rebel that might be attacked if you're found in a Surge Area?
Wednesday, June 04, 2008
Now THAT'S Some Circular Logic
Next Gen Talk Radio
So if you establish this is how they get their info, why wouldn't you want to influence it
I sat in Destin, Florida, at the SEC meetings in the mid 1990s and listened to my colleagues rail against talk radio. They lacked journalistic background. They let anyone get on and say anything. They were the end of the gentile sports world as we know it.
Fast-forward a decade. Talk stations are credentialed to SEC media days, complete with a "radio row" for coaches and players to appear. We have not one, but three national sports talk radio networks. One of the great launching pads for the world-wide leader in sports was its radio network component.
Are there still problems with talk show hosts? Yes. Do we regulate appearances? You bet. But the best of breed are knowledgeable -- and responsible -- members of the sports media community.
That didn't happen overnight. It took people deciding to reach out on both sides of the equation. I see where we are with the new media and Web 2.0 sites as very similar to that mid-90s tipping point with the sports talk format.
Tuesday, June 03, 2008
Next Sign: Little Disturbing
There are some signs you don't want to see at your airport. We wheeled up to the small airport near Clemson University. It was dark. Few lights. Kyle Kellams and I park our rental car and look up to see this sign.
Having won the game, the evac was quite pleasant. Since we were in upland South Carolina, exactly what would you be evacuating from?
Monday, June 02, 2008
You're Kidding, Right?
Perhaps Andrew Cohen of CBS is the most droll, tongue-in-cheek humorist in America. He's the legal affairs correspondent for the network. Sunday morning, he opined that all PR people were liars, just like Scott McClellan.
Of course, Cohen is getting shelled by the PR industry, with PRSA launching against him. Plus the internets are in full force. You can see the original piece and Cohen's reaction.
I have two.
Pot, lawyer Andrew Cohen, meet Kettle, the PR types -- Guess what, when it comes to ethical standards the general public sees you both as black.
Here's my better one.
From his original rant: Show me a PR person who is "accurate" and "truthful," and I'll show you a PR person who is unemployed.
Andrew Cohen, who works at CBS, as you call out the public relations profession, I have two words for you: Dan Rather.
Another SNW Event Gone Bad
The twist at Seattle University is the school officials stepped in to warn students that were planning a party Memorial Day weekend through Facebook invitations. Details at the Chronicle of Higher Ed and Seattle Times.
Students, obviously, think their First Amendment rights were violated. Sounds a lot like they opened up way to much information about the party -- to the point university officials let them know they could get in trouble with the school's code of conduct. Scared, the students cancelled.
Payoff quote from the SeaTimes:
Butterworth said the university administration monitors sites like Facebook only when something is specifically brought to their attention, and that they are acting in the Jesuit tradition of "cura personalis" — care of the whole person.
"Our education doesn't really stop when students leave the classroom," Butterworth said. "In some ways, it begins there."
Butterworth is the dean of students, who arrived at the doorstep of another Facebook-planned and advertised party earlier.Don't ask, don't tell? Maybe. Think about it for a minute. If you told your parents in some graphic detail what you were about to do at your "douchebag" party (their label for the event), what would your parent's reaction have been.
Be practical with your SNW's, kids.
Sunday, June 01, 2008
Near Miss for NCAA Track
Be very glad the regional track meets aren't Saturday-Sunday. Yesterday we had some nearby -- but nowhere near close enough to suspend or really even think of suspending -- storms. As of this post, I've already had my fifth active weather net based on severe thunderstorm warnings. Clocked a half inch of rain since 5:30 a.m. and numerous lightning strikes; including one that took our power in nearby Tontitown.
As you can see from the screen capture, active net No. 6 is just moments away.
Working on the CoSIDA Panel
Unlike previous appearances, chairing the panel is more about managing and encouraging discussion. Along those lines, I will offer the briefest of presentations at Tampa.
But to encourage that discussion, I am planning to post some of my anticipated thoughts toward Dan Gilmoor and Spencer Hall.
First and foremost -- why are these two guys on the platform? In my mind, they represent the best of breed when it comes to the theory and practice of the new media. As I've mentioned several times before, Dan runs the Center for New Media and when it comes to how the Brave New World will be structured, few short of Aldus have had a better grasp on where it is going.
Spencer as the lead of Every Day Should Be Saturday is one of those national blog/board entities that crosses all party lines. If you are associated with college football, you read EDSBS. Period. That's media, on-air talent, coaches, adminstrators, fans, prospects. Anyone who says otherwise is A) lying; or B) ignorant.
And by ignorant, I don't mean stupid. I mean the classic Merriam-Webster: destitute of knowledge or education.
So, alternating with my $4 gasoline inspired summer travel through great signs of past road trips, we'll flesh out the program.
Saturday, May 31, 2008
Friday, May 30, 2008
Further Reinforcement for Monitoring
You can't violate my free speech -- often the lament of the college athlete caught by a coach or administrator with a problem on their SNW. A state ruling from Connecticut provides another support in the argument as a high school student's comments on livejournal.com were used to disqualify him from the student council election.
The high school had a clause that candidates must show "good citizenship." Apparently, calling a school administrator a "douchebag" or encouraging people to "piss off" the school's central office on your blog violates that policy.
Payoff quote from the Hartford Courant:
The court also emphasized that Doninger's discipline barred her from an extracurricular activity, and that the blog post was inconsistent with the school's policy that student government representatives have a record of good citizenship.
The student apparently is prepping an appeal. Good luck, because when the rules for extracurricular activity are set -- whether they are team rules for an athletic team or qualifications for a leadership or academic group -- you violate them at your peril.
The First Amendment does not cover that.
More at the Chron and the Hartford Courant
Wednesday, May 28, 2008
Great Sign Moments for the Road
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
No, I'm Not That Bill Smith
When asked, I never agree to hotel check-in personnel and others that like to joke about the fact that you've got a pretty common name. I counter, it's not common, it's popular.
That said, I noticed today there's another Dr. Bill Smith from the state of Arkansas with a far more popular blog (traffic-wise), and got asked if were were the same. No, he runs a GOP-issue website.
Kind of when I was on the board for the Arkansas Air Museum, and there's a hangar in Springdale with BS on the side. No, not mine either.
Monday, May 26, 2008
No Travel this Memorial Day
Sitting on the back deck, this is the first time in 15 years I'll be home the week of Memorial Day. Fort Walton and Destin are special places for our family, vacationing there since high school for me and since elementary school for Libby. The combination of restructuring and gas prices -- no beach this summer.
I'll miss it, in particular the Donut Hole, which I've mentioned before. I always saw those mugs when we'd visit, and resisted the temptation to buy one until last summer. Who knew it would be our last visit for a while.
So, with my morning coffee in the Donut Hole mug, I'm thinking about the sound of the beach and never taking anything for granted anymore.
Sunday, May 25, 2008
The Message is the Medium
Here's the first in a series of thoughts looking toward the new media panel at CoSIDA. Feedback to the email address is encouraged.
A generation had its opinion formed by Marshall McLuhan's theories. His post-postmortem website even starts with a link labeled "Enter the Medium". I've been more a Neill Postmann follower (as in Amusing Ourselves to ), and working this past spring in the Sports Media Relations class I've come to a new point of view. This may not be original -- I didn't google the snot out of it to check -- but the realization was strong and personal.
McLuhan was right in what I call the Atomic Era; that post-Second World War time from 1945 until the mid-1990s where we faced new technologies and the realization that for the first time in human history we really did have the capacity to end it all. Television -- the primary medium of which he spoke -- became a message in and of itself. It changed everything.
One could argue this continues today with the internet -- a distribution medium that becomes a message and a purpose into itself. Just look at social networking as a prime example.
But why?
Various mediums do influence and shape the way the message is imparted. McLuhan lived and thought far ahead of his time, but I don't think he could possibly have seen a day in which the means of distribution could become one. Television brought together picture and sound in real time, pretty jarring.
Still, a newspaper by its nature is flatland, to use Edward Tufte's term. What happens when the newspaper -- the written word -- appears on your screen that brings you color photos, moving images, sound and streams of raw data.
McLuhan lived in a world with a rainbow -- a spectrum of specific wavelengths that did specific things, albeit in new and wonderfully subversive ways to the culture at large.
We live in a time where that prism -- the medium -- is removed; all the modes of communication run together into a pure beam of light.
Look, I love newspapers and still subscribe to them. Same for news weeklies. Until someone comes up with a better user interface for the toilet, one that's fully compliant with the first 10,000 feet of commercial flight and independent of power supplies, I'll keep using them. That doesn't mean I don't RSS 40-50 news sources, use aggregators and spiders to harvest news and search and participate in Web 2.0 communities.
I do it all for the same reason we all do -- I'm looking for a message; the medium doesn't matter any more. I'll take my news on trees or flickering LCDs; I'll watch my content on a CRT, a plasma screen or a LCD phone; I'll listen to the voices over analog waves, digital downloads or in my head.
Therefore, those that command the message -- who form it, set its agenda, choose its content -- are the ones who shall rule the medium. Content is king.
More as it develops, but now I want to put my attention on Aurelija Miseviciute, who's playing in the NCAA semis about 100 miles away from my computer. But I can watch by streaming video, essentially warping space to a niche market -- people interested in Arkansas women's tennis -- that McLuhan could not imagine. He might argue the medium made it possible. OK, but that's to the credit of a bunch of engineers -- perhaps Al Gore? I seek the message, and all the medium just allows me to save $3.95 a gallon and the transit time.
Look at You All Grow'd Up
Nothing like a quality hour spent searching and writing code -- ah, for those glorious days of WordPad.
So, the blog now has its own easy to find RSS feed, plus Add This social bookmarking for the individual posts.
After all, the world can't live without the musing of The Road Scholar -- share them.