introducing iphone?

appleSM07.jpgThe hot rumor ahead of Apple CEO Steve Jobs' big announcement tomorrow is that he'll unveil the rumored Apple "iPhone" (or whatever it will be called) and the Wall Street Journal just broke the news (on its subscription website) that the portable Apple device will be carried by Cingular (see the AP story about the WSJ story).

The lead up to Jobs' speech tomorrow at MacWorld in SF has lead to considerable buzz and speculation, so much so that even the thousands of CES attendees hundreds of miles away in Vegas will likely be buzzing about whatever his big news is.... The blog that is always a thorn in Apple's side, ThinkSecret, offers a nice round-up of the rumors tonight...



trade journalism

indieWIRE isn't exactly a traditional "trade paper," but of course we often cover the ins-and-outs of the film business...one of the challenges of such reporting involves maintaining the access to the information that comes from the companies we try to report on. As top notch trade writer Anne Thompson unfortunately learned, that access can easily be threatened (Universal has entirely banned her from covering their studio after disputing one of her stories).

The message sent by such a decree from a studio chief is quite clear: don't piss us off or we'll cut you off. Indeed, the fear of losing inside access impacts coverage of the film business...I've chatted with top trade reporters recently who told me about stories they are avoiding for fear of pissing off inside sources, or company heads. In one case, the Hollywood trade reporter complimented indieWIRE for its coverage of a touchy subject. Meanwhile, a separate potential story remains unreported...it involves a rather complicated scenario that is difficult to sort out -- reporting it could ruffle some feathers, but we'll try to tread lightly and make sense of it.



nyt: "as corporate ad money flows their way, bloggers risk their rebel reputation"

More on blog advertising in Monday's New York Times, with Brian Clark (from indieWIRE partner company GMD Studios) among those talking with writer Louise Story about how corporations and bloggers are increasintgy collaborating.



stop the press?

From the the Times Online in London, a piece from the paper's deputy political editor about the British government attempting to stop the leak of information that might be damaging to George Bush...:

The Attorney-General was accused last night of using the Official Secrets Act “big stick” to gag newspapers in an attempt to save President Bush from further embarrassment over Iraq.
Lord Goldsmith threatened newspapers on Tuesday with prosecution under the Act if they published details from a record of a conversation between Mr Bush and Tony Blair from April last year, when the President is alleged to have suggested bombing al-Jazeera, the Arabic television network.


ny times: "join a revolution. make movies. go broke."

arincSQ.jpgA few months ago I got an email from writer Charles Lyons who explained that he was working on a New York Times story about independent filmmakers whose films hadn't been picked up. Sort of the flip side of the mythical indiefilm Cinderella story. I immediately sent him to "Four Eyed Monsters" filmmakers Susan Buice and Arin Crumley, whom I'd gotten to know and was writing about (here and here). Charlie's NY Times piece is running in the Sunday paper this weekend:

What makes the independent film landscape particularly treacherous, though, is that most independent pictures are either self-financed or backed by individuals who've staked their own cash - and are left holding the bag when, as in the vast majority of cases, the movie turns out to have no commercial future.



Alt. Weekly Merger

vvlogo.jpgRecently I was chatting with a friend about how the relevance of the alternative weekly newspaper seems to have changed over the years, with the rise of web-based outlets and resources. I still remember the "old days" (the mid-90's) when NYC apartment seekers would line up in Astor Plaza on Tuesdays to grab the first copies of the Village Voice before racing to available no-fee apartments. Now, many people read alternative media online and use Craigslist for buying/selling/renting.

The New York Times reports that Village Voice Media will be acquired by New Times Media, creating a large network of alternative weeklies in 17 markets. If the deal is approved, it will be interesting to watch how the group develops its web strategy, which according to the article will include "a new alternative media Internet portal."



"Much of Gulf Coast Is Crippled"...

For those who have somehow missed, avoided or ignored coverage of Hurricane Katrina, the stories and images being broadcast and blogged tonight are staggering. In the severely damaged regions of the Gulf Coast, including New Orleans, Biloxi, and numerous small towns: massive flooding and waters rising, dead bodies stashed aside to be dealt with later, people living on the roof's of their homes waiting for rescue, looting at gunpoint, and inmates taking hostages at a prison. The damage is clearly worse than had been expected yesterday.

According to a report tonight, as many as 1 million people may now be homeless as a result of the damage throughout the region.

A breaking news blog from the staff of the local New Orleans' Times-Picayune newspaper is offering continual updates from a paper staff forced to relocate to another area and posting its news via the blog...

» Continue reading ""Much of Gulf Coast Is Crippled"..."


OK, so why aren't they going to the movies...

cruise1xSM.jpgThe New York Times reports in Tuesday's edition, "To Market a Magazine, Fill It With Celebrity Gossip", saying:

The voracious demand for Hollywood gossip, from Brad Pitt's love interests to Tom Cruise's spat with Brooke Shields, drove circulation increases for celebrity magazines in the last six months...More serious categories - particularly newsweeklies and men's titles - continued to struggle...

The bump in gossip-minded media sure didn't seem to boost summer ticket sales at the megaplex box office. So, what gives?



Most Emailed Article...

Tonight on the New York Times website:

Most E-Mailed Articles
Past 24 Hours | Past 7 Days

Updated every 15 minutes

1. FASHION & STYLE / SUNDAY STYLES | June 19, 2005
Gay or Straight? Hard to Tell
By DAVID COLMAN
With more gay men dressing down and straight men flaunting their looks, gaydar has been rendered as outmoded as Windows 2000.

» Continue reading "Most Emailed Article..."


Making Sense of The 'Deep Throat' Story

mfelt.jpgPerhaps more interesting than the Vanity Fair story revealing the indentity of the infamous Deep Throat is the story behind the story. In the Washington Post today, Bob Woodward previews an upcoming book by detailing "How Mark Felt Became 'Deep Throat'." Meanwhile, in the same paper, media critic Howard Kurtz looks at how the Post was scooped on its own story by the Vanity Fair piece unveiling Deep Throat's identity. The New York Times meanwhile goes inside the Post newsroom to look at how the story broke on Tuesday and finally, while over at The News Virginian, J. Todd Foster (a former People Magazine contributor) reveals that three years ago he nearly outed 'Deep Throat' when Felt's family, seeking money, peddled the story to him. In interviews for a potential book at the time, Foster collaborated with another writer and the aging Felt, suffering from dementia, said, "Well, I wasn't a Deep Throat," doubting that he had given information to Woodward and reiterating, "I thought Deep Throat was another source entirely."



On the Inside...

In this week's edition of the New York Times Magazine, writer Benoit Denizet-Lewis again goes inside a closed world for an NYT mag cover story. The writer of recent insider articles on down-low culture and contemporary teen sex, this week looks at modern frat life in the wake of an alcohol ban at many colleges. He talked about his approach in an interview with Gawker:

My "method," if I have one, is really about hanging out as much as possible with the people I'm writing about, but always knowing when to give them some space before they get annoyed with me. I'm pretty good, I think, at knowing when to back off. My goal is also to get the subjects I'm writing about to forget that I'm a reporter. Because once they do that, they drop the bullshit facade. I think that my age, 29 (and the fact that people guess me to be anywhere between 19 and 25) helps, especially when I'm writing about young people. When I'm dealing with older subjects, it can get a little weird at times, with them asking me what college newspaper I write for. With that said, my age really is an advantage there, too, because they often underestimate me.


The New News Channel?

During the recent presidential campaign, it became all too clear that the cable news networks' definition of balanced debate is to invite two partisan spinners from each side to spout their party line. Over the course of a 5 - 7 minute segment, each strategist misrepresents the other side's views and cuts the other person off, with the network anchor stepping in a few times like a boxing ref, presumably representing the objective mediator.

After a few rounds, the network anchor calls the match, thanks the participants for the viewpoints and then typically makes a comment about the valuable discussion of the issue that has taken place. One of the ultimate example's of this sort of fake debate is CNN's "Crossfire." But not for long. According to The New York Times, the show is canceled, and in fact today was co-host Tucker Carlson's last day. New CNN president Jonathan Klein told the Times that the network is moving away from Crossfire type debate:

Instead, Mr. Klein said, CNN wants to do "roll-up-your-sleeves storytelling," and he said that was not a role he saw for Mr. Carlson. "There are outlets for the kind of show Tucker wants to do and CNN isn't going to be one of them," he said.

Mr. Klein said he wanted to move CNN away from what he called "head-butting debate shows," which have become the staple of much of all-news television in the prime-time hours, especially at the top-rated Fox News Channel.

We'll see how this all plays out, what this really means, and how much patience Klein has for the new approach, the Times articles ends with...

The rest of CNN's prime-time lineup will be moving toward reporting the day's events and not discussing them, he said.

Mr. Klein said he had no intention of changing that approach, but he added a caveat. "Not unless the first batch of things we're trying to do don't turn out well," he said.



New v. Old Media

scan1112.jpg

A front page story today in leading old media news source, The New York Times, underscores the increasing influence that new media has had on traditional outlets.

The page one piece, titled Vote Fraud Theories, Spread by Blogs, Are Quickly Buried, underscores a continuing shift. While blogs are often used by individual people who personally comment on and highlight stories in established outlets, in this case The New York Times (arguably the most important English-language newspaper) has reacted to email and weblog dialogues. Spurred by activists email messages and web-based claims, they investigated the information further and then published their findings as a lead story.

Just as gossip tabloids have influenced the mainstream media, driving celebrity stories to typically traditional outlets, so too are blogs, some with just small daily readerships that can multiply with an occasional frenzy of email and online traffic, influencing what the world's leading media outlets write about.

[Image Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company (click photo for larger version).]



NYT | Is The New York Times a Liberal Newspaper?

"Of course it is," responds NY Times public editor Daniel Okrent.

Saying that The Times plays too much to its urban readership, Okrent is particularly critical of the paper's editors for supportive coverage of gay marriage, saying that its articles about the debate do not offer a deep exploration of the issue. Worrying that the 50% of the paper's readers who live outside of metropolitan New York might be alienated by the big city and "all its attendant provocations, experiments and attitudes," Okrent's offers a critique of The Times arts coverage that is especially cold, writing, "The culture pages often feature forms of art, dance or theater that may pass for normal (or at least tolerable) in New York but might be pretty shocking in other places."

What's great about The New York Times is that its editors use their media leadership role to great advantage, placing sometimes challenging and issues on the radar of readers and certainly editors and reporters at other media outlets. Would Okrent would rather its editors make the paper more like, say, The New York Post?



Big Media News at a Crossroads

PBS news anchor Jim Lehrer was especially tough on the three network news anchors for limiting convention coverage this year to just a few hours in prime time. At a Harvard panel discussion on Sunday (broadcast on CSPAN and covered in the NY Times), Lehrer boldly told Tom Brokaw, Peter Jennings, and Dan Rather:

"We're about to elect a president of the United States at a time when we have young people dying in our name overseas, we just had a report from the 9/11 commission which says we are not safe as a nation, and one of these two groups of people is going to run our country,'' Mr. Lehrer said. "The fact that you three networks decided it was not important enough to run in prime time, the message that gives the American people is huge.''

While the Big Media news anchors argue about the dwindling number of viewers who will see their convention coverage on network television, news junkies will have a new way to get the latest on this year's political conventions: blogs. Nearly 40 bloggers will be covering the Democratic convention.

For its part, ABC News and Jennings will offer non-network gavel-to-gavel coverage of the conventions on a special digital experiment that will be broadcast on digital cable, streamed online, and accesible via some cell phones; the new ABC News Now service will air 24/7 news through Election Day.



Sci Fi Channel's Lie About Shyamalan "Doc"

pic_02.jpgThe Sci Fi Channel admitted Friday that it lied to the media about tonight's would-be expos, "The Buried Secret of M. Night Shyamalan," in an attempt to find a smart guerrilla marketing hook (ala "The Blair Witch Project") to promote "The Village," the upcoming movie by Shyamalan. (Yet, the network never revealed to its audience the truth about the movie).

The three-hour special, first announced last year in Variety (and other publications) as a documentary by award-winning "My Architect" director Nathaniel Kahn, purported to reveal secrets from Shyamalan's past. In an announcement last month the network and the filmmakers told the press that Shymalan tried to shutdown the film after the project veered off course. Now, the channel and corporate parent NBC are admitting that they went to far.

In the Shyamalan film for Sci Fi, Kahn inexplicably decided to play the part of a doc filmmaker struggling to get the full story about a mysterious man. Its a performance not far from Kahn's own battle to learn more about the life and death of his enigmatic father, architect Louis Kahn, captured in the Oscar-nominated doc "My Architect". Seeing him so effectively reprise his role as a passionate doc director in "Buried Secrets" tonight, I couldn't help but wonder about the sincerity of his on-screen persona in "My Architect." Frankly, I thought he had found an equally compelling doc subject, until halfway through the 3-hour movie when I read online that Sci Fi had admitted the lie. Unless Nathaniel Kahn is aiming for a career as an actor in Hollywood, why bother participating in such a manipulative marketing ploy?



indieWIRE: Issue #1 | July 15, 1996

Eight years ago today, we launched indieWIRE. The long-lost first issue is published below, including our first typo (we dated the first edition as July 15, 1995). Woops, it was 1996. And as my good friend and colleague Brian Clark reminded me today, we share a birthday with MSNBC.

Also, special thanks to everyone who is sending us warm wishes today, especially the folks at my favorite film blog -- GreenCine Daily -- for their kind words.

I emailed issue #1 to a couple hundred folks who had become active members of iLINE, the online film community that Cheri Barner, Mark Rabinowitz and I created on AOL and at the old VirtualFilmFestival website. I am truly amazed that today we are able to reach more than 35,000 people by email everyday, not to mention the hundreds of thousands of readers who access our content online each month. Sincere thanks again to our staff, readers, friends, colleagues, contributors, and members of the film community.

---

[Publishers note: This is the premiere issue of indieWIRE, a daily news service for the indie film community. To sign up for a FREE daily email subscription, please send a message to "theiline@aol.com" with SUBSCRIBE indieWIRE in the subject line.]


indieWIRE
==================================================
July 15, 1995 Vol. 1 Issue 1
(c) 1996 iLine Ltd.
theiline@aol.com
--------------------------------------------------------
indieWIRE is published by iLINE Ltd. Re-publication and re-distribution in any medium or in any platform of the Internet without the written consent of iLINE is prohibited.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

» Continue reading "indieWIRE: Issue #1 | July 15, 1996"


FOX-ification

movies_040713outfox.jpgToday I watched Robert Greenwald's latest, "Outfoxed: Rupert Murdoch's War on Journalism," the controversial new doc that my colleague Brian B. wrote about in indieWIRE today (and Brian C. blogged about this morning). In fact, FOX News is taking hits from numerous docs right now, including the incredible report on squashed stories in "The Corporation," to harsh criticisms in "Orwell Rolls in His Grave" and a blow in "Fahrenheit 9/11."

Built upon footage compiled by researchers who scoured FOX News Channel broadcasts for months, the film paints a frightening portrait of the slant of the nation's #1 cable news network. Sure, we all felt that FOX News was biased, but seeing Greenwald's assembly of footage, combined with testimony from journalists who have worked for the channel or its affiliates sure pack a powerful punch.

FOX News' slogans "Fair & Balanced" and "We Report. You Decide" are an even bigger joke than I ever imagined. The real "star" of the movie, if you want to call him that, is Bill O'Reilly. Constant clips capture O'Reilly at his raging worst. It is amazing that he maintains such a devout following for a program that could barely be classifed as entertainment, let alone news.

With "news" networks like FOX leading the way, is it any surprise that the American viewer doesn't trust the media? Only 25% of people surveyed believe all or most of what they see on the network, according to the recent Pew Research Center's Biennial News Consumption Survey. Amazingly, local news, the big three networks, NPR, and MSNBC all ranked below FOX News on the survey. Of course, the highest ranking news outlet on the survey was "60 Minutes" with only 33% believing all or most of what they see on that program. Thats a scary snapshot of how we view the media today.



NYDN: Another Post 'exclusive'

529-FRONT_SMALL.jpgYou gotta love the tabloid wars. The New York Daily News, rival NYC tabloid to the New York Post, taunted the wounded Post this morning, with a headline that prodded: "KERRY'S REAL CHOICE." In the article, the Daily News wrote:

Leave it to the New York Post to further tarnish its shoddy reputation with yesterday's front-page "exclusive" declaring John Kerry had picked Dick Gephardt as his running mate.

"KERRY'S CHOICE," blared the headline.

front070704.gifThe paper was hitting the stands amid the first media reports that Kerry's real choice was John Edwards.

The Post's humiliating gaffe was greeted with derision and knee-slapping laughter here and abroad, while it created a fast market for copies of the paper on the auction Web site eBay.com.

Meanwhile, back at the New York Post, the paper poked fun at itself today and reprised its "KERRY'S CHOICE" headline, adding the subhead: Dem Picks Edwards as VP Candidate (REALLY).

Will Ferrell even got into the action, in character as Rob Burgundy to promote his new film. Holding up a copy of the false headline, he said on NBC's Today show, "This is...an excellent journalism periodical."



NYP | Kerry picks Gephardt

nyp.gif

TODAY'S NEW YORK POST:

Kerry picks Gephardt

Mo. rep to get Dem veep nod

EXCLUSIVE

John Kerry has chosen Rep. Richard Gephardt, the veteran congressman from Missouri, to be his running mate, The Post has learned.

Gephardt, 63, a 28-year veteran of the House of Representatives, could be named by the presumptive Democratic nominee as the party's vice-presidential candidate as soon as today.

The Massachusetts senator was set to announce the winner of the veep-stakes at a rally this morning in Pittsburgh, according to several reports last night.

With the July 26 Democratic convention looming, Kerry is looking for some advantage in the polls, and is hoping his choice of running mate will be the answer...

FROM THE SMOKING GUN:
Cover | Full story



WP | Parties to Allow Bloggers to Cover Conventions for First Time

In the Washington Post today, Brian Faler reports on blog coverage of the upcoming conventions:

More than 15,000 people will converge on Boston later this month to cover the Democratic National Convention -- including, for the first time, bloggers...

The Republican Party recently decided that it will also give bloggers credentials for its convention later this summer.



MediaChannel | Michael Powell Lays an Egg

Jonathan Rintels, on FCC Chairman Michael Powell, in MediaChannel.org:

Now that a U.S. Court of Appeals has rightfully tossed out the Commission's new rules that would have exponentially increased media concentration and consolidation -- rules which Powell pushed through the FCC despite an overwhelming public outcry last year -- his tenure as Chairman, which so many expected would lead to him becoming a star in Republican politics, may instead be his political swan song.



Sign of the Times: Question Media Accuracy

NYTbkfst.jpgIn a failure I consider even greater than the recent Jayson Blair scandal, editors of The New York Times bowed to journalistic competition and became a powerful mouthpiece for the government in its information campaign leading to the attack of Iraq. As the Bush administration made the case for war, the paper led with front-page stories that have now proven inaccurate.

Citing an "institutional failure" at the paper, yesterday the Times' Public Editor Daniel Okrent detailed "flawed journalism" related to the paper's high profile coverage of WMD's and Iraq in the period leading up to the attack. Okrent, who works independently for the company, was extremely critical of the publication's editors who assign stories and place them in the paper. "War requires an extra standard of care, not a lesser one," he said. Okrent added:

Some of The Times's coverage in the months leading up to the invasion of Iraq was credulous; much of it was inappropriately italicized by lavish front-page display and heavy-breathing headlines; and several fine articles by David Johnston, James Risen and others that provided perspective or challenged information in the faulty stories were played as quietly as a lullaby.

The Times did publish its own critical review of the period. Okrent added that the NY Times' editors failures were caused by 1) the hunger for scoops, 2) a front-page syndrome, 3) hit-and-run journalism, 4) coddling sources, and 5) end-run editing. In a note on Wednesday, the NY Times editors wrote:

Editors at several levels who should have been challenging reporters and pressing for more skepticism were perhaps too intent on rushing scoops into the paper. Accounts of Iraqi defectors were not always weighed against their strong desire to have Saddam Hussein ousted. Articles based on dire claims about Iraq tended to get prominent display, while follow-up articles that called the original ones into question were sometimes buried. In some cases, there was no follow-up at all.

Such a failure is significant not only because the paper prides itself on being the "newspaper of record" but also because news organizations around the world (not to mention millions of readers) rely on The New York Times as a credible source of information. The influence that its articles have on others is significant and critiques such as Okrent's are a reminder that the media should be continually challenged.

"We consider the story of Iraq's weapons, and of the pattern of misinformation, to be unfinished business," concluded the NY Times editors in their statement last week. "And we fully intend to continue aggressive reporting aimed at setting the record straight." Okrent concluded:

The aggressive journalism that I long for, and that the paper owes both its readers and its own self-respect, would reveal not just the tactics of those who promoted the W.M.D. stories, but how The Times itself was used to further their cunning campaign.



Where Did You See That?

In today's "On The Media" column in the National Journal, William Powers considers how it is we get our news and information today, speculating that blogs, and the Internet driven by human filtering -- not network news and newspapers -- have become the key component in driving our awareness of daily news stories:

"Today, the only media outlet that everyone follows is called Did You See? Did you see what happened to those contractors in Iraq? Did you see the new study about television and attention deficit? Did you see what that mother in Texas did to her kids?"

New media products that draw the most attention these days tend to be those that serve the needs of a Did You See world. Blogs, those online journals of commentary and links, are all effectively Did You Sees, one person's effort to boil the news of the world down to a handful of salient items. [Via Romenesko]