Media: August 2006 Archive Page

In a picture widely distributed to the media last month, a normal-looking Couric wore a frumpy light gray suit and her trademark smile.

But thanks to Photoshop, the popular editing software, the same photo, printed in a CBS magazine, shows her looking much, much thinner - and her suit has become a few shades darker.
--Weighing Anchor: CBS Photo Trickery Takes a Load Off 'Slimmer' Couric (New York Post)
I've blogged before rather flippantly about Adobe's attempts to fight the generic verb "photoshop," but this article credits the software as a proper noun. But there's no source for the implicit claim that Photoshop really was the software used, rather than, say The Gimp.

The conventions and standards of a PR department differ from those of the news department. I think it's reasonable to assume the news folks had no idea this would happen, but the before and after photos really do remind us how much the TV personality cult is driven by image, rather than talent (accuracy, insight, depth, etc.).
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Despite claims from the TV news outlet to offer "nonstop news" and "coverage you can count on," an Onion investigation has uncovered hundreds of instances in which KAMR Channel 4 10 O'Clock Eyewitness News team relied almost exclusively on news reports, weather forecasts, and even special-interest features already generated by the station's 6 O'Clock Eyewitness News team. --10 O'Clock News Team Relying Heavily On Work Of 6 O'Clock News Team (The Onion (Satire))
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29 Aug 2006

Star Trek's a thesis

Among the dark corners where Dr Baker's thesis - titled Broadcast Space: TV Culture, Myth and Star Trek - shines light is the changing link between the starship Enterprise's intergalactic adventures and the real world's space race.

Shatner's monologues were inspired by the visionary speeches of JFK, advocating greater exploration. Thirty years on, the roles were reversed, with astronauts from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration guest-starring on Star Trek spin-offs to promote their underfunded existence. --Adam Morton --Star Trek's a thesis (The Age)
Come on, headline writer. You can do better than that.
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Of course, students already know how to read the highly emotional and symbolic language of television. They learned it informally by clocking in an average of 5000 hours in front of the set before they reach school age -- the same amount of time it takes to jet around the world 148 times, or orbit the moon 30 times. But just because students are sitting slack-jawed and motionless in front of the set, it doesn't mean their minds aren't hard at work. Contrary to popular wisdom, television watching is not a passive activity.

It takes concentration to make sense of contemporary television. Narratives are broken by commercials, flying graphics, rolls and crawls, fast cuts and fades to black. Students may not have the vocabulary to articulate to adults how they make a story out of this hodge-podge of images, but on a rudimentary level, they already have a firm grasp on the grammar of television. In order for them to be fully aware that television is carefully constructed with specific codes and conventions, someone has to talk to them about the way tv works. --Kathleen Tyner --Can Your Students Read TV? (Media Literacy Review)
While I agree with Tyner's main point, that students should be trained to think critically about TV, I don't agree with the phrasing "television watching is not a passive activity." Yes, a viewer's brain is active, but there's no way for the viewer to change the experience based on reactions.

You can shout questions or challenges to a live speaker, you can applaud or boo, or sit in stony silence, or whisper a comment to your neighbor. Good speakers can pick up on such cues, and if they don't the audience will.

You can write back to a weblog.

All you can do to a TV is turn it off. It's binary. Or, in the case of those call-in contests, at best it's multiple choice. It is of course possible for live TV to respond more subtly to audience input, but didn't Ray Bradbury cover that pretty thoroughly in Fahrenheit 451?

Perhaps Tyner could have said "TV need not be a passive experience, if you are a critical viewer." I'd agree with that -- but it's probably fair to say that most of the slack-jawed teens aren't tuning in because they want to exercise their minds.
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23 Aug 2006

Elmo Is an Evildoer

When I watched "Sesame Street" in the '70s, the human cast and the Muppets were quirky adults who didn't talk down to me with baby voices. Now the human cast gets almost no airtime, and the show is dominated by Elmo, Baby Bear and, now, Abby Cadabby -- preschoolers enamored by their own adorable stupidity.

The lesson they teach -- in opposition to Oscar, Big Bird, Grover or Bert -- is that bland neediness gets you stuff much more easily than character. --Joel Stein --Elmo Is an Evildoer (L:A Times)
E is for Elmo evil. F is for flamebait.

Is Elmo the Jar-Jar Binks of the Sesame Street franchise?
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22 Aug 2006

Games get serious

A euphemism like "decision-based simulation" maybe, but rarely a "game." To many, video and computer games represent an adolescent diversion, a parental annoyance that thwarts homework, chores, and all things productive. So when FAS and others stump for games as an educational or training tool, they begin by stating the problem: "You oversee a very complex system," or "You want to reach a new audience." The notion of a game providing the solution comes later. Such is the way when establishing a new medium. --Josh Schollmeyer --Games get serious (Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists)
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I am a very visual and active learner. I draw circles around words or phrases, highlight pertinent passages, make marginal marks and notes, or draw small doodles so I can visualize a concept. I make arrows that connect similiar ideas, draw stars next to passages that I hope I'll be able to find again, or stick post-it notes on pages I want to visit again. This method of absorbing information does not work with online texts. --Moira Richardson --Bound for Glory - the future of print (Literary Tease)
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Once upon time, in a galaxy exactly like this one, hard-core gamers spent hours staring at screens of tiny text and laboriously typing commands to move characters to the next level.

That era -- approximately 1979 to 1985 -- marked the golden age of interactive fiction, when games commonly consisted of text adventures tailored to run on personal computers capable of storing only about as much data as contained in a single digital photo. --Joanna Glasner --Text Games Get Film Treatment (Wired)
I'm glad to see that Jason Scott's Get Lamp feature is getting some publicity. The IF Comp is mentioned, too.
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Among the video news releases uncovered were an item on ethanol plants aired on a Louisiana station that was created by a public relations firm on behalf of Siemens AG, a corporation with a financial stake in the construction of ethanol plants.

In another case, a Boston station edited and re-voiced a video segment produced by an outside company on behalf of Toshiba, Fisher-Price and Scholastic, whose kids' products were featured in it.

The item ran at Christmas, without any indication to viewers it had been created as a news release. --FCC probes 'fake news' at U.S. TV stations (CBC)
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--Crisis in the Middle East: Mapping the Conflict (Truth Laid Bear)
While the computer-generated flyovers do help give me some sense of geography on those rare occasions when I watch TV news, I'm really never satisifed unless I can click, click, click.

Try out this map -- it's really very useful for making sense of the conflict.
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Amazon used to be a large river in South America - but that was before the world wide web. This month the web is 15 years old and in that short time it has revolutionised the way we live, from shopping to booking flights, writing blogs to listening to music. Here, the Observer's Net specialist charts the web's remarkable early life and we tell the story of the 15 most influential websites to date. --Websites that changed the world  (Guardian Observer)
The the author's introduction is a bit puffy, but the actual list of web pages is pretty interesting.
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The house that Gates built will be launching XNA Game Studio Express, a set of (dumbed-down) development tools that will allow hobbyists and their ilk to develop games for both the Xbox 360 and the PC. Initially, these homebrew (is it still considered "homebrew" if you're using official tools?) games will only be playable to other coders part of a so-called "Creator's Club," a nice way to say that Microsoft will charge you $99 for a one-year subscription to play such games. --Microsoft to Let Regular Joes Develop Xbox Games (Gizmodo)
I'm not surprised Microsoft wants a piece of this pie.
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Bloggers have been making fun of the examples Google's lawyers deem acceptable. They included: "Appropriate: I ran a Google search to check out that guy from the party. Inappropriate: I googled that hottie."

Web veterans have also been taken aback by Google's suddenly humourless approach. The eight-year-old company has previously cultivated an image of youthful non-conformity, from the jeans and T-shirts often worn by its billionaire founders, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, to the scooter lanes and volleyball courts at its Palo Alto headquarters. --To google or not to google? It's a legal question (The Independent)
The word google has recently joined words such as photoshop and xerox, as a generic term for an activity once tied to a specific product. Google's copyright lawyers have to demonstrate that they have acted to defend the copyright, or else the word can fall so far into the common domain that the company wouldn't be able to defend its name against competitors who try to use it. But I'm filing this as another example of why lawyers don't live on the same planet as the rest of us.
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More than a dozen accusations of staged or doctored photographs have made their way through various Web sites in the past several weeks. None has been treated by the news outlets as seriously as the original Reuters incident, which saw the photographer Adnin Hajj fired and over 900 of his photos removed from the Reuters wire list. But numerous other outlets - including the BBC, The New York Times and AP - have been forced to recall photos or change captions following inaccuracies pointed out in online forums. --Sheera Claire Frenkel --Reutersgate strikes other news outlets (Jerusalem Post)
It looks like the mainstream media have learned from Rathergate.
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It's important to understand that there is not just a single fraudulent Reuters photograph, nor even only one kind of fraudulent photograph. There are in fact dozens of photographs whose authenticity has been questioned, and they fall into four distinct categories.

The four types of photographic fraud perpetrated by Reuters photographers and editors are:

1. Digitally manipulating images after the photographs have been taken.

2. Photographing scenes staged by Hezbollah and presenting the images as if they were of authentic spontaneous news events.

3. Photographers themselves staging scenes or moving objects, and presenting photos of the set-ups as if they were naturally occurring.

4. Giving false or misleading captions to otherwise real photos that were taken at a different time or place. --Reuters Commits Four Types of Fraud (zombietime)
Because I don't follow the political blogs, this subject kind of crept up on me.

Warning -- some of the photos on the page are disturbing, but it's precisely the emotional impact of the photos that makes the issues of digitally altered and staged photos so important.

Note the two different shots of the same Lebanese woman lamenting the loss of her home in the immediate aftermath of attacks two weeks apart. It's possible that someone misidentified the photo, or that an entrepreneurial freelancer misrepresented the facts to make an additional sale. But the New York Times sequence that in one picture shows a dust-free young man clutching his hat under his arm, with no visible injuries, lying in such a manner that he appears to be pinned under a small metal pole, looks very interesting when contrasted with other images from the same sequence, showing what looks like the same man wearing his cap on his head, assisting with the rescue efforts.

Then there is "The Passion of the Toys," the dismissive title critics have given to a series of photos showing some remarkably undamaged and dust-free toys in the foreground of photos that show the aftermath of military attacks. A similiarly dramatic photo shows a mannequin wearing a wedding dress in the midst of the destruction.

The author writes, "Now, of course there is a real war going on, and there is real damage, and authentically tragic scenes. No one is denying that. So, with all the actual honest footage of unstaged war imagery floating around, why is Reuters resorting to supplementing its coverage with obviously fake photos?"

Here's an interesting quote, credited to a comment posted on the conservative blog Little Green Footballs:
Every time, if an Israeli is hurt, it was a "rocket" that did it; if a Lebanese/Hizb is hurt, "Israel" did it. Humans hurt Lebanese, but inanimate objects hurt Israelis, according to Reuters.
I didn't check the Reuters captions myself, but this is a good example of where bias can creep in. A similar controversy erupted in the aftermath of the Katrina disaster, when photo captions from one news agency described black people as looting, while a different news agency described a different scene with subjects who are not black (it looked like a white man and a Hispanic woman) as having taking food that they found. (See "You Say 'Looting,' I Say 'Finding'"
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You could cure a toothache or make snowshoes using the original Britannica, of 1768-71. (You could also imbibe a lot of prejudice and superstition. The entry on Woman was just six words: "The female of man. See HOMO.") If you look up "coffee preparation" on Wikipedia, you will find your way, via the entry on Espresso, to a piece on types of espresso machines, which you will want to consult before buying. There is also a page on the site dedicated to "Errors in the Encyclopædia Britannica that have been corrected in Wikipedia" (Stalin's birth date, the true inventor of the safety razor).

[...]

Wikipedia is an online community devoted not to last night's party or to next season's iPod but to a higher good. It is also no more immune to human nature than any other utopian project. Pettiness, idiocy, and vulgarity are regular features of the site. Nothing about high-minded collaboration guarantees accuracy, and open editing invites abuse. Senators and congressmen have been caught tampering with their entries; the entire House of Representatives has been banned from Wikipedia several times. --Stacy Shiff --Know It All: Can Wikipedia conquer expertise? (The New Yorker)
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Computers & Composition: An International Journal invites contributions for a special issue, Reading Games: Composition, Literacy, and Video Gaming

While video gaming has been a strong cultural force since the advent of the popular coin-operated arcades of the 1970s, it is only within the last few years that video/computer gaming has been an academic focus: there is a lot of catch-up work to do. The average age of gamers has been steadily increasing, as has the number of dedicated players. Inevitably, this dedication to gaming will have -- if it does not already -- a profound impact on learning and literacy. Video/computer games are historically- and culturally-situated texts that operate in particular social contexts significant to composition theory and praxis. --CFP: Computers & Composition -- ''Reading Games: Composition, Literacy, and Video Gaming''
Matthew S. S. Johnson sent me this via e-mail and asked me to help publicize it. I posted the full text on KairosNews.
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Until recently entertainment reporting was in the hands of respectful, publicist-friendly titles such as Vanity Fair and The Los Angeles Times. Indeed, the latter recently opened one of its celebrity articles with this gem of a sentence: "One doesn't so much interview Angela Bassett and Laurence Fishburne as sit back and watch as their friendship, wordplay and enthusiasm for their craft plays itself out."

The internet has changed all that. Today the real stories are more likely to appear on the websites of The Smoking Gun, the Drudge Report or the TMZ (which got the Gibson scoop). These websites deal in tips, not interviews. They owe no favours to publicists. And they have more in common with (and more respect for) the British red-top press than The New York Times. --Chris Ayres --Be shocked! Be amazed! See Hollywood on a website near you (The Times Online)
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The blog hurt the administration in two key ways: First, administrators were unable to focus on correcting the problems that led to the creation of the blog, and second, the administration's clumsy and futile efforts to combat the blog simply compounded the anger and contempt on campus. --Daniel W. Barwick --The Blog That Ate a Presidency (Inside Higher Ed)
Good analysis of an administrative train wreck that started because a college board responded poorly to a controversy started on a blog.

To be fair, anonymous complaints are hard to deal with, but ignoring a forum -- even an unfair forum -- is a sign that those who wish to abuse it will have free reign rein.

Barwick has a good solution: "Clearly what Alfred State needed (and other colleges probably need as well) is a blog that is confidential, accessible, not regulated for content, and yet not completely public."

Of course, if anything in the "confidential" blog becomes contentious, it's a simple matter for warring factions to copy and paste material to other forums, so it's probably better to think of such a community as gated, rather than the content as confidential.
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This page is a archive of entries in the Media category from August 2006.

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