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Posts Tagged ‘media’

Outsiders - 2nd March 2008

Posted by jason on 2 March 2008

This is the first go at a regular feature I’ll try on the blog where, every Sunday, we’ll bypass the gallery ‘insiders’ and set out the political blogosphere’s prospective agenda for the week with some selected links.

Council elections: The rest of the country might be having a little break from elections for a while, but here in the Sunshine State we have to elect our local councils in a couple of weeks. You’ll remember that one of John Howard’s unsuccessful late “wedges” was trying to turn amalgamations into an issue for Kevin Rudd by offering plebiscites, and attacking Peter Beattie as a Rudd proxy. The update is that people are voting in some brand new Local Government areas, and in the resultant game of musical chairs, some long-serving councillors are bound to miss out. The blogosphere up here is doing a great job of covering it.

Indeed, few things have pleased me more in recent weeks than finding out about hyperlocal bloggers in regional Queensland like Cairnsblog (covering Cairns and surrounds) and Strewth! (Covering Hervey Bay and the Fraser Coast). These are providing alternative news sources in some areas that are under-serviced by the mainstream media. They’re both also in the best tabloid traditions of pugnacious, colourful muckraking. Go, now, and add them to your RSS subscriptions. This is what I’d hope that one possible future direction for the political blogosphere could look like.

Read more…

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100 days in, the verdicts begin.

Posted by jason on 1 March 2008

A few bloggy responses to the first 100 days of the new government. (If there are some we’ve missed, let us know)

Guy Beres offers a summary of the MSM reaction.

Tim Dunlop reckons that the printed report is a bit rich after the pasting Labor have been giving the outgoing government over political advertising.

And Uncle Piers, well…

AFTER just 99 days of the Rudd government, Australia is in the worst political position it has endured since the crisis days of the Whitlam government 33 years ago.

Here’s hoping he’s on Insiders tomorrow, and that this is just an appetiser.

UPDATE: Yes and yes.

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Three things we learned this week about the difficulty of media regulation.

Posted by jason on 29 February 2008

1. It’s very difficult to stop people watching a television programme that’s been broadcast in another State, even if you’ve banned it, and even if it might prejudice court proceedings. (Bloody Internet.)

2. It’s very difficult to keep a Prince’s wherabouts under wraps when the media are globally networked, even if his life depends on it. (Bloody Internet. Bloody New Idea.)

3. It’s very difficult for Attorneys-General to back away from regulation that frames gamers as children, even if everyone knows that it’s in large part an adult market, and even if, in any case, any fourteen-year-old can acquire any game (or movie, or song) they want. (Bloody Internet. Bloody Family First to please. Bloody Senate.)

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recalcitrant paul vs. planet janet

Posted by jason on 29 February 2008

Goodness me. There’s a bit of a stoush on the Oz’s website! Janet Albrechtsen wrote a column earlier this week that gave out some advice to Kevin Rudd, and claimed victory in the “Culture Wars”, or argued that they were still going on, or something like that (It’s honestly a little bit hard to tell). Paul Keating has replied today, fairly intemperately, to a side-swipe he recieved in Albrechtsen’s column, and it’s a bit of a companion-piece to his posthumous pot-shot at Paddy McGuinness in the Fin a couple of weeks back (which is still behind the pay-wall, so no link). If it’s less discomfiting for the reader than the McGuinness diatribe, it’s probably because Janet is still very much alive, and able to defend herself.

Anyway, we’ve been in enough trouble for our alleged partisanship lately, so I’ll leave the rights and wrongs well alone, although I will say it’s all pretty entertaining whichever way you slice it. Also, perhaps I’ll risk remarking that there is something to be said for this comment on Albrechtsen’s summoning of the dreaded elites:

Albrechtsen, for her own part, of course, was not part of any elite. The ear of a prime minister and a cabinet for a decade, which finally enjoyed control of both houses of parliament; membership of a clique of journalists, sharing common cause, with unfettered access to the opinion pages of the broadsheet newspapers of the country - nothing elitist about that.

The main reason I’m posting though is to ask a couple of questions. Bear in mind that it’s up there on the Oz website, and that people are commenting furiously, whether they’re supporting PK or JA. The question is: has a current or former Prime Minister ever had an opinion piece published in this manner before, in a “blog-like” format, with the facility for immediate and copious feedback from members of the public? (Be good if people could think of prior examples)

Secondly, does anyone think Keating should start his own snark blog? What could the title be? My nomination is “unrepresentative swill”.

UPDATE: Niall’s take bringeth some more funny.

UPDATE #2: Others take sides in the match of the day. Hangover is barracking for PJK, as (perhaps predictably) are some commenters over on this LP Thread. And justice for all takes a more even-handed approach. I only found one so far that is sticking up for JA, but I’m not going to link to it because the blog as a whole seems excessively concerned with the fate of “the white race” - yowsers!

UPDATE #3 Janet comes back. Honestly it’s just like Gladiators.

UPDATE #4 Like Ken in the comments below, Jason Soon over at Catallaxy is not exactly supportive of Janet, but thinks Keating’s ego is the main player in this stoush.

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Response to Ken Parish

Posted by jason on 25 February 2008

Hi everybody. Ken Parish over at Club Troppo concurred somewhat with Tim Blair’s criticisms of us. I replied in the comments but it got marked as spam so I’m not sure when it’s gonna make it.

Here’s what I wrote.

Hi Ken.

I’m one of the researchers whose work you’re talking about here. Just a matter of housekeeping first - there seems to be a little confusion in your post here about blogs - one, Gatewatching, is a group blog involving Barry, Axel and I, but you do seem to mix that up in the post with Axel’s personal blog, Snurblog - I think Tim’s post conflates them slightly, too.

I’d direct you and your readers’ attention to my most recent response to Tim’s questions on Gatewatching, here. This makes clearer, I hope, the relationship between our ABC Opinion writing, our blogging, and the larger ARC project we’re involved in. I think Tim has managed to blur all of this pretty effectively, and I thought some clarification was necessary.

You may well appreciate that it’s easy to be stung into hasty responses when you’ve been “Blaired” - I’ve tried to answer Tim’s objection in good faith in the post linked to above - I’ll leave you to be the judge of whether I’ve succeeded. It must be said that Tim did talk about our work without seeking to confirm anything about our project with us - I hope the post I’ve directed you to corrects some of that.

Your own contribution here, which seeks to nuance our idea of left and right in the Australian blogosphere is incredibly useful, and your questions around notions of “community” etc. are fair ones. I won’t go too far into debating them here, but I’m happy to talk to you about it at some other stage. It should be stressed that we’ve never represented our opinion pieces or blog posts as final, formal research findings - stimulating this kind of response is one good reason for trying out our ideas in public.

In fairness to Axel’s research on Australia’s blogosphere, it’s the innovative methodology and the data he turned up which I think is the most important thing of all, and I assume that he’s sincere in saying he’d welcome other interpretations and readings of the data. This quantitative approach is, of course, not the only approach we’ll be taking - we’re also looking at blogging from a number of other angles, but Axel’s interest in this approach has been rewarded by what I think is an interesting and provocative paper.

I should add that the early part of our project has been practically-focussed - we spent the election campaign running youdecide2007, by which we hoped to get practical experience in the kinds of things that we’re researching, and also to try out some innovative methods of promoting online public affairs communities.

We are planning to interview Australian bloggers, and I’ve already interviewed a number - including some you mention like Sen. Bartlett and Tim Dunlop - and I’ve extended an invitation in my post to Tim for an interview, and I’d like to take the same opportunity in respect of yourself at this time.

I’d suggest finally, though, that your claim that the ARC is wasting its money is a little harsh. As I point out over on Gatewatching, the opinion stuff is done outside the bounds of the project proper, mainly because we’re so enthusiastic about being part of the conversation that’s being had about blogging in this country. Again, you’re entitled to your opinion, but perhaps a bit more information on the project would modify that opinion somewhat. I suppose it’s our fault that the scope of the project isn’t clearer - we’ll work on that, and hope that you’ll continue to monitor it with interest.

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Insiders is back…

Posted by jason on 10 February 2008

For non-Aussies, that’s the ABC’s Sunday Morning serious current affairs show. It’s returned from it’s summer hiatus, and already this morning, Barrie Cassidy has done a sharp interview with erstwhile (and presumably future) Liberal leadership contender Malcolm Turnbull, confronting him with evidence that his colleagues don’t like him very much. All quite entertaining.

I’m enough of a PJ to be very happy to see Barry and the crew back, but already weekly guest Paul Kelly - who’s wheeled in as an eminence grise of political punditry - has exhibited the problems that frustrate so many of us in respect of MSM commentators.

After Andrew Bolt had spent five minutes disputing the existence of the indigenous stolen generation, and the wisdom of offering an apology (I strenuously disagree with Bolt, but at least this is a point of view), Kelly was asked by Barrie Cassidy whether he thought that an apology was “the right thing to do”. Predictably, Kelly avoided the direct question - and few questions in Australian politics could be more important - and just talked about in strategic terms, thinking only about whether it was “smart” politics.

Here’s a theory: reason that the left-of-centre blogosphere has prospered in Australia is that the opinion pages only seem to be open to forthright conservatives, and erstwhile (small-l) liberals like Kelly have retreated to evaluations of political and media strategy.

Update: The show has featured a Hugh Atkin YouTube mashup of Barrie Cassidy and Cory Delaney. Tops.

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Club Bloggery Part 10 - This Just in.

Posted by jason on 29 January 2008

As Posted on the ABC’s Opinion Website last Friday - we’d welcome further comments.

Many of the dust-ups so far between bloggers and the mainstream media (MSM) in Australia have concerned comment, not news.

The kinds of spats we’ve written about previously have been over who exactly has the mortgage on punditry about established stories, social issues, opinion polls and the like.

Occasionally the MSM’s resistance to the blogger commentariat can be less than rational, but they often get the final word with the accusation - containing more than a grain of truth - that bloggers “don’t break stories”, and are simply parasitic upon the news-gathering activities of established outlets.

The problem with this claim is that when big stories come, parts of the mainstream media can often appear negligent in their pursuit and treatment of a story, and more and more often they’re coming off second best to other, new kinds of news media.

Read more…

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Club Bloggery 9: Not Funny

Posted by Snurb on 5 December 2007

The election may be over, but our Club Bloggery series for ABC Online continues unabated for now (if perhaps at a pace more commensurate with the impending summer holidays). This week, we take a look back in some degree of anger at the ‘just kidding’ defence for political stunts gone wrong, which was employed several times during the campaign.

Not Funny

By Axel Bruns, Jason Wilson, and Barry Saunders

One of the most prominent recurring features of the long election campaign we’ve just put behind us were our politicians’ and journalists’ usually ill-fated moves to attempt the humour defence whenever some political stunt or statement didn’t pay off.

We saw this first with Labor’s star recruit Peter Garrett, who was reported to have said “once we get in, we’ll just change it all” in what he was later at pains to describe as a “short and jocular” conversation with Channel Nine personality Richard Wilkins and talk radio shock jock Steve Price.

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Club Bloggery 7: Election Flops on YouTube

Posted by Snurb on 16 November 2007

We’ve now posted the seventh instalment of our ABC series Club Bloggery, covering the online dimensions of the Australian election campaign. Just to mix things up a bit, this week we had a look at what’s been happening on YouTube over the past few weeks, and found that (perhaps unsurprisingly) the more interesting developments are in DIY campaign advertising and mash-ups. Plenty of links included in the story below - we encourage you to see for yourselves!

Election Flops on YouTube

By Axel Bruns, Jason Wilson, and Barry Saunders

In an election campaign as drawn out as this, you’d have to have excellent memory to remember the hype around John Howard’s use of YouTube to make policy announcements. Some months ago, the media were all over the story - but unfortunately for the Prime Minister, much like the widely-predicted poll ‘narrowing‘, the YouTube effect has been missing in action.

That’s not to say that YouTube and similar sites haven’t played a role in the campaign - but certainly not to the extent they’ve already featured in the U.S. presidential primaries, where debates between the candidates on either side of the political divide have invited citizens to pose their questions via YouTube, and where some politicians even announced their intention to run for President on the site.

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Club Bloggery Part 6 - Jumping the Shark

Posted by jason on 10 November 2007

Hi all - here’s the latest Club Bloggery posted over at the ABC on Friday. The topic seems to have excited a fair amount of interest - feel free to comment here.

Jason Wilson, Axel Bruns, and Barry Saunders

Collectively, the writers here at Club Bloggery have been watching the Australian political blogosphere for years. We know that the bloggers who have perhaps been most important and prominent down under are psephologists – specialist electoral statisticians who try to understand and analyse polls, and consider the interlocking numbers games of electoral politics.

Head counters like the anonymous Possum Comitatus, Simon Jackman, William Bowe, and Peter Brent produce accessible, incisive, original takes on polling, and engage in prolonged discussion with their readers about the meaning and import of their analysis. Week after week, free of charge, they offer in-depth analysis on polling that improves our understanding of the political process and of how party strategists think. That’s why we were surprised this week when a journalist in The Australian, Samantha Maiden, attacked a few psephs by name, implying that their sites amounted to little more than left-wing wish-fulfilment.

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