blogs
Web Sites, Blogs, Twitter and Bakersfield
Submitted by Steve Nelson on Tue, 2009-02-24 13:24. bakersfield | barketing | blogs | Bloomberg | Boulder City | History | news | twitter | UCSC | web sitesAfter leaving my hometown of Boulder City, Nevada for the University of California at Santa Cruz, I came home for a holiday visit. An old classmate of mine asked where I'd been and I said I had moved to California. "California?" she snorted. "I've been to Bakersfield. You can have California - I don't need it!"
         
 I've thought of that over the years as I've listened to reactions to emerging new media:
 "Web sites? I have an 800 number and people can call and request brochures.You can have your web sites - I don't need one!"
 "Blogs? My daughter has a blog about all the drama she is going through in high school. I've seen blogs - I don't need one!"
 "Twitter? Who cares what I had for lunch? I've seen Twitter, and you can keep it. I don't need it!"
 Web sites, blogs, Twitter. You've been to Bakersfield, you've seen enough of California.
 I sent feedback at the bloomberg.com news site. Here's the complete transcript of the feedback and its resolution:
 Feedback Status:TicketID: W--------2271
Status: Resolved
Summary: Where's the Bloomberg Twitter feed?
LOG: 2/19/09 22:37:51 Your Initial Feedback
I can't seem to find you on Twitter - that's where I get my news. You there?
LOG: 2/24/09 11:41:46 Bloomberg Feedback Team
Hello: We are sorry as we are not.
Sincerely, Bloomberg Website Feedback Team
dedicated to Leon, with a warm heart
Submitted by Stephanie Gerson on Thu, 2008-12-04 15:34. blogs | twitterQ: What's worse than lame twitter marketing?
A: A blog about lame twitter marketing.ÂÂ
Rewriting Sarah Palin and Katie Couric: News in the Internet Era
Submitted by Steve Nelson on Wed, 2008-10-01 13:57. blogs | Couric | elections | Facebook | google | jouranlism | news | Palin | politics | twitter | youtubeOne difference this year is the use of YouTube to immediately spread rich records of interviews, segments, opinions, rejoinders, and evidence that has become part of the new cultural fabric of politics, and the body politic is still learning how to respond. A recent clip of Katie Couric’s interview with Sarah Palin is a good example. Couric asks Palin what newspapers she reads, and Palin’s answer varies from most, to all, to any of them. This clip has spread by wildfire via YouTube, blogs, Twitter, Facebook, etc.
But in the Internet age, most, all, and any really could be legitimate answers, and in a nonpartisan spirit, I’d like to offer Governor Palin a slightly different answer, in case she’s asked again:
Couric:
What newspapers do you read?
Palin:
Oh, Katie, that’s such a quaint old-timey question – news “papers†- that’s like asking me what “records†I listen to or what “evening news show†I watch.
Well, I do still get the newspaper from my hometown of Wasilla every week – it’s good to stay connected to my roots, to see what is happening at the community level, and to support the small town business.
And I read the Anchorage Daily News – I am still the Governor of Alaska, after all. Most days I read it online, but I get the Sunday edition delivered to my house because my kids (and Todd!) like to read the Sunday funnies the old-fashioned way.
But that’s about as much “paper†as I’m willing to consume just to get the news.
Of course I have news sources beyond the Alaskan border, Katie. If you were to hack into my Google Reader account (please don’t!) you’d see I have it set up with many feeds, not just from traditional “newspaper†sites, but from a variety of sources with a variety of outlooks, including cable news sites and the best of the blogs. That way I can scan the headlines, read the articles, easily see how the same story is reported from different points of view, and form my own opinions.
And, like many Americans, I have my Google Alerts set up to bring me news on specific topics, and I’m constantly updating it with topics that deserve my attention and consideration as a candidate for Vice President. I don’t know how I managed without that one!
So, how about you, Katie. What "newspapers" do you read?