Check out the new NAA Community!
NAA.org has introduced a new opportunity to network and interact with your industry colleagues and NAA experts, share best practices and keep your fingers on the pulse of important industry issues. The NAA Community is a tool designed to make your online community experience easy, with exciting features including blogs, photo galleries, file sharing, upgraded e-forums, and more. Please also note that the Digital Edge blog has now moved to NAA Community.

Get started on NAA Community today!

Search Blog

<<  July 2009  >>

SMTWTFS
1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031

August 06, 2007

Journalism That Matters: D.C.

I'll be at the Media Giraffe Journalism That Matters: D.C. this week -- also known as hanging out with the cool kids.

Journalism That Matters is a series of discussions, brainstorming, debate and more centered around the future of journalism and community. I attended JTM in Tennessee in January, and came back energized, hopeful about the future of journalism and very glad I flew out there.

This JTM session is going to be much bigger than the group of 50 or so who met in Memphis. More than 150 people are slated to attend.

From the JTM Conference site:

The action-oriented discussions known as "Journalism That Matters" are coming to Washington, D.C. Journalists, academics and public advocates will critique and build upon a 21st-century newsroom prototype - and help develop an economic model that supports it.

And on the theme of this summer's meeting:

"What will journalism be like when only the journalism is left?"  Journalism is at a crossroads. What will support its basic values, while adapting its practice to new economic, social and technological realities? Yahoo and major news organizations are aligning for the efficent sale of advertising. Across the nation, dozens of citizens are experimenting with new forms of local, web-based journalism and community building -- and contemplating the potential, gradual, end of newsprint.

 



Posted by Beth Lawton at 2:20 PM | PermaLink | 0 comments

Subscription Options

You are not logged in, so your subscription status for this entry is unknown. You can login here.

Comments

No comments found.

Commenting has been disabled for this entry.