Hierdie is ’n pleidooi aan Jacob Zuma: Gryp die oomblik van jou verkiesing en jou verheffing tot president aan om jou verhouding met die media op ’n nuwe grondslag te plaas. Jy kan nie, jy kan eenvoudig nié jou presi?dentskap begin deur redakteurs, koerante, skrywers en spotprentkunstenaars te dagvaar nie.
Continue Reading April 18th, 2009
This is a plea to Jacob Zuma: seize the moment of the election and your ascendancy to the presidency to put your relationship with the media on a new footing. You cannot, you simply cannot, begin your presidency suing editors, newspapers, writers and cartoonists.
Continue Reading April 18th, 2009
Sitting on judging panels for journalism awards gives one valuable insight into the best of South African reporting. The Taco Kuiper Award, which gives out a whopping R200 000 for “a distinguished example of investigative journalism” will be handed out this week, and that has meant I have been poring through piles of material of some of the year’s most important stories.
Continue Reading April 18th, 2009
Latest news is that Mail & Guardian staff have been warned that they will be told in two weeks who is going to be retrenched and who can stay. Attempts are being made to prevent this, but things look tough.
Continue Reading March 25th, 2009
We gave money from our Taco Kuiper Fund at Wits U to the Daily Dispatch to investigate the spate of killings of Somalis in their region. The result is a great story, a powerful investigation, and imaginative and rich use of multimedia on their website. Have a look at Daily Dispatch.
Continue Reading March 14th, 2009
I was struck by how dignified and appropriate was the President’s response to the collapse of the story of his pregnant, young girlfriend. He chose his words carefully, and he chose them well. “I will drop a line to the Press Ombudsman,” he said.
Continue Reading February 10th, 2009
The Sowetan journalists are upset with me, perplexed at how I could have criticised their coverage of the President (”He sleeps alone, like a monk”) but defended the Star’s expose of the three women competing for his affections. Was I inconsistent?
Continue Reading February 4th, 2009
I was disappointed that the Sunday Times did not publish the full version of the report of it’s Review Panel. There is material in it, I think, of use to all South African editors.
Continue Reading January 18th, 2009
Three weeks ago, I reported that the Independent group were planning to merge all their sub-editing rooms into one national subs room. This was confirmed today in a note from Star Editor-in-Chief Moegsien Williams which also said they were aiming to reduce their editorial staff by 23.
Continue Reading December 4th, 2008
How rude can you be about your boss? In exchange for paying you a salary, can you employer expect you to give up your right to criticise them? That’s the question being raised as the fight for freedom of expression moves from the lofty corridors of power to the places of everyday life, such as the factory floor and the academy.
Continue Reading December 4th, 2008
The quarter ABC figures for newspaper sales have just come out. Normally the newspapers trumpet it selectively and manipulatively (I think this is called spin doctoring: “We are up AGAIN, if you compare our sales to this time in 1983, particularly among our target market of left-handed intellectuals”). But this time there was largely silence. Wondering why?
Continue Reading November 15th, 2008
Newspapers – and therefore journalism – will be changed forever by this economic downturn.
Continue Reading November 12th, 2008
When newspapers are in trouble, journalism is in trouble. And this week has not been a good week for American newspapers. One of their worst, in fact. And it raises the question of whether current global conditions are going to deliver a knockout blow to an already punch-drunk industry in America.
Continue Reading October 31st, 2008
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Anton Harber: Media
Professor Anton Harber directs the Journalism and Media Studies Programme at Wits University. He is former editor of the Mail & Guardian.
Full bio
Among the main results from the World Association of Newspaper’s Newsroom Barometer (a survey of 700 editors and senior news execs in 120 countries) for this year:
- 86% believe integrated print and online newsrooms will become the norm, and 83% believe journalists will be expected to be able to produce content for all media within five years.
- Two-thirds believe some editorial functions will be outsourced, despite frequent newsroom opposition to the practice.
- A plurality - 44% - believe on-line will be the most common platform for reading news in the future, compared with 41% last year. Thirty-one cited print (down from 35% last year), 12% mobile and 7% e-paper. The rest were unsure.
- A majority of editors - 56%- believe news in the future will be free, up from 48% from last year’s survey. Only one-third believe the news will remain paid for, while 11% were unsure. - From Editors’ Weblog
There is a crisis in trust and communication between the British public and the mainstream media, a new report has concluded. The gulf between public expectations of news provision and the actual nature of articles, which oscillate between esoteric or irresponsible, leaves readers feeling confused and excluded.
The report, entitled ‘Public Trust In The News’ was conducted by researchers from Manchester and Leeds Universities and was published by the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism. - From Editors Weblog
Reflections on Journalism in the Transition to Democracy - Ethics & International Affairs 18, no. 3 (2004).
Journalism in the Age of the Market
- Harold Wolpe Memorial Lecture, Centre for Civil Society, University of KZN, Aug 2002
The Untimely Death of SA’s Finest Daily - Sunday Times, May 2005
“Two Newspapers, Two Nations? The Media and the Xenophobic Violence” from Go Home or Die Here, edited by Shireen Hassim Tawana Kupe and Eric Worby (WUP, 2008)
Remarks at Goedgedacht Forum, October 2008
The rise of social network journalism - From The 2009 Flux Trend Review (Macmillan, 2008)
A recent piece by me on the Zapiro cartoon row which appeared in Comment is Free, a Guardian blog.
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