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About
Howard Owens is a digital media pioneer. He started publishing local news online in 1995 when very few local news outlets had web sites. The header image on the site depicts the film camera he used early in his career and the press pass from his year on the staff of the Carlsbad Journal. For more on Howard's professional background, read his LinkedIn profile.
HowardOwens.com is the personal web site of Howard Owens and covers his range of interests -- political localism and libertarianism, music and personal interests, as well as his professional interests.
Howard is currently publisher of The Batavian and lives in Batavia, N.Y.
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Daily Archives: August 3, 2006
Bako blogging
It’s hot in Bako (though not as hot as it was), but that isn’t stopping the local bloggers from writing long, fascinating posts.
- Black Dog on meeting a mountain lion.
- N.L. Belardes on his favorite topic, the Lords of Bakersfield
- Matildakay on the Cinema of the Lords.
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A big city editor who gets blogging
John Temple, the editor of the Rocky Mountain News, has a pretty lively blog (disclaimer, if it’s needed, I used to work for Scripps, the same company that employs Temple). Here he takes on E&P editor Greg Mitchell’s supposed liberal bias in the guise of media criticism.
Who says a big city, MSM executive can’t grok blogging?
As for Mitchell — I interviewed him once, circa 1991, when his book Campaign of the Century came out. I won a press club award for the resulting article, in which I concentrated on what our own paper’s archives said about the 1934 California gubernatorial campaign. I met Mitchell again a year or so ago at a convention.
I’ve met Temple once or twice, too.
Both nice, smart guys.
Does Temple have a point? Read his post and compare and contrast with this quote from Mitchell’s Wikipedia entry:
In an interview June 28, 2004 with the Echo Chamber Project, Mitchell discussed the duty of news reporters to be “skeptical” and not tilt coverage either to the right or left. He cited coverage of the build-up to the United States war in Iraq as an example of skewed coverage.
He said the tone of coverage by news media “all our coverage on all subjects—is not to be partisan or not to be left or right or anything like that. But we believe in the—what should be the main principle of journalism, besides being accurate and fair, is to be skeptical—to raise questions, to not take what officials say as the gospel truth—unless it’s really proven—if there’s documents.”
At any rate, I think the real news here is that Temple isn’t afraid to be himself in his blog. Authenticity is essential to a good blog, and that is an attitude many MSM editors and reports, I think, still find uncomfortable.
He does need to post more frequently, though.
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