3 to read: Facebook? Change? No way | Era ends: NYT’s Markoff retires | Print is dead (not)

By Matt Carroll <@MattCData>

Dec. 13, 2016: Cool stuff about journalism, once a week. Get notified via email? Subscribe: 3toread (at) gmail.

  1. Why Facebook has zero interest in making changes for news: OK, the hedline exaggerates. Frederic Filloux of Monday Note says Facebook does have one good reason — it’s good PR. But otherwise… Facebook is about ads, page views and emotion. News? It don’t care; ain’t part of the game plan. So newspeople who are counting on Facebook to make substantive changes? Sorry. A tough read, but sounds realistic to me.
  1. A tech era ends: NYT’s Markoff retires: For anyone who has followed the world of tech, reporter John Markoff is a rock star. Markoff chronicled the ins and outs of digital, from Apple to browsers, from AI to dark hackers. Now he’s pulled the plug, after nearly three decades. His retirement speech looks back over his illustrious career at the new York Times.
  2. Print is dead. Long live print: Why print is so hard to kill (hint: people like it): Michael Rosenwald argues in the Columbia Journalism Review that newspaper publishers are giving up on print way too soon. People still love print and — btw — that’s still where a lot of the money is. He makes an interesting argument (even if I’m not sure I quite buy it.)
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Matt Carroll is a journalism professor at Northeastern University.

3 to read: How to use term ‘alt right’ | Snapchat’s quiet rise | Reddit’s civil war is about Trump

By Matt Carroll <@MattCData>

Dec. 6, 2016: Cool stuff about journalism, once a week. Get notified via email? Subscribe: 3toread (at) gmail.

  1. The bruising battle over using the term ‘alt-right’: The NYT has become ground zero for the fight over using the term “alt right.” Every time it’s used, readers write in, pro and con (but always with passion), about how and whether it should be used. Public editor Liz Spayd explains how the Times will be using “alt right” in the future.
  2. The rise of the browser over apps (again): First came the browser, and it was good. Then came the apps, and they were better. And now comes … the browser, again? How browsers are winning back your phone. By Hugh Durkin of Intercom.
  3. The civil war tearing Reddit apart is all about Trump: Reddit is incredibly successful because it (mostly) let’s people say and post whatever they want. But now the Trump election and the rise of manipulative trolls is putting incredible stress on one of the web’s most cheerfully anarchic sites. By Bryan Menegus at Gizmodo.
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Matt Carroll is a journalism professor at Northeastern University.

3 to read: Facebook’s election boondoggle | Saving investigative news | Newsletters as a business

By Matt Carroll <@MattCData>

Nov. 29, 2016: Cool stuff about journalism, once a week. Get notified via email? Subscribe: 3toread (at) gmail.

By Matt Carroll <@MattCData>

Nov. 29, 2016: Cool stuff about journalism, once a week. Get notified via email? Subscribe: 3toread (at) gmail.

  1. How the election blew up in Facebook’s face: A fascinating autopsy of Facebook’s decision to become more focused on real-time content, like Twitter, and how that led directly to an horrifying avalanche of fake news. It’s a case study of how seemingly innocuous decisions to encourage sharing had unimaginable results. By Ben Kantrowitz at BuzzFeed.
  2. Saving investigative news: Folks, it’s a great time to be a corrupt politician in America. That’s why we need investigative journalism more than ever, at a time when the news media’s financial underpinnings are collapsing. Here’s some ideas for what we can do. By yours truly. (Text of TedX talk.)
  3. Newsletters are cool (again): Newsletters, those digital dinosaurs from the wayback before social media, are making a comeback. Here’s a couple of stories about how to make a newsletter work for you: How to start a newsletter” by Mario R. Garcia and 8 business models for email newsletters,” by Andrew Jack.
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Matt Carroll is a journalism professor at Northeastern University.

Call to action for journalists | Legacy media as outsiders | How social beat newsrooms for influence

By Matt Carroll <@MattCData>

Cool stuff about journalism, once a week. Get notified via email? Subscribe: 3toread (at) gmail.

Trump plays his trump card

It’s all about Trump fallout this week. And out of hundreds of pieces written, here’s three of the best.

Call to action for journalists: Margaret Sullivan at the Washington Postwrites a stirring call to action for journalists operating in a world where they are openly hated by the president: “If January 2017 isn’t going to herald disaster for press rights — and the citizens served by a free and independent press — we’re going to need some help. We’re going to need some heroes.” Absolutely true.

Legacy media needs to act as outsiders: New media sites, operating largely in the Facebook universe, ran circles around legacy media during the election, writes John Herrman for the NYT. And legacy media is still acting as if they are on the inside, close to power — but they aren’t, and they need to embrace their outsider status. An interesting take on strategic action for newsrooms.

How social media is beating newsrooms for influence: Mainstream media wrote incredibly tough stories about Trump, ranging from his ducking of federal income taxes to his (possibly) illegal use of a nonprofit. Yet the stories didn’t seem to stick. For an explanation, look no further than collapse of traditional news media’s influence and the rise of social media. Story by Pablo Boczkowski for Nieman Lab.

Bonus (non-Trump) read: Nuggets of wisdom, from the MIT Media Lab: Cool tips for building a creative, supportive environment at work or school. I just started at Northeastern U as a journalism prof. But I spent the past 2–½ wonderful years at Civic Media at the Media Lab. Some great ideas for running anything from a newsroom to a classroom.

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Matt Carroll is a journalism professor at Northeastern University.