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Media Giraffe Quotes

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Showing #1-15 of 109 records.

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Christopher Grotke & Lise LePage
iBrattleboro.com / local, sustain

"As far as what motivated us, it was not money. Money had absolutely nothing to do with it. It was a desire to build an online community based around a real place, where the people using the online community live in the place. And it was to start creating a way for grassroots journalism to flourish. It was so the stories in this town that The Reformer, which is a corporate paper, was not going to cover, got covered. And what what we discovered was that when you cover news at that grassroots level, you draw the attention of regular media. And so they then start scanning the site, every day, every other day, and when they see something interesting, they pick it up. So, in a way it is a really great way to bring news up that would otherwise simply not get out at all. Things that are embarassing to [town] board members, and various town boards -- things they don't want to talk about. And certainly points of view that are never going to be represented."
-- Lise LePage, iBrattleboro co-founder

Riverbend (Anonymous)
Riverbend -- Baghdad Burning author / book, political

"Bloggers are not exactly journalists, which is a mistake many people make. They expect us to be dispassionate and unemotional about topics such as occupation and war, etc. That objective lack of emotion is impossible because a blog in itself stems from passion - the need to sit for hours at one's computer, slouched over the keyboard, trying to communicate ideas, thoughts, fears and frustrations to the world." The blogger known as "Baghdad Burning" in an April 7, 2006 interview with an Aljazeera reporter

Richard Anderson
VillageSoup.com / local, sustain

"Yes, we surely have thrown away some money that would have been nice to have. But it is highly worth it. I mean you think about the opportunity to maybe really put yourself -- or put this community -- on the map as being the founding place of this new industry standard whether it is the Village Soup-licensed product or five other versions of Village Soup. Or somebody’s even got a better version than we have, and a slicker way to get there ,or a cheaper way to get there or something, but that we would be identified as where this concept started."

Scott Armstrong
Information Trust / firstamendm

. “Only an interrogated executive is an executive that’s responsive to the people . .. I’m not about the glamour-journalism we have today . . . [I prefer] results to glitz.”
Scott Armstrong, in a Media Giraffe Project interview, April, 2006

H. Brandt Ayres
Ayers Institute for Community Journalism / ownership, education

"To me the defining qualities of family papers are rootedness -- a passionate commitment to place and to the people who live there -- and spending more on the paper. If the family gets that sort of payday rush from putting out a really good newspaper they will spend more on the paper . . . I would ask you to explain to me what is the objective view of lousy health care, poor schools, racial murder and injustice?"
H. Brandt Ayres, in a speech to a Sept. 2002 conference on family newspapers at the University of Ilinois, Champaign-Urbana

Andrew Baoill
FunFeral.org / blogger, resource, radio

By participating, I’m learning by doing, examining issues and taking part in the process in the practices, and talking about advocating in academic work. [By] Learning about the complexities of them, I’m able to write and learn."
Andrew O'Baoill, in Media Giraffe interview (below)

Nancy Barnes
Minneapolis Star-Tribune-"Experience Paper" / newspaper

"Experiences are ways of converting traditional news judgments from editors' definitions (what's most interesting, what's most important, what you can't believe just happened) to readers' definitions of how they react (what makes readers feel informed, what gives them something to talk about, what tells them the paper is looking out for their interests.)"
Anders Gyllenhaal, editor, Minneapolis Star Tribune

Andrew M. Baron
Rocketboom.com / video, blog, news

"I remember quite clearly the day Rocketboom had 700 regular audience members (December, 2004). 700 was a very big number for me - it still is - because it represents one of the largest, accessible playhouses in Austin that I was involved with. In any number of theaters, usually with less than 300 seats, I would easily spend an entire year of my life working on a production that would be a success to sell out even one or two nights for an entire 6 or 8 day run. In so many ways, there is no comparison between a play and an episode of Rocketboom and in another way, with Rocketboom, we now have well over 350,000 people per show."
Andrew Baron, commenting at his own blog on Rocketboom's growth
(photo by J.D. Lasica)

Paul Bass
Online Journalism Project / New Haven Independent / local,blog,ownership, sustain

"I love journalism, I love the community. I feel like it is what I was born to do. I have been doing it since I was 8 years old. years ago. I love interviewing people. I love the give and take that you get. I believe in this new medium, I believe everyone was burned out on the mainstream press, everyone was burned out corporate journalism and there are now new possibilities with the technology to make it really better. So, yea -- it's an exciting thing to do every morning."
Paul Bass, in a Nov. 1, 2005 interview with the Media Giraffe Project

Lowell Bergman
Univ. of California School of Journalism / individual

"Is Geraldo Rivera investigative reporting? In the O.J. Simpson case, were people standing outside doing interviews called investigative reporters because they were tracking down who the live-in babysitter was? Is that investigative reporting? I don't know. There may be some investigation involved and there may be some reporting, but I don't think it has much to do with keeping institutions or individuals accountable who have power and are not accountable. It doesn't have much to do with the old phrase "comforting the afflicted and afflicting the comfortable."
Lowell Bergman, in a Jan. 2001 interview at the site Journalism Jobs

Rick Blum
OpenTheGovernment.ORG / watchdog

"Why Secrecy Matters: Openness in government helps saves lives and strengthens democracy. For instance, thanks to transparency law and public attention brought by media coverage, body armor that had been distributed to U.S. troops despite failing ballistics tests was recently recalled."
OpenTheGovernment.org website, commenting on its Sept. 1, 2005 "Secrecy Report Card."

Wally Bowen
Mountain Area Information Network / local, sustain

"The question facing the nation today is: Will non-profit, civic uses of the Internet disappear, as did non-profit radio? . . . If the Internet is to fulfill its promise of strengthening our civic lives, provision must be made for local, non-profit content."
Wally Bowen, in a 2000 essay, "Local Voices Falling Silent in Internet Boom."

Jason Calacanis
Weblogs Network Inc. / niche, trade

"Traditional journalism is, in a word, broken . . . [o]n top of the unnecessarily one-way journalism being practiced today, the media space is suffering from the appearance of (and in some cases outright) impropriety . . . We believe participatory journalism is a better model than one-way journalism."
Jason Calacanis, from the Weblogs website

"The best thing you can do to make more money is produce world-class content. That's what I spend my time on: finding people who can make world-class content... and pay them!"
Jason Calacanis, in an Aug. 4, 2005 interview with the JenSense blog

Vinton G. Cerf
Vinton Cerf / senior

"We are accustomed, as Americans, to talking about the Freedom of Speech. But there's another important freedom, the freedom to hear. Speakers need listeners. Listening should not be prevented by legislation, regulation, or bad business practices."

Vinton G. Cerf, in a March 30, 2005, talk to attendees at the "Freedom-to-Connect" conference in Silver Spring, Md.

Katy Chevigny
Arts Engine / film, video

“If we want a truly democratic society, we want truly independent voices. Documentary film is the best way to get those voices out. We want to make sure there is true democracy. Arts Engine provides access to social issues documentary films, in an effort to promote social change,”
Katy Chevigny, in a Media Giraffe Project interview, April, 2006.

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