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Your chance to sub-edit the journalism of Charles Dickens

Posted by Dominic Ponsford on 6 May 2011 at 11:40
Tags: Journalism, Journalists, Sub editors, Subbing, new media

The University of Buckingham is calling on Press Gazette readers to help it  mark Charles Dickens’ 200th birthday next February by sub-editing a huge archive of his journalism.

It has digitised Household Words and All The Year Round – the two magazines Dickens edited from 1850 until his death in 1870. And it has used text-recognition software to turn those scanned pages into words.

But each computer-generated transcript contains a number of errors and needs a human to put them right. That’s where you come in!

It’s an exercise in crowd-sourcing which has so far seen less than  10 per cent of the pages completed.

Although the articles are all un-bylined – this project could lead to a number of new Dickens works coming to light because other computer jiggery pokery is going to be deployed to identify pieces written by the great man based on identifiable patterns in his writing style.

The magazines sold between 40,000 and 100,000 copies a week and were thought to have about 30 readers per copy. This was in the days when a daily newspaper was reckoned to be motoring if it sold more than 10,000 copies.

There are more than a thousand 24-page magazines to correct – including some which serialised some of Dickens’ greatest works.

As an aside, apparently Dickens made around ÂŁ170,000 a year from his magazines in today’s money – providing him with the bulk of his income. And staff-wise he had just two partners and a printer – no publisher or commercial team. An inspiration to journalists going it alone with their own publications today.

Click here to sign up with the Dickens Journal Online scheme.

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Quick draw Sun subs nail art-attack headline

Posted by Dominic Ponsford on 31 July 2009 at 10:36
Tags: National Newspapers, Sub editors, Subbing, Sun, newspapers

No sooner has Press Gazette relaunched its headline of the month competition, than a story breaks which is a headline writer’s dream.

Mugger Lloyd Talbot was jailed after the retired art-teacher he attacked provided police with a portrait of her attacker.

Here’s how the headline writers handled it:

The Daily Star: DREW DUNNIT!

Daily Mirror: IN THE FRAME

Daily Express: Quick on the draw

My favourite?

The Sun with: LONG ARM OF THE DRAW

While the Daily Mail went for the less fun option of: Artists’s sketch nails her mugger.

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Free single malt whisky for sub-editors: Yes, really….

Posted by Dominic Ponsford on 29 July 2009 at 13:42
Tags: David Montgomery, Roy Greenslade, Sub editors, Subbing

Industry bigwigs have been queuing up to stick the boot in to sub-editors in recent years – with media luminaries ranging from David Montgomery to Roy Greenslade proposing a ‘final solution’ to journalism’s economic woes with the elimination of sub-editors.

But as Axegrinder and Grey Cardigan have recently been pointing out – the results of such cost-cutting can be calamitous.

Press Gazette says enough is enough: It’s time to save our subs, and cherish the work they do.

With this end in mind we have relaunched Press Gazette magazine’s much-missed headline of the month competition – which was also recently reprised by All Media Scotland.

And thanks to some generous sponsorship we can offer the winning headline writer, and the colleague who nominates them, a bottle of Jura single malt whisky every month.

As if that’s not enough, we are also launching a new headline of the year contest. The winner of that will win an exclusive weekend away on the Isle of Jura where George Orwell wrote 1984, with the colleague who nominates the winning headline to receive a bottle of exclusive 1974 Jura whisky which is worth Ă‚ÂŁ500 a bottle.

So to hell with search engine optimisation: Press Gazette is looking for headlines which show wit, intelligence and craft while grabbing the reader’s attention.

Nominations should be sent to dominicp@pressgazette.co.uk.

Entries are welcomed from all sectors of journalism – print and online.

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You’ll need deep pockets if you sack the subs Monty

Posted by Dominic Ponsford on 1 November 2007 at 13:37
Tags: David Montgomery, Journalism, Sub editors

David Montgomery’s fast growing investment vehicle Mecom evidently has pots of cash judging by the speed it is buying up newspapers across Europe.

That money will come in handy for lawyers’ fees if the former Mirror chief executive carries on with his plans to do away with sub editors.

Somewhat carried away by his speech last night, I put my report of it straight up online without letting a colleague pass a second pair of eyes over it – as is the norm.

The result was a stray apostrophe in the headline and a misspelling of the name Weidenfeld (thanks Tony Berry and Michael Wren for pointing those out).

Press Gazette had a more serious dose of the consequences of such shoddy practice a few weeks ago when the word “payout” was used in the headline of a report of a fairly innocuous libel settlement.

An irate phone call from a libel lawyer ensued and it turned out the matter of money in the libel deal was confidential and he considered that to suggest otherwise was actionable.

It was an easy mistake to make and came about because the sort of experienced and trustworthy journalist Montgomery thinks does not need sub-editing put their work up straight away online without recourse to a sub-editor.

The speed with which stories need to be published online nowadays – and the plethora of extra libel risks that online publication entails – mean there is more need for sub editors now than ever before.

If established newspapers are to make the transformation to become successful online businesses the quality that good sub-editing ensures will be essential to help them rise above the unregulated clamour of the blogosphere.

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