All entries tagged: James Hamilton
Chicago’s L3C newsroom
For those keeping track of such things, take note: Journalism is about to get its first low-profit, limited liability corporation company, or L3C.
The new Chicago News Cooperative, unveiled on Thursday by former Chicago Tribune managing editor Jim O’Shea, will begin life as a nonprofit, but will change over to an L3C after Jan. 1, when [...]
Lots of great future-of-news pieces in the new issue of Nieman Reports
As we mentioned previously, it’s time for a new issue of Nieman Reports, our sister quarterly here at the Nieman Foundation. Over the past couple of weeks, we’ve given you previews of two of its stories: Joel Kramer on lessons from running MinnPost and Margaret Wolf Freivogel on her startup, the St. Louis Beacon.
The entire [...]
Lab Book Club: Journalists as goods
We’re nearing the end of our month-long Nieman Journalism Lab Book Club (which has seeped into March). Here’s my discussion with Jay Hamilton, author of All the News That’s Fit to Sell, about Chapter 8. It’s one of the most interesting chapters in the book, dealing with “journalists as goods.” Among the topics we discuss:
— [...]
Lab Book Club: Talking Heads ’99
[For Chapters 7 and 8 of this month's Nieman Journalism Lab Book Club selection, we turn to Tim Windsor. For more info on the Book Club, check here. —Ed.]
While the previous chapter’s data about the early days of online news do not age well, the focus of Chapter 8 — the value of celebrity among television anchors [...]
Lab Book Club: Some online lessons from the (fairly) recent past
Here’s the newest part of my interview with Jay Hamilton, author of this month’s Nieman Journalism Lab book club selection, All the News That’s Fit to Sell. Here we’re talking about Chapter 7, which focuses on what we can learn from the economics of online news around 2000. Our topics include:
— How the power-law graph [...]
Lab Book Club: A look back at the early days of online news
[For Chapters 7 and 8 of this month's Nieman Journalism Lab Book Club selection, we turn to Tim Windsor. For more info on the Book Club, check here. —Ed.]
Chapter 7 of All the News That’s Fit to Sell, like much of the book that surrounds it, is a moment frozen in time, like Pompeii or [...]
Lab Book Club: The role of prestige and personality in selling the news
We’re up to Chapter 6 in our video interview with Duke economist James Hamilton. He’s the author of this month’s Nieman Journalism Lab Book Club selection, All the News That’s Fit to Sell. In this chapter, Jay talks about the role prestige and personality play in how media is produced and consumed. Among the topics:
— [...]
Lab Book Club: The secret tie between Playboy and food stamps
Here’s the next installment of my interview with James Hamilton, author of this month’s Nieman Journalism Lab Book Club selection, All the News That’s Fit to Sell. Our topic here is Chapter 5, which focuses on, among other things, how market forces influence local TV news. Some of the topics we cover:
— How the format [...]
Lab Book Club: The system’s to blame for the loss of hard news
[For Chapters 5 and 6 of this month's Nieman Journalism Lab Book Club selection, we turn to Lisa Williams of Placeblogger fame. For more info on the Book Club, check here. —Ed.]
Who’s to blame for the scourge of soft news: men, women, or the system?
The list of people, trends, and things responsible for the [...]
Lab Book Club: How economic incentives shape the news
Here’s the next installment of my interview with James Hamilton, author of this month’s Nieman Journalism Lab Book Club selection, All the News That’s Fit to Sell. Here we talk about Chapters 3 and 4, which use TV as a jumping-off point to discuss how economic incentives encourage certain kinds of news coverage and discourage [...]
Lab Book Club: How language and audience align on the nightly news
[Here's Martin's review of Chapter 4 of this month's Nieman Journalism Lab Book Club selection. For more info, check here. —Ed.]
In Chapter 4 of All the News That’s Fit to Sell, James Hamilton tackles information programs on network television ranging from 60 Minutes, Dateline, 20/20 and the nightly news shows all the way down to [...]
Lab Book Club: How news orgs’ hunt for profits can drive media bias
[Here's Martin's review of Chapter 3 of this month's Nieman Journalism Lab Book Club selection. For more info, check here. —Ed.]
James Hamilton begins Chapter 3 of All the News that’s Fit to Sell with a question that frames a long-standing debate within and surrounding the media industry: “Do the media provide people with the information [...]
Lab Book Club: Why “rational ignorance” keeps people from reading your amazing story
This is the second portion of my interview with Jay Hamilton, author of this month’s Nieman Journalism Lab Book Club selection, All the News That’s Fit to Sell. We’re talking about Chapter 2, which is where the meat of the book begins. Jay uses the transition from party-affiliated to independent newspapers in the late 19th [...]
Lab Book Club: How technology built objectivity into newspapers
[Here's Zach's review of Chapter 2 of this month's Nieman Journalism Lab Book Club selection. For more info, check here. —Ed.]
The New York Sun was one of the first non-partisan newspapers in the United States, and it might have been the country’s last partisan newspaper as well. What happened in the intervening 175 years was [...]
Five years of Facebook: How it redefined what we consider “news”
Facebook celebrates its fifth birthday today, having led a revolution in social media and shaken up journalism in the process. As a student at Harvard when Facebook launched here in February 2004, I claimed the 185th profile on the site, known then around campus as thefacebook.com — one word, as in, “You won’t believe [...]








