GlobalPost field trip: the future of journalism

14 03 2010

Last Wednesday, my Reinventing the News class accompanied Professor Kennedy to the headquarters of GlobalPost, “one of the most widely recognized leaders in charting a new path for the future of journalism,” according to the mission statement of their website. Despite GlobalPost being only about a year old, they already have 70 correspondents in 50 different countries, according to Executive Editor Charles Sennott.

GloablPost's cozy headquarters contrast the sleek, modern web site

Located just a few blocks from Boston’s North End, GlobalPost’s offices are composed of slanted roofs, chandeliers, wood and exposed bricks. Their website, however, is sleek, no-frills and extremely well organized. Ads are minimal. The navigation bar at the top of the site allows visitors to browse stories by region and country, to skip straight to the opinion or multimedia, to read GlobalPost’s mission statement, or to become better acquainted with their 70 correspondents.

The site creates the impression of a journalistic establishment that understands what its readers want, and delving further into GlobalPost’s content confirms that they know what they’re doing. Compared to the New York Times, whose website apparently is under the impression that it’s a newspaper, reading GlobalPost is a revelatory experience. Even with the occasional typos, double-posts and other minor complaints, GlobalPost’s site makes the Times’s headache-inducing layout look muddled, unprofessional and nigh unreadable.

GlobalPost’s content is often exemplary as well. Take the multi-part multimedia report “Life, Death and the Taliban,” in which GlobalPost’s correspondents, photographers and editors “unpack the complex history of the Taliban in Afghanistan and Pakistan.” The videos and slideshows are informative and visually interesting, while stories, like Jean MacKenzie’s award winning “Funding the Afghan Taliban,” are concise, packed with information and often breaking.

A barebones interactive timeline attempts to tie the stories together and give an overview of the history, although it could be more intuitive. Videos, however, are integrated into the project skillfully; hover over a video and a preview begins to play immediately, and clicking on the video doesn’t cause the browser to navigate away from the page, making it easy to jump between them and not get lost. If only the stories did the same, perhaps loading at the bottom of the page rather than taking readers to a new window or tab.

"Life, death and the Taliban" ties multimedia elements together to paint a picture of the Taliban in Pakistan and Afghanistan

Sennott told the students in attendance that GlobalPost’s staff work incredibly hard to integrate photography, video, audio, and writing on the web, and that no establishment has really nailed down the formula yet. Their dedication shows, however.

GlobalPost is also home to the incredible Study Abroad program, which has allowed about 70 American college students, nicknamed “The Student Correspondent Corps” by Sennott in an October article announcing the launch of the program, to act as junior foreign correspondents.

“At a time when so many traditional print and television news organizations offer students few opportunities to get started in the craft of journalism, GlobalPost is proud to create what we hope will be a new path for student journalists to become foreign correspondents in the digital age,” Sennott wrote.

To “Study Abroad” seems like a truly awesome experience. I would love to send home first-hand reports of the arcade scene in Japan, game developers in the UK or game censorship in less tolerant parts of the world, with videos and photography to boot. The Study Abroad page allows students to report on the cultures of exotic places, leaving the “big stories” and “hard news” to GlobalPost’s regular seasoned correspondents, and I think some stories about gaming in foreign cultures would be perfect.

Sennott told our class that “great journalism is about being on the ground,” hence GlobalPost’s 70 correspondents, and that he “doesn’t believe in backpack journalism,” stressing the importance of working with other journalists and specialists rather than trying to fly solo. I think he may be onto something, and I hope that GlobalPost represents one aspect, at least, of the future of journalism.





Hello Blog

13 01 2010

It’s been almost a year since I wrote anything here. Co-op at The Phoenix is over, I’m graduating a year earlier than I thought, and I started using Twitter a lot more.

Dead Space 2 is official (and I’m officially excited), Little Big Planet PSP is out (and I discovered that I’m already sick of it), and COD4.2 (or Modern Warfare 2 for sticklers) was the biggest release of last year, possibly the biggest game released ever.

Other games to have made a mark on my completely over-saturated radar last fall included Borderlands, Dragon Age: Origins, Halo:ODST, Uncharted 2, New Super Mario Bros. Wii, The Beatles Rock Band, Left 4 Dead 2, Batman: Arkham Asylum, Plants vs. Zombies, Machinarium, Mario & Luigi: Bowser’s Inside Story, Zelda: Spirit Tracks, Dissidia Final Fantasy…

Wow. Maybe I should finish a few of those before starting the next batch.

Anyway, Professor Dan Kennedy requires his Reinventing the News: the Journalism of the Web students (of which I am one) to maintain a blog. So I transferred this from Blogger, changed the name and voila. Some posts will be dictated by him, and some will be written of my own volition.

If anybody’s reading this, here’s to a good semester!








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