Sunday, December 21, 2008

Making Ethical Decisions

Making Ethical Decisions

Scenario 1:
regardless of how badly i may want to read the documents on the desk, it would be against everything i stand against. i would be cheating my way to a story.

Scenario 2:
going undercover is a very deceitful way of trying to get in formation that can be taken by interviews and investigative reporting.

Scenario 3:
quotes are what other people said exactly. taking their words and making them one own is wrong, not to mention illegal.

Play Editor

Play Editor

The girl in the story did not show anything solid that the professor in fact did sexually harass her. Reporting the absolute truth with all of the accurate information to back the story up is very important to a journalist. Libel lawsuits can be filed against reporters and journalists alike if anything that can be constituted as inaccurate information is sent into press. I would not have this story put on paper.

Copy Edit The World

Newspaper:
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"accept"

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"misspelled"

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"MicroFine"

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Signs etc...
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"cylinder"

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"caramel"

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"everything"

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"stuff's"


Random: i thought it was funny...
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Online Writing Exercises

Online Writing Exercises


1) Go to a news web site and see if it measures up to these criteria for online writing:

San Jose Mercury News

a) Do the news items reflect immediacy?
Yes it's items do reflect immediacy, with articles from almost every genre as wsell as breaking news, locally and nationally.
b) Does the site try to help readers save time?
yes and no. yes becasue the site is sectioned off in to different genres so readers can find related articles with ease, however, it does seem to be a bit cluttered with some unwanted columns.
c) Is it quick and easy to get information?
yes very easy to get the information you need. but to get the full experience of the news web site, readers must pay for the entire service or they stop the reader with a registration window.
d) Does it provide both visual and verbal information?
with the breaking articles the website shows both visual and verbal information, however for the other, maybe less important, articles dont get such luxories.
e) Do the stories contain lists and bullets to make them easier to scan?
yes the stories do contain lists and bullets that make it easier for the readers to understand, however there are also advertisements that are scattered within that could make it rather difficult for the readers.
f) Are the stories broken into “chunks”?
yes the stories are broken into chunks, so that the reader is not overwhelmed with information.
g) Do stories provide hyperlinks to additional information?
some stories to provide hyperlinks to additional information, some just end as they are.
h) Are there opportunities for readers to "talk back"?
yes, with some stories, mostly statewide, nationwide, and some locally.
i) Does the site use multimedia to enhance understanding and add appeal?
the site does use some, however, not enough to gain more appeal with the very multimedia driven generation of adults that are coming to the news era.

Find That Lead

WORDPLAY LEAD:

T-Pain sings tech's praises (again) on new CD, 'Thr33 Ringz'

By Chris Lee

Los Angeles Times
Article Launched: 12/18/2008 12:00:00 AM PST

Just because hip-hop/R&B superstar T-Pain single-handedly — albeit accidentally — transformed the pop chart with his retro-futuristic sound, don't expect him to strangle the goose that laid the golden egg.






DIRECT ADRESS LEAD:

Fall Out Boy's newest doesn't cut it

By Margaret Wappler

Los Angeles Times
Article Launched: 12/19/2008 05:42:30 PM PST

Fall Out Boy isn't one to thwart its fans or the fame machine. The band's fifth album, "Folie a Deux," is an example of right-now pop, adroitly programmed with crunchy 1980s melodies, emo's dark prowess and symphonies a la "Sgt. Pepper's." A little something for everyone, all of it played to the max.

Sunday, December 14, 2008

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PR Day: A Trip worth Taking

Dozens of anxious wide-eyed students hang around to herd into the Barrett Ballroom at San Jose State University on Thursday afternoon.

They wait to board a cruise ship, to explore the land of public relations, anxiously waiting to meet the captain and crew.

Clean-cut men and women, wearing dress shoes, slacks, dress shirts and ties, some wearing vests, sweaters and cardigans, some with glasses to complete their ensemble.
The annual public relations day was to promptly start at 12 noon. Upon registration and lunch, the several dozen business attire clad students enter an experience with will never forget.

Their ticket, into the event, in hand, became a passport to their future.
Unknowing to all the students they were going to be whisked away into a foreign land, the land of public relations.

The students meet with the key note speaker, captain and tour guide, Brad Whitworth, a highly decorated senior communication manager for the strategic alliances group at Cisco in San Jose.

Whitworth, with over 30 years of experience, in high-tech, financial services and association management attempts to guide the students into an experience of public relations world, utilizing his own experiences.

He attempts to explain and show the students that when they are in the real world, how to say the right things to the right people at the right time using the right channels.

However the tour guide is no one man crew.

Whitworth was accompanied with a dozen of crew members, split into three groups, much like the different crews in a cruise ship.

The students went through two one-hour breakout seminars with people who have been successful in the field of public relations.

Their travel tip panelists consisted of representatives from the sports entertainment industry, special events and social networking.

Some of the representatives included, Erin Reilly, Community Relations Coordinator for the San Francisco Giants and Phil Simon, Director of Media Relations for the San Jose Saber Cats, for students interested in PR for sports entertainment.

Special events representatives included, Patty Herrera, Director of Multicultural affairs for the Oakland Raiders and Karen Jackson, Community Development Director of HERS Breast Cancer Foundation, for students interested in the special events aspect of PR.

And for the students who are into the more communicative part of PR, the social networking portion was held by, Mike Manuel of Voce Communications, Social Media Strategist and Vanessa Camones of the MIX agency.

There were only two sessions of the breakout seminars, so the students had to choose wisely.

The final stop for the PR cruise was to take the students into a real world situation, a job fair.

Where eager students brought their résumés and cover letters to representatives of prospective agencies the students may be working for.

Agencies such as the International Association of Business Communicators (IABC), The Hoffman Agency and Big Sky PR, just to name a few.

For the students, the passengers of this whisked away traveling trip, was an afternoon filled with information, experiences and opportunities, to lead students to the right path, the path to better themselves and safeguard their future.

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-60 SECONDS-

SEVERAL DOZEN STUDENTS DRESSED IN BUSINESS ATTIRE ASSEMBLED IN THE BARRETT BALLROOM AT SAN JOSE STATE UNIVERSITY.

PROMPTLY AT NOON ON THURSDAY THE ANNUAL PR DAY BEGAN.

THE THEME OF THE DAY WAS CALLED, A PASSPORT TO YOUR FUTURE.

LED BY, TOUR GUIDE AND KEYNOTE SPEAKER, BRAD WHITWORTH SENIOR COMMUNICATION MANAGER FOR THE STRATEGIC ALLIANCES GROUP AT CISCO IN SAN JOSE.

THROUGH TWO ONE HOUR BREAKOUT SEMINARS WITH PEOPLE SUCCESSFUL IN THEIR FIELDS, STUDENTS WERE TAKEN ON A JOURNEY THOUGH THE MANY AVENUES THAT PUBLIC RELATIONS CAN TAKE THEM, SUCH AS EVENT PLANNING, SPECIAL EVENTS AND SOCIAL NETWORKING.

THE STUDENTS WERE THEN TAKEN INTO A REAL WORLD SCENARIO, A JOB FAIR, WHERE EAGER STUDENTS BROUGHT THEIR RÉSUMÉ’S AND COVER LETTERS TO REPRESENTATIVES OF AGENCIES, SUCH AS THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF BUSINESS COMMUNICATORS, THE HOFFMAN AGENCY AND BIG SKY PR TO NAME A FEW.

FOR THE STUDENTS THIS WAS AN AFTERNOON FILLED WITH INFORMATION AND OPPORTUNITY, TO BETTER THEM SELVES AND SAFEGUARD THEIR FUTURE.

-END-

Topical blog post #4

“Never, never, never give up” – Winston Churchill
This is my favorite quote when it comes to things that I want most in life. I try to live and abide by it every day; however, some days are much easier to keep the rule compared to others. What good can come from giving up? What good comes from never giving up? The answers are easy: Nothing good comes from giving up, and everything can potentially come from never giving up. The answers may be easy, but keeping the commitment is surely not. I understand that I haven’t been the best of students in my entire 19 years of school, but I want people to say "He never gave up" or "He never gives up" when they talk about me. I want my parents, friends, future wife, future kids, and every single person I come in contact with to recognize this characteristic in me-persistence. To persevere through all the trials and tribulations can only result in a greater appreciation and sense of accomplishment in completing the course I have set for myself. Therefore, I will "Never, never, never give up," ever.