When
Community Residents Commit 'Random Acts of Journalism'
Published in the
Winter 2007 issue of Harvard University's Nieman
Reports.
By
Jan Schaffer
Jan Schaffer
J-Lab Executive Director
Article from Harvard's Nieman
Reports.
In rural Dutton, Montana, 80 people showed up last fall, wooed by
a notion of starting a local news site for this newspaperless
town of 375 people. Months later, the community celebrated the launch
of
the Dutton Country Courier, DuttonCC.org. In Chappaqua,
New York, three long-time community volunteers decided their
community needed
a weekly online newspaper. They took matters into
their own hands and in early October launched NewCastleNOW:
News & Opinion
Weekly.
Meanwhile
in Moscow, Idaho, low-power KRFP-FM radio, just two years after
it began airing a citizen-produced nightly newscast on
radiofreemoscow.org,
is applying for a commercial radio license.
All
three of these citizen media projects were fueled in small part
by micro grants from
the J-Lab/Knight Foundation New
Voices program, but
they are being sustained in much larger part by the passion,
vision and hard work of their creators.
In
communities with little news coverage, people are using the
Web to restore a sense of place.
From
girls podcasting in the Lower East Side of Manhattan, to environmental
journalists creating
a wiki about
the Great Lakes,
to
journalism
students scooping Chicago news outlets, in two years some
30 New Voices start-ups
have joined scores of other hyperlocal ventures in committing "random
acts of journalism."
It is
here – on these hyperlocal
sites – that the systemic
conventions of inverted pyramids and "balanced" stories
are out of sync with information conveyed amid a keen caring
about community. "These
are not multiple-source stories," said veteran journalist
Suzanne McBride of the items on CreatingCommunityConnections.org,
which she cofounded
in Chicago. "It took me a while to say that's okay;
it's
not libeling anyone. I had to change my thinking about
that," she
told a Citizen Media Summit at The Associated Press Managing
Editors' conference
in October.
For those seeking to venture into this sphere, whether
affiliated with a news organization or not, we offer
these tips:
1) Get ready for a high-touch
enterprise. If
you build a local news site, citizen journalists will
not come unless they are cajoled, recruited, trained,
stroked, celebrated, and sometimes paid. Content wranglers
must be evangelists, cheerleaders, assignment editors
and writers. Travis Henry, top editor of YourHub.com,
has taken Denver-area contributors to Broncos games
and has been known to make house calls to teach someone
how to load to the site. In Dutton, University of Montana
journalism students coauthored early stories with local
contributors to help build confidence. And when MyMissourian.com
founder Clyde Bentley discovered that a local bluegrass
band got a grant to go to China,
he "gave them an old computer, set them up a
blog and a Flickr account." They sent me e-mails
and I posted all of their material. "We got incredible
readership on this thing and we all saw more of China
than we ever would," he said.
2) Understand contributors' motivations. Robust user-generated content demands some equilibrium
between the giving and the getting. Volunteers will
write or report if they are getting something in
return. What motivates them? Maybe they want to learn
tech skills, get a real journalism job, make a difference
in their community or solve a problem. Said one citizen
reporter for The Forum (forumhome.org) in Deerfield,
N.H.: "My experience working as a Forum reporter
has been one of the best experiences of my life.
At times, I feel used, overworked, and run out of
words in my head to place on the screen. But it is
all worth it in the end."
3) Model the content you want. Seed
your site with the kind of stories you hope others
will contribute.
Write a mission statement. For instance, BlufftonToday.com
promises to provide a "friendly, safe, easy to
use place" on the Web for people to post and
share. "... In return, we ask that you meet
this character challenge: be a good citizen and exhibit
community leadership qualities. It's a simple and golden
rule. Act as you would like your neighbors to act. "We've
had almost no complaints about inaccurate information," said
iBrattleboro cofounder Lise LePage. "Citizen
journalism is always going to be advocacy. They attend
a meeting because they have a reason for being there,
but that doesn't mean their coverage is going
to be inaccurate."
4) See and be seen. Invest in face
time in your community. Attend meetings, state fairs
and sports events. "Most
of the community stories come from my going out and
relentlessly talking to people," said Barb Iverson,
CreatingCommunityConnections.org's other co-founder.
Added Mark Potts, founder of the now-shuttered Backfence.com, "It's
the garden club. It's the stoplight down their
street that isn't working or the principal who's
been fired. If you don't live there, you don't
care."
5) Tap existing assets. Pay attention
to what the community tells you is important. When
The [Bakersfield]
Californian launched Bakotopia.com, local bands made
it the place to share information about local musicians.
Bicycling is such a popular Chicago pastime that bikers
insisted their pursuit be a separate "beat," apart
from "transportation," on CreatingCommunityConnections.org.
6) Open doors for participation. iBrattleboro.com
has an Assignment Desk that seeks volunteers to cover
town meetings and events. Appalshop radio trains community
correspondents to produce news stories for the air
(http://www.appalshop.org/ccc). NewWest.net offers
writers their own "MyPages."
7) Rethink "news." Citizens
define news very differently from traditional news
outlets. They
don't engage in scorecard journalism: Who's
up or who's down today? The Democrats or the
Republicans? They don't balance stories with
false equilibriums; if someone is in favor of something,
they won't run around to try to find someone
who's against it. And, importantly for the community,
they don't require conflict before there's
a story. They validate consensus as well. For some
sites, it's enough to run the minutes of a town
meeting.
8) Partner for link love. When CreatingCommunityConnections.org
found Chicago aldermen hiring their relatives, the
editors offered to also break the story on The Beachwood
Reporter (beachwoodreporter.com) to help juice traffic
and impact. Most news organizations consider it unthinkable
to share enterprise stories.
9) Don't sweat the
math. Appalshop trained 13 producers, but only five
are regularly producing. MadisonCommons.org
has trained more than 70 citizen journalists, but only
a handful contribute. It's common to have fewer
than 10 percent of those who agree to contribute actually
do it.
10) Build the business as it
comes. The editors
of Baristanet.com will barter ads for hair care and
dry
cleaning. NewWest.net supports activities with revenues
from an indoor advertising company. TCDailyPlanet.org
has attracted grants from several community foundations.
Nonjournalists
sharing photos and videos of breaking news events – from
the London bombings to the South Asia tsunami – garners
media attention, yet what's happening on emerging hyperlocal
news opens a window to observe
what is happening in journalism today. In communities
with little news coverage, people are using the Web to restore
a sense
of place. Behind
these hyperlocal efforts is a desire to get local citizenry
engaged in issues affecting their lives – in essence,
to create a civic media that at the same time constructs a
new architecture
of participation in
their towns.
Learning
curves at many of these Web sites are still high, but those of
us who observe and research these
efforts
already know a lot. Earlier
this year, J-Lab released one of the first reports
on the
rise of local news sites based on user-generated content
(UGC). The
research, "Citizen
Media: Fad or the Future of News?"
reported on survey responses from 191 citizen media
participants and on in-depth interviews of the founders
of 31 Web sites.
Here
are some of the key findings:
- Citizen
media is emerging as a form of "bridge media," linking
opportunities to share and create news and information
media with opportunities to get involved in civic life.
- No one
size fits all; there are many models. Sites have been started
by former journalists seeking to be the I.F. Stones
of their towns and by friends of the public library seeking to construct a
local newscape.
- Instead
of being comprehensive sources of news, sites are forming as
fusions of news and schmooze. Stories unravel
over a series of postings and people, contrary to traditional journalistic
conventions, "cover" the
topics they care most about and know something
about.
- Half
the respondents said their sites don't need to make money
to continue. Costs can be as low as $13 a month
for server space, and volunteers provide most of the labor. But site founders
concede it would be nice to
be able to pay a little to contributors.
- Most
citizen sites don't use traditional metrics — unique
visitors, page views or revenues — to measure their success. Yet
73 percent pronounced their efforts to be "successful."
- Success
is often defined as impact on the community.
Site owners say their sites they have
increased voter
turnout in elections and upped attendance at town meetings. They have helped
their communities solve problems
and watchdogged local government.
- There
is a high degree of optimism that citizen news sites are here
to stay. But site founders say that attracting
more contributors and some operating support continue to be major challenges.
With
the rise of so many independent local news sites, traditional
news outlets are
now trying to enter this space with
their own iterations of UGC sites, such as
the Chicago Tribune's TribLocal.com and The Washington Post's LoudounExtra.
For the most part, news organizations
are starting from scratch in developing
their
hyperlocal news sites rather
than partner with existing ones.
It remains to be seen whether the sites
affiliated
with news outlets will achieve the
passion and caring for community
exhibited by the independent startups.
Some
citizen media site operators think such competition is senseless. "We
are plankton," says iBrattleboro.com cofounder Christopher Grotke. He'd
like to see news organizations
feeding off his site – and
others like it – rather than trying
to replicate what it already does.
It remains
to be seen whether sustainable business models will emerge from
the numerous citizen media efforts
now online. Perhaps they will
become a venue for a new type of community
volunteerism, something baby
boomers do after they
have finished
coaching their
kids' soccer teams. But
it's increasingly clear that
citizen media sites are helping to
transform
how local journalism is practiced
and even what it is and what it can
do.
From
his perch at MyMissourian.com, Clyde Bentley believes that "traditional
journalism plus citizen journalism
equals 21st Century journalism."
I agree.

####
Jan
Schaffer (jans@j-lab.org) is executive director of J-Lab: The
Institute for Interactive Journalism at the University of Maryland.
E-mail news@j-lab.org to get a copy of "Citizen Media:
Fad or the Future of News?."
Questions
or comments? E-mail Jan. |