If you hang out at enough newspaper forums—and I’ve been to a few—one of the phrases you hear over and over is “citizen journalists.” It’s kind of a funny and annoying phrase. It sounds like something out of a 1950s Red-scare movies reel. Or the B-side of the National Guard recruiting song by Kid Rock, “Citizen Warrior,” that is a trailer before the feature presentations at all the movie house. And it’s also a bit of a slap at us practicing journalists, as if we’re not citizens but rather some sort of foreign force of critics and cynics brought in to kick people when they’re down.
But I digress. One of the most important things about journalism is that you don’t need a license to do it. That’s thanks to my favorite amendment, number one. It’s not like selling real estate, performing open-heart surgery, flying a place or cooking a hamburger to sell to somebody. You just do it. Now, distributing your material is a whole ‘nother matter (and another topic for another day)..Citizen journalism is really amateur journalism. But citizen sounds a whole lot more ... more ...
professional. And when I say amateur I don’t mean poor-quality per se, but rather the fact that it’s your avocation not vocation.
Thanks to cell phones, voice mail, IM and everything else, citizen journalism is alive and well. We saw it in spades on Friday, when gas prices started to soar based on predictions of Hurricane Ike slamming into the oil ports in Texas. $4.50/$5/$5.35 a gallon. Crazy stuff. We heard the rumors, then put out an email request for help finding these places. The calls, cellphone pictures, emails just started pouring in. Incredible. So rather than tracking down places, much of our reporting was verifying these numbers. Which is a different task. An important task. But an easier task. Calling in tips to the newspaper didn’t start with the Web. But the technology has made it easier.
Your host is Ken Otterbourg, the managing editor at the Winston-Salem Journal. It's a forum to discuss the media, from
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