▍國際傳媒新聞:2019/08/16~2019/08/22
✅ABC NEWS|20190822
🔗How our 50:50 Project aims to increase the representation of women on ABC News
The first is developing and commissioning more content across the ABC News network that women find relevant and interesting. The second part of ABC 50:50 is working to increase the contribution of women as expert talent or commentators and contributors across our programming.
✅Columbia Journalism Review|20190821
🔗Can music journalism transcend its access problem?
A music writer’s job is easily romanticized: Imagine getting paid to listen to music, that most universal, immediately resonant, and cool-conferring of art forms. Sure, modern writers spend just as much time clearing their inbox as they do panning for aural gold, but that’s a small price to pay for hearing new records ahead of time, and going to shows for free. Advance far enough, and they might even get to hang out with the artists themselves, hopefully in the pages of a ritzy publication.
✅Columbia Journalism Review|20190820
🔗Playing at climate catastrophe
For the tens of thousands who live and work along the California coast, no issue looms as large as sea-level rise. Since Rosanna Xia joined the Los Angeles Times in 2010, this symptom of climate change has dominated her coastal beat. “Everyone acknowledges the problem,” she says. “The water is rising, but what we’ve built and treasured along the coast is fixed in place with nowhere to go. What do we do?”
✅REYNOLDS JOURNALISM INSTITUTE|20190820
🔗Push alerts: Useful or annoying?
The Associated Press plans to study push alerts and how to make them more useful for audiences and publishers.
✅PROPUBLICA|20190820
Almost 100 journalists and journalism students have gone through our Data Institute and scholarship program. Many have told us that their experience shaped their lives and careers.
✅BLOOMBERG|20190820
🔗The Sports News Site Haters Love to Dunk on Keeps Signing Up Subscribers
The Athletic now has more than a half-million readers, but can it turn a profit?
✅CNN|20190818
🔗Websites that peddle disinformation make millions of dollars in ads, new study finds
At least $235 million in revenue is generated annually from ads running on extremist and disinformation websites, according to a new study from the Global Disinformation Index provided exclusively to CNN ahead of its September release. That means the people behind websites propagating hate or false information don’t just have an ideological influence — they can also make big money from advertisers who often are unhappy or unaware that their brand name is being displayed alongside content they do not endorse.
✅DIGIDAY|20190815
🔗How The Times of London increased digital subscribers 19% in a year
Over the last year, The Times of London has undertaken a detailed content audit to understand what makes its readers tick. The outcome has given the newsroom more understanding on what it should commission, boosting more regular reading, in turn, driving retention and subscriptions.
整理:朱弘川╱編輯:鄭凱榕