LBY3
The continuing adventures of Beau Yarbrough

HesperiaStar.com 2.1

Thursday, May 3, 2007, 14:41
Section: Journalism

The Hesperia Star

At long last, the full archives of all the stories moved over onto HesperiaStar.com (more than 500 older stories from the original site, including everything about the casino, everything relating to the last election, everything about Hesperians affected by 9/11 or serving in Iraq or Afghanistan, and much more) will be accessible sometime after next Tuesday. It’ll take Google and all the other search engines a few days to go through all the archive links, but once that happens, all the old stuff should be available through any search engine you care to use.



Army leans on soldier blogs, e-mails

Thursday, May 3, 2007, 14:13
Section: Journalism

Over the last few years, I’ve done several online interviews with soldiers serving in Iraq, including getting digital photos taken by them. It’s much more immediate, obviously, than waiting until they return and it’s something I wish I could do more of.

It’s probably over, though, according to a piece in Wired:

The U.S. Army has ordered soldiers to stop posting to blogs or sending personal e-mail messages, without first clearing the content with a superior officer, Wired News has learned. The directive, issued April 19, is the sharpest restriction on troops’ online activities since the start of the Iraq war. And it could mean the end of military blogs, observers say.

Military officials have been wrestling for years with how to handle troops who publish blogs. Officers have weighed the need for wartime discretion against the opportunities for the public to personally connect with some of the most effective advocates for the operations in Afghanistan and Iraq — the troops themselves. The secret-keepers have generally won the argument, and the once-permissive atmosphere has slowly grown more tightly regulated. Soldier-bloggers have dropped offline as a result.

The new rules (.pdf) obtained by Wired News require a commander be consulted before every blog update.

“This is the final nail in the coffin for combat blogging,” said retired paratrooper Matthew Burden, editor of The Blog of War anthology. “No more military bloggers writing about their experiences in the combat zone. This is the best PR the military has — it’s most honest voice out of the war zone. And it’s being silenced.”

Army Regulation 530–1: Operations Security (OPSEC) (.pdf) restricts more than just blogs, however. Previous editions of the rules asked Army personnel to “consult with their immediate supervisor” before posting a document “that might contain sensitive and/or critical information in a public forum.” The new version, in contrast, requires “an OPSEC review prior to publishing” anything — from “web log (blog) postings” to comments on internet message boards, from resumes to letters home.

Failure to do so, the document adds, could result in a court-martial, or “administrative, disciplinary, contractual, or criminal action.”

I’ve worked the PR side of the street, and I know of the frustrations of having someone go off-message, particularly when there’s the potential for leaking sensitive information. (Not to mention simply embarassing the leadership.)

Still, this is a real pity. Hopefully this will be revised or rolled-back.

Update: Not surprisingly, the folks over at the Columbia Journalism Review aren’t happy about this, either.

On the Media spoke to milbloggers, including Blackfive himself.



Edline in the Washington Post

Wednesday, May 2, 2007, 17:09
Section: Journalism

Earlier this week, the Washington Post published an article about Edline, an online site that allows parents to keep tabs on their children’s grades, attendance and other classroom activities. Both Hesperia High School and Sultana High School have Edline sites set up.

At the beginning of this semester, Laura Iriarte Miguel switched anatomy classes.

No big deal. Students at Quince Orchard High School in Gaithersburg can shift courses around at the start of each term. But when Iriarte Miguel remained on the roll in the wrong class for several days, her parents began receiving notices from Edline — an online, up-to-the-sec grade-tracking program used in Montgomery County middle and high schools — about her unexcused absences and zeros on quizzes.

Montgomery County high school senior Laura Iriarte Miguel is no fan of Edline, which records her grades and attendance in every subject.

Finally, one night at dinner, in between bites of spaghetti, her parents grilled her about her truancy and her rotten anatomy grades. She hadn’t told them she had opted into another class.

“They wanted to know why-why-why-why,” Iriarte Miguel says. She set them straight, but the air was still poisoned. The suspicion, she says, “accumulated in the back of their minds during the whole day.”

This could be a simple story of parental expectations and teenage lackadaisicalness. But it’s also a tale of an innovation at the nexus of a morphing world — symbolic of the changing nature of childhood, America’s abiding faith in education and the unforgiving quality of technology

If I wasn’t insanely busy this week — seriously, a week where the paper has to be done early, and where we have a lower-than-average page count is shaping up to be one of my busiest in my entire time here — I’d probably localize this story for Hesperia.



Texas journalism awards go nuts

Tuesday, May 1, 2007, 12:43
Section: Journalism

Society of Professional JournalistsThis Saturday, Peter and I will be going to the local Society of Professional Journalism awards banquet in Riverside. Every time, there’s always a few “huh” awards (including ones I’ve received), but overall, the integrity of the SPJs hasn’t ever been in question. I attribute weird awards to not knowing what else was submitted and maybe the judges burning out on seeing oodles of the same sorts of stories repeatedly (at least, that’s what I tell myself, since my soldier-home-from-Iraq pieces never win).

Well, that’s nothing compared to the scandal surrounding the Texas-area Katies awards:

Elizabeth Albanese, former press club president and winner of 10 Katies in the past four years, may have “rigged” the contest, according to the Dallas Morning News.

Rigged might be the wrong word. It turns out entries were never read and no competition was actually held. Albanese could not produce the names of any judges for the 2006 competition. Or, for that matter, the names of judges from 2005, or, come to think of it, 2004. She was unable to provide them, giving a variety of reasons, including her switch from one laptop to another, club officials said.

Elizabeth Albanese, 37, if that is her real name — court documents show her to be Lisa Albanese, 41 — has a history of psychotic behavior dating back to her adolescence, and has been arrested in Texas, Virginia and Maryland on charges including passing bad checks, fraud, theft and forgery.

Wow.



R. Kelly writes song for Virginia Tech

Tuesday, May 1, 2007, 10:42
Section: Virginia Tech

Black Virginia Tech flag

Grammy-award winning R&B artist and love machine R. Kelly has recorded a song inspired by the Virginia Tech shootings:

“Rise Up” will be available digitally May 15, and 100 percent of the net proceeds from its sale will go to the Hokie Spirit Memorial Fund, said Jive Records, Kelly’s record label.

Kelly, 40, wrote the inspirational ballad after watching the events unfold on television while he was on tour, Jive said.

The lyrics include the lines: “Rise up, when you feel you can’t go on, rise up, and all of your hope is gone, rise up, when you’re weak and you can’t be strong.”

The Hokie Spirit Memorial Fund was created to provide assistance to the victims of the families, as well as grief counseling and other needs for those affected by the shootings.

Thanks, R. We’re still keeping all the freshman girls away from you.


 








Copyright © Beau Yarbrough, all rights reserved
Veritas odit moras.