ONLINE FIRST! This article by @docpics, @lisakrantz, and Cory MacNeil uses a Q-method to determine audiences' levels of comfort with the publication of graphic news #photographs. https://t.co/UidOPqqGIg
Some work by student photojournalists covering the unrest on their campuses via the Guardian. (Seeing some that should show up in College Photographer of the Year entries next fall!) #CPOY
https://t.co/ycmIeW2dv0
Don McCullin: “Photojournalism is dead. We’ve become obsessed with glamour and gloss: footballers, narcissism and gossip. Nobody wants the pictures I used to take.” https://t.co/TgycI7fdog
PhD student @lisakrantz presenting her research about the cumulative effects on photojournalists of covering mass shootings at the AEJMC Southeast Colloquium. #MizzouMade
You may use AI every day and not even realize it.
You may even rely on it for some of your news and information.
Learn more in the latest episode of "What the Media?!!?" as I talk with @Mizzou@mujschool@csowsley@docpics#AI#MediaLiteracy
https://t.co/YOLGgyQTQ1
@ryanjthomas83 Hazing. Kind of like the tenured profs get the internal, larger offices out of the way of traffic and the assistant “working toward tenure” ones get the office next to the main traffic from the large lecture hall.
@ryanjthomas83 Each review has a folder. Title=review for journal name and deadline. Completed folders move into a folder for the year for the annual review.
@ryanjthomas83 Innovation in organizations is more complex (xxx). vs Innovation in organizations has generally focused on tech (see xxx, xxx, xxx). Providing some examples rather than an exhaustive list. But that’s just a seat of my pants answer.
@ryanjthomas83 If I’m following you correctly, my take is normal cite when you’re specifically referring to specific or factual information from an article. This is where I get this point. The “see such and such” refers to more of a general example.
Photojournalist Bill Biggart killed covering the World Trade Center on 9/11. Journalists consistently put their lives and health at risk covering stories for the civic good and as historical witnesses. #photojournalism
Very happy to see this study I co-authored with @docpics and Cory MacNeill about the “Photo Bill of Rights” in print. In it, we argue that the Bill couples duties owed to the public with duties owed to journalists. https://t.co/n9Zc6NBf8K