You can see my recent work at the following links. These include: a story about disabled access in Salford, a business feature on Salford City Radio, my coverage of an academic conference on The Fall and an interview with Turkish rock artist.
Thursday, 24 July 2008
My Recent Portfolio
at
16:36
0
comments
Labels: careers, journalism, manchester, media, newswriting, Salford, work
Friday, 18 July 2008
Manchester Media: Salford Online
Salford Online is a news and community website serving, well, Salford.
Long perceived as Manchester's "scruffy neighbour" (see here for the offending article), Salford has for years been playing catchup in terms of coverage and media outlets. Salfordonline attempts to redress this balance, and is looking for new amateur journalists and writers to cover the vast variety of stories on offer.
It's led by editor Brian Everall and a very small (ie single figure) team based in Eccles, but constantly provides high-quality journalism despite this lack of resources.
You may recognise star reporter Tom Rodgers from this site, or from his articles in the Paul Foot award-winning Salford Star (produced by mad scally Stephen Kingston) and on crossrhythms.co.uk!
at
17:00
0
comments
Labels: careers, journalism, manchester, media, newswriting, Salford, students, work
Thursday, 1 May 2008
Journalists Pissed off with PR - Official!
The PR vs Journalism war continues. Saw this and had to give you the link. It's a genius article about how not to handle journalists.
Click Here to Read More..
at
17:04
Labels: careers, journalism, manchester, media, newswriting
Wednesday, 27 February 2008
Librarians: A Dissection
As a library professional, one often feels that it would be better for us if no-one ever used libraries, if all the books should just stay on the shelf, perfectly primed for learning.
It's like filing, only horizontally. Placing the books in numerical order from left to right doesn’t sound that difficult, but
1) It’s hard, sweaty work, especially in libraries as the heating system is often in full flow.
2) You can develop a real crick in the neck from tilting your head to peer at book spines all day long
This is fairly simple. Unless of course you work at Keele University (which I did), as it’s one of the only libraries in the country that still uses the American Library of Congress system, where the books theoretically range from AAA000 to ZZZ999.
You can see the colour draining out of them (and for some computer scientists, they’re already pale).
There’s a lot of Virgos in this field. There’s also a lot of OCD-style behaviour exhibited.
If they work in the information searching section, guaranteed they’ll be amazing at pub quizzes. All that time spent researching random data has given them superpowers of information-handling.
They may be able to name the all members of Aztec Camera, The Spin Doctors and The Polyphonic Spree (depending on how current their tastes are). They will be able to tell you what all the flags of the world look like, and what the sizes of Champagne bottles are, in order.
A toast, then, to these unsung heroes of the educational system. Cheers!
at
15:29
Labels: careers, manchester, work