Showing posts with label twitter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label twitter. Show all posts

Monday, October 30, 2017

Blog/Tweets #1: Let's Look At Some Posts And Tweets!

The simplest way I had to explain this assignment was in terms of something many of us are already familiar with: sports coverage. In the same way we do a game preview, live game tweets and then a game recap, we were to do an event preview, live tweets following the event as it happened and then a recap of the event for this assignment.

Some took the sports analogy and did literally that, and I think that's a good place for us to start. Here is one person's preview post, and then their tweet stream and finally their recap. See how the preview sets things up for the tweet stream, and then the recap nicely gets to end result and ultimate outcome? This is how we want multimedia products to complement and not copy each other.

Now, let's look at some examples using this format with non-sports topics including ...

* A birthday party preview and tweets and recap.

* Returning bottles preview and tweets and recap.

* Cooking dinner preview and tweets and recap.



Friday, October 27, 2017

Tweets #1: Tweets Are Easy!


But that's less of a challenge than you may think.

That's because you're not limited to just one tweet. You can do as many tweets as you'd like!


So a single tweet is not a single story. Rather, a collection of tweets are. One tweet may be like sort of a lede, where it sums up the main point. following tweets are like the body of a story, with one tweet offering an update and another some relevant stats, and yet another a quote.


And that's the most basic value of Twitter -- it's another way to relay events live and as they happen to an audience who may not be near a TV or radio or whatever. You can essentially "broadcast" live, just using text sent to mobile devices of readers.


A collection of related tweets are unified by a hashtag; that is, the hashtag symbol on your keyboard (the thing that looks like a criss-cross fry; it's the number 3 key when under shift lock) followed by a unique phrase. For example, tweets at a convention I went to a few years ago were joined by the hashtag #ncmc13 (short for National College Media Convention 2013).

(That's what hash tags are really for, not simply so you can add a #snarky comment.)
You can supplement your tweets with photos, which can help tell the story beyond the 140 characters allowed in a tweet, and beyond simple words.


Ideally, the best tweet streams can be put in reverse order and read just like an inverted-pyramid news story, with (timewise) your first tweet summing up what happened, and the following tweets filling in   details and offering a chronology as something unfolds.

Here -- again, in reverse order, with the tweets in order of when they were posted -- is the State News' sports Tweet stream just before and from the press conference announcing a football coach's heart attack here a few years back:

Report: Football head coach Mark Dantonio suffered a heart attack but is OK.

There is a "important football-related press conference" scheduled for 1 p.m. It is unclear if it is related to reports of Dantonio's health

MSU: Dantonio will remain at the hospital for a few days for monitoring. Return to sidelines at a later date.

MSU: Offensive coordinator Don Treadwell will manage day-to-day responsibilities of head coach.

MSU: Dantonio had "symptoms consistent with a heart attack."

MSU: Dantonio had a cardiac catheterization procedure early Sunday morning.

AD Mark Hollis said Dantonio will not be on the sidelines for the Northern Colorado game Saturday.

Hollis: "This is a time for the Spartan nation to come together, to rally."

Dr. D'Haem of Sparrow Hospital said a full recover is expected.

Dr. D'Haem said procedure is very routine and happens often. Also said he expects no long-term negative impact. Return yet to be determined.

Dr. D'Haem said Dantonio began feeling symptoms around 12:30 a.m. Sunday.

Dr. D'Haem: Heart attacks are never good...but I would classify this as a rather small heart attack.

Hollis said he spent the night at the hospital until about 5:30, the returned to hospital this morning at 8.

Dr. D'Haem: "Stress doesn't cause coronary heart disease, but very stressful events can be a trigger."

Coach Treadwell on players' reaction: "They're handling it as well as they can. They love their head coach."

Hollis: "(Dantonio's) thoughts went immediately to his family and then to the football program."

Treadwell said the fact staff has been together for a number of years will make this process easier from a football point of view.

Dr. D'Haem said timetable for Dantonio's return will be taken week-by-week.


There's a lede. There's a nut graf. There's supporting details. There are quotes. There is background. It collectively qualifies as a journalistic story. And you did it within the confines of social media.


This is exactly how The Associated Press wire service has always filed breaking news stories as a story is breaking: line-by-line, with the idea the lines can be pasted together into a story. It allows the writer to push out a story (and an editor to edit copy) much faster than if he or she waited to have a mass of information combined into a story, and yet a reader still ends up with all the information they    need to consider the package in its totality.

So really, tweets are just a way of applying old journalistic skills in a new way.

Now, it's your turn. Your assignment is to live-tweet anything you are observing -- the latest episode of your favorite TV or radio show; a sporting event you're attending; your roommate eating dinner; whatever -- and send me a link to your Twitter account (which must be open to the public).


You will need to send a minimum of 12 tweets, with a unique hashtag applied to each. For this first assignment, I don't care what the news value is of your topic. I simply want to see your technical proficiency in live-tweeting something happening, as it happens.

Tweets #1: What NOT To Do


I received this query from a student last semester:

I was wondering if I could write my blog and tweet about a raft race/war I am participating in this week.


The answer was, no.

That's because we are trying to use Twitter as journalists. As journalists, we can be observers of something, but not participants. Being a participant would be a conflict of interest. Those standards don't go away just because we're tweeting.

So, the event should be something we are observing: a baseball game. Or your roommate making dinner. Or someone playing a video game. Or following your friends on an ice cream run.

It should not be something you are doing, like a baseball game in which you are playing. Or you making dinner. Or you describing a video game you're playing yourself, or your solo ice cream run.

The same person who wanted to tweet the raft race/war later suggested covering a game of "Capture The Flag," in which this person would not be participating. That's fine.

As long as we can simply observe and report, we can do our jobs as journalists. We can stay objective and can concentrate on reporting the story for our audience, as opposed to winning a race for ourselves, or boosting a race in which we're involved. 

Journalists are neutral observers, and never participants in what we report.

Blog/Tweets #1: What It Might Look Like


For our opening assignment in using social media and writing about breaking news, what I will ask you to do is to pick out anything you observe as part of your daily routine for which to write an online breaking news preview story, an online breaking news follow-up story, and a live tweet stream as the event is unfolding.

When I say I want you to do anything in your daily routine, I do mean anything. Cover your watching  your favorite TV show. Or your roommate making breakfast. Or a game on TV you're watching. Really, anything.


(I want these to be observations, not something you're participating in. For example, you can cover your roommate making breakfast, but not a first-person account of you making breakfast yourself. Just like with a news story, don't use first-person references.) 


The reason for that is that I simply want you to get used to the technical process, without having to do any real and time-consuming reporting. We will incorporate reporting in latter versions of this assignment.



The parameters  of the assignment include:


-- Each breaking news entry being about the SAME topic, being covered as a preview and then a recap of what happened

-- Each breaking news story staying over the 100-word minimum 
-- The breaking news stories being written in a journalistic style, as opposed to a first-person blog-like style
-- Each breaking news item containing two working hyperlinks, inserted onto text
-- A minimum of 12 tweets on the same subject as the breaking news topic 
-- Each tweet having a consistent unique hash tag, to allow the tweets to be chained together


Now, to give you an idea of what the final product might look like, let's look at breaking news/tweet combos from the first such assignment (cut-and-pasted here; though for this assignment I want you to do it on Twitter and blogspot.com and then send me the links) from a past JRN 200 class, and let's talk about what worked and what can be done better.


And we're off: 


  1. Girls begin to leave the kitchen and head to their 12:40 classes. Ryan will be serving lunch until 1:00pm. 
  2. The bus boys are beginning to clean the dishes of the girls who have already finished their meals. 
  3. More girls just arrived as Ryan puts out another round of chicken gyros. 
  4. Liz Redmond: "This is my favorite meal that Ryan makes!" 
  5. Chef Ryan made glutton-free chicken nuggets for a couple girls who can't eat the meal today. 
  6. The volume in the kitchen is louder than ever due to all the conversations by the girls. What is everyone talking about? 

  7. The girls just discovered the Italian wedding soup. 4 bowls were just poured. 
  8.    
    The smell of freshly cut tomatoes and onions are filling the kitchen. 
  9. Chef Ryan, a U of M fan, lost a bet to the girls & he has to wear a green and white tutu all week. 




  10. Chef Ryan just put out a fruit bar. Pineapple, cantaloupe, mangos, and oranges all freshly cut for the Theta girls. 

  11.   








    Chicken gyros, homemade by Chef Ryan, look the best I've ever seen them.  


















  12. 20 girls out of the 54 who live-in are attending lunch today. 
  13. It's almost lunch time at Kappa Alpha Theta with Chef Ryan! Chicken gyros are on the menu today. 


Now, here are the blog posts previewing and recapping the event:








Tuesday, November 5



Post

When it nears time for class, the ladies of Kappa Alpha Theta give their dishes to the bus boys who help clean up while Chef Ryan begins to prepare dinner. The bus boys are men from fraternities on campus who are expected to come by the sorority house at the end of each meal. Chef Ryan has only been with Theta for two years now and they've never been happier about hiring him from Campus Cooks. The girls always leave with their stomachs full and looking forward to dinner. It is rare when the girls have something bad to say about Chef Ryan's masterpieces. Today is was chicken gyros, wonder what it will be tomorrow?

Preview


Everyday at 11:30am, Kappa Alpha Theta's Chef Ryan has a full meal made and ready for the girls to eat. Each day it's a new meal, plus he will special make certain dishes for girls with allergies. Chef Ryan is a part of Campus Cooks here at Michigan State. Each Sorority and Fraternity have a Campus Cook Chef to cook for them 5 out of the 7 days a week. During lunch you can expect to see plenty of girls throughout all grades who live in the sorority come downstairs to the kitchen for a quick lunch before class. 

****** 

Here's another example:



  1. Erickson finished the race with a great time, got first, and just won the game despite her interruption! �� 
  2.   
    Sophie Smith ‏@sophiejrn200 Nov 5
    Erickson is on the edge of her seat on the futon, determined to take first place and win it all. 
  3. Erickson moved on from the city ride to test her skills in the final race against her computer opponents. 
  4. Baker apologized and just left the room. Erickson has returned to concentrating on her goal of winning. 
  5. Erickson is beyond frustrated that her chances of winning are in jeopardy now.  


  6. Erickson yells at her friend, Emily Baker, for her disturbance. 
  7. Erickson's friend from down the hall entered her room and has severely interrupted her game. 
  8. Erickson just collected a ticking time bomb and had Kirby shoot it at a hopeless victim. 
  9. The game is getting intense. Erickson is extremely focused.  
      
    ic.twitter.com/Nw0aayHiPp


  10.    
    Erickson is off to a good start, as usual, busting open boxes and collecting dozens of badges. 
  11. Erickson turned on her favorite game, Kirby Air Ride, and is beginning her quest through the city as Kirby. 
  12. Erickson kicked off her shoes, grabbed her GameCube remote and a blanket, and is now retrieving to the futon. 
  13. Nikki Erickson just returned to her dorm room for the first time since early this morning. She's eager to relax. 

Now, the blog posts:

Blog New Media #1 - Review 



Michigan State student Nikki Erickson quickly paired up with her GameCube controller when she came home from her class-filled day on Tuesday.

Erickson was going through her normal routine of dominating her favorite game, Kirby Air Ride, in an attempt to win it all as she had done many times in the past.


Just after busting open a crate with a bunch of badges inside to collect in the game, Erickson was interrupted when her friend down the hall, Emily Baker, entered her room unannounced.


Erickson's concentration had been blown and as a result, blew up at Baker. Baker left the room promptly after.


"I really didn't know she was so in the zone," Baker said. "I wouldn't have interrupted her if I knew."


Just when Erickson thought she had lost her chances, it was time for her final race that determined her fate.


After zooming past her computerized opponents as fast as lightning, receiving 3 speed boosts on the way, Erickson took first place and won the game.



Blog New Media #1 - Preview 

A student at Michigan State University plans to come home from a long day of classes on Tuesday and play her GameCube. Nikki Erickson has always enjoyed video games and playing Kirby Air Ride in her dorm room is something that helps her to unwind at the end of the day.

Erickson is extremely competitive and excels greatly at this game she plays so frequently. However, every time she sits down to begin to play, the excitement is just as great as before.


Erickson knows the game like the back of her hand, yet she strives to perform even better and accomplish more than she did in the game she played previous.


"I love playing my GameCube because it helps me forget my school work for a little while," said Erickson. "Instead of doing college algebra I get to zoom around on a Warpstar. Who wouldn't want to do that?"


Although that's an easily answered question, the one that's not is will Erickson successfully take on several races and mini games once again and win the game?