Posts Tagged ‘social network’

Poll: do ‘one-man-bands’ mean more news?

P&T readers think social media is “tweet.”

Over half of our poll respondents said that they use social media such as Facebook and Twitter several times each day. In the binary opposite, just under a quarter voted that they never or rarely use it.

This week’s poll is inspired by a comment about how “one-man-bands” are very prevalent in many television news markets, even bigger ones, yet not in Erie. This relatively new approach, where the reporter takes his/her own camera, shoots, reports, then edits each story by themselves, could mean that more people would cover more stories. Or it could mean more layoffs and the same or less news.

Could the "one-man-band" approach to TV news mean more coverage on Erie stations?

  • No - management will just cut more jobs and reporters would have to work harder for each story (72%, 21 Votes)
  • Yes - more reporters at more places means more news (17%, 5 Votes)
  • I don't know/I'm ambivalent (11%, 3 Votes)

Total Voters: 29

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Any Erie lifecasters?

While at the Jersey Shore this week, where the weather was significantly better than its been around here, I stumbled upon an article from McClatchy Newspapers in The Press of Atlantic City about “lifecasting.”

If you are not familiar with that term, as the headline suggests, lifecasting is more than your typical Facebook status update or tweet about where you are heading for lunch. These are people, and there are thousands, who are using portable video cameras, web cams, and camera phones to chronicle or even live stream most of the events that occur in their everyday lives.

Read the story of lifecaster Shama Kabani of Frisco, TX:

When Shama Kabani of Frisco, Texas, got married last month, she considered tweeting as she walked down the aisle.

But then she thought better of it. (Not to mention, her phone mysteriously disappeared about an hour before the ceremony.)

For Kabani, 24, owner of Click to Client, a social-media consulting firm, using Twitter during her wedding probably wouldn’t have surprised anyone, but even she has social-networking limits.

“He deserves better than that,” Kabani said of her new husband.

On a normal day, Kabani estimates she spends six to seven hours a day on social-media networks. She has more than 17,000 followers on Twitter and so many friends on Facebook – 5,000 – that she can’t add any more. She also has an online TV show, Shama.Tv, in which she talks about social media.

“I had my first computer in the fourth grade, and I haven’t looked back since,” she said.

The story of Shama and others made me wonder if there are any lifecasters in Erie. Although I could not find anyone with an “Erie” tag at Justin.tv or even through an extensive Google search, there is a gal from Erie, Desiree Cramer, who used to room and produce videos with Pittsburgh-native and popular lifecaster Justine Ezarik back in 2007 and before.

I find this wholesale sharing of personal information amusing given the context of identity theft and protecting privacy rights.  Are these lifecasters a serious element in our social media structure, or are they just wannabe reality TV stars bypassing the TV network gatekeepers?

Your new Facebook user name

Here’s what was on my Facebook home page this morning:

Soon you will be able to have a username

Starting on Saturday, June 13th, at 12:01am in your time zone, you’ll be able to choose a username for your Facebook account to easily direct friends, family, and coworkers to your profile.

FacebookWhat this means that instead of your Facebook profile being designated by a number, you can have an individually designated user name so your friends can type “/username” and find you.

Good, simple idea, right? Well, nothing that Facebook ever does is without controversy. Everyone is pretty confident that there will be a mad dash to secure names, but it could go bad, even to the point of squatting on names to extort cash from people who really have that name, as some are saying. I should be OK in getting a user name close to my desire, but probably my friend Bob Smith will have to come up with something really creative.

Meanwhile, I wonder if making my Facebook profile a true personal home page accessible by anyone searching on Google or Bing isn’t the exact opposite of my desire to use Facebook as a way to communicate to only people I know and trust. I don’t need another home page to the World Wide Web. The greatest selling point to me in even participating in Facebook is its security features.

To some folks, this change to user names will get a big Hallelujah! But others may think that it’s the beginning of a slow death to a great application.

Poll: who is the best user of social networking

I guess the readers of Press and Tower weren’t in the mood for fun last week. My poll asking about your favorite E-Trade commercial was voted on by only 8 people. Oh well, I still laugh every time I play them!

A very hot topic these days on the web is the traditional media’s acceptance of social networking tools. These days reporters are using Twitter, Facebook and blogging to tear down the walls between the news consumer and the practitioner.

This week I would like your opinion on which television station you think is doing the best job of using social media.

Which Erie TV newsroom is the best at using social media (blogging, Facebook, Twitter, etc.)?

  • WSEE (62%, 18 Votes)
  • WJET/WFXP (24%, 7 Votes)
  • WICU (14%, 4 Votes)

Total Voters: 29

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Who are Erie’s black bloggers?

For the past few weeks I have been on a quest to educate myself on the acceptance and participation in the new media by Erie’s minority community. Sorry to say, I have not been very successful in getting information on how connected African-American, Hispanic and other ethnic minority members are to the various outlets of new media.

Let me preface in saying that it seems like we have at least adequate participation in the mainstream media by minorities. In addition to newspaper and television reporters and production staffs, you can hear minority voices on community access television and on the radio. In fact 90.5 WERG does a great service to our community in providing media balance through the highly regarded Super Soul Weekend programming, as well as the Sunday ethnic shows.
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The Facebook phenomenon

For a few years now I had been hearing about Facebook, the social networking system based on geographic and school-based networks. I had always heard it contrasted with MySpace, the original networking system that now seems like the Wild Wild West.

Because of obvious privacy issues, I had been very wary of social networking sites. But as my children have grown older and wished to connect with their friends via this new technology, I’ve walked with them with my eyes wide open.

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