March 15, 2008

No Feed For You

ComputerUPDATE TO THE UPDATE, AND THEN NO MORE UPDATES: Yeah, there's something wrong with the Star feed, but who knows what the problem is. Whatever. Hopefully they'll have the whole thing uploaded later.

UPDATE: The Star's feed is coming through clearly on Ustream.tv, the live-streaming host website. It must be the redirect through IndyStar.com that's slowing down the process.

Here's a bit of a gripe directed toward the two television stations in town (you know who you are) that live-streamed Barack Obama's town hall meeting in Plainfield today: Why you gotta hate the Mac users of the world? At least set up your stream to support those of us who have installed Flip4Mac.

Presumably PC users were able to log on and watch the live coverage, which is more than the blogmistress can say for the Star's direct feed. Yes, it supported Macs, but the feed itself disappeared about three minutes into the event.

Clearly, our media market has a long way to go in the realm of online communications.

March 13, 2008

Preview The Star's New Website

New_2 The Indy Star will formally launch its new website design next week.

If you'd like to catch a sneak peek, click here.

Hat tip, friend o' the blog.

March 12, 2008

Star Deploys Writer, Photographer To Iraq

Indystar Indy Star reporter Will Higgins and photographer Bob Scheer shipped off to Iraq today.

The blogmistress wishes them safe travels as they cover an Indiana National Guard unit for the Star's special "Spirit of the 76th" section.

March 09, 2008

Hello, Glaring Error

IndystarUPDATE: Several sources have called to tell the rest of the story behind this gaffe. It was in no way, shape or form the fault of the bylined reporter or the person working the desk that night. Rather, the taglined reporter who was assigned to nab the verdict and ship it back to the mother ship on deadline didn't get his facts straight. He assumed that because a verdict had been handed down against the hospital that it also applied to the doctors. And we all know what happens when you assume.

The Indianapolis Star carried this above-the-fold correction alongside this story on the front page today:

A story on Page A1 in some editions Saturday incorrectly reported that a jury found against Dr. Gary Thompson and Dr. Michael Turner in connection with a 1998 child abuse case. The jury actually found in favor of both doctors. The story to the right reports the correct information. The Star apologizes for the error.

Can someone explain how in the world this happened?

The original story, which has been updated, now carries this correction:

Some editions of The Indianapolis Star Saturday incorrectly reported that a jury found against Dr. Gary Thompson and Dr. Michael Turner. The jury actually found in favor of both doctors. The story above reports the correct information. The Star apologizes for the error.

March 05, 2008

Pam Fine Leaving The Star

Indystar This just in:

Dennis Ryerson/INI
Sent by: Heidi Sims
03/05/2008 02:34 PM
To
StarNewsroom
cc
DIRECTORS AT INI
Subject: announcement

To the staff:

Pam Fine, in a message below, has some great news for her but not so great news for us.  As Pam explains, she is leaving The Star to assume the Knight Chair at the University of Kansas.  It's a great job for a person who, as we all know, is a teacher at heart who has vast knowledge to share about what we do.

We'll miss Pam's incredibly hard work, her passion, and her quest every day for improving the quality of what we do.  She has accomplished wonderful things at The Star.

Listing Pam's accomplishments isn't easy; there are so many of them.  She lead efforts to help us focus our work more effectively so we could better impact the lives of our readers. She established new standards and procedures that improved accountability as well as quality.  She was instrumental in our push to provide a livelier, more interesting front page every day.  She conceived the well-received IndySunday section.  She led great coverage of everything from elections to horrific murders.  There's nothing in the paper, apart from our editorial pages, that she didn't touch in a positive way. in the digital world, Pam has been critical to our many improvements in what we are offering on-line.

Of course, no description of Pam would be complete without noting her fine sense of humor, which lightened the heavy load and added to the solid teamwork that exists here.

Pam's last day here will be April 4. I know you will join me in wishing her the very best.

Dennis

March 04, 2008

Check Out IndianaPolitics.tv

Wishtv1 In case you haven't already seen it, WISH-TV has a slick new site, complete with its own separate Web address, entirely devoted to Indiana political races at every level of government.

Among other things, you can find information on candidates, check out the latest political coverage, and, if you're running for office, upload your own information.

The site fills an electronic space that's largely unoccupied and creates a new revenue stream for the station in an already-lucrative area of advertising.

An Open Letter To The Indy Star's New Print Format

Indystar Dear Indy Star's New Print Format:

Where did the news go?

Signed,
The Blogmistress

March 03, 2008

Thou Shalt Not Steal?

Newspaper2 While not directly tied to the local market, this is quite the big media story with Hoosier roots:

A White House official who served as President Bush's middleman with conservatives and Christian groups resigned Friday after admitting to plagiarism. Twenty columns he wrote for an Indiana newspaper were determined to have material copied from other sources without attribution.

Timothy Goeglein, who has worked for Bush since 2001, acknowledged that he lifted material from a Dartmouth College publication and presented it as his own work in a column about education for The News-Sentinel in Fort Wayne. The newspaper took a closer look at his other columns and found many more instances of plagiarism.

"The president was disappointed to learn of the matter and he was saddened for Tim and his family," White House press secretary Dana Perino said in a statement.

She said Goeglein had accepted responsibility and "has apologized for not upholding the standards expected by the president."

The White House sought deal with the embarrassing situation quickly, the same day the plagiarism was reported by a blogger, Nancy Nall, a former News-Sentinel columnist.

Word on the street is that Goeglein had been told by someone close to him that he needed to stop coping other people's work. He paid no heed to the warning.

February 29, 2008

WISH Responds To CanaRx

Wishtv WISH-TV has responded to a defamation lawsuit over its investigation into a Canadian company importing drugs to the United States. The Star reports:

WISH-TV (Channel 8) asked a federal judge this week to dismiss a defamation lawsuit against it by a Canadian pharmacy benefit company that sells to Americans.

CanaRx sued WISH in November saying it was defamed by a broadcast linking the company to sales of counterfeit imported drugs.

The Indianapolis TV station says Indiana's Anti-SLAPP Act protects the media against lawsuits over reports on public issues as long as the reporting was done in good faith and has "a reasonable basis in law and fact."

WISH charges that CanaRx's lawsuit, filed in November, is "attempting to silence media coverage of newsworthy events." At the time its lawsuit was filed, CanaRx had contracts with five Indiana municipalities, including Muncie, to offer mail-order prescription drugs to their employees.

The company said it knew of no reports of "bogus or counterfeit medicine" found in any of millions of prescriptions it's shipped to U.S. customers.

February 12, 2008

Taking A Break

Atlas It has not gone unnoticed that this blog hasn't been updated in a few weeks. Apologies for that, but the blogmistress has been a bit overwhelmed.

Accordingly and officially, the site will be on hiatus until March 3. If you've got something you just can't wait to talk about, feel free to make this your thread.

Thanks for your patience.

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