Links
Journalistic Must-Reads
- Poynter – Industry news and tips from the pros
- Editor & Publisher – More industry news
- NewsU – Free (and some paid) training resources
Multimedia Pointers
- Teaching Online Journalism – Tip sheets and blog posts from multimedia wizard Mindy McAdams
- Will Sullivan’s Journerdism – A mix of journalism- and technology-related posts and an always surprising feed of Delicious bookmarks from Will Sullivan
- News Videographer – Angela Grant tells you how to make your videos work online
- MediaStorm – Stunning video and audio slideshows
- Mastering Multimedia – Thoughts from photographer-turned-multimedia producer Colin Mulvany
- Multimedia Shooter – If it concerns multimedia journalism, you’ll find it here
- Interactive Narratives – Home to plethora of multimedia projects for you to ogle
- Andy Dickinson – They like video journalism across the pond, too
- Innovation in College Media – See what innovations are coming from budding jouranlists
- The Sixth W – A programmer’s take on journalism
Thoughts from the Copy Desk
- ACES – Editor-centric news, networking opportunities and training resources
- Andy Bechtel – New home for Andy’s thoughts on language
- Bill Walsh – Things that make editors cringe and other word-related postings
- John McIntyre – Yep, that the guy with the bow tie.
- Words to the Wise – Thoughts from Kathy Schenck at the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
If You’re Just Starting
Note: This list is a bit out-dated, as in it features only a few of the slew of blogs I follow. When I get a chance, I’ll expand this list. However, if you’re just starting to read your favorite blogs in an RSS reader like Google Reader, let me give you a head start.
Download my 66 favorite journalism-related blogs and import them into your brand new Google Reader. That will automatically subscribe you to them, and it’ll save you tons of time of searching for worthwhile blogs.
How to import: Download the XML file. Log into your Google Reader. Click Settings in the top right corner. Then go to Import/Export (the second to last tab, I think.) Upload the XML file and then go back to your Google Reader. You should see it filled with all sorts of goodies.



Recent Comments