Winter 2010

The Beat Goes On—Its Rhythm Changes

Beats form the backbone of a newsroom, so what happens when resources shrink, new voices emerge and platforms multiply? Which topics stick around? What new beats emerge? As Twitter cranks up the demand for constant interaction, how do beat reporters handle the daily grind? How do journalists connect with news consumers in a time of information overload? As e-book reading surges, is self-publishing the way to go? Dig in to these stories—and listen to Gabrielle Goodman perform our cover’s song that she wrote.

 

The Beat Goes On—Its Rhythm Changes
Introduction (1 comment)
By Melissa Ludtke, Editor
The Beat: The Building Block
The Capriciousness of Beats (1 comment)
‘Sometimes the overlooked topics may be more important than the ones that dominate the headlines.’
By Kate Galbraith
It’s Scary Out There in Reporting Land (18 comments)
‘Beats are fundamental to journalism, but our foundation is crumbling.’
By David Cay Johnston
Books From the Beat: A More Complicated Equation
By Jan Gardner
The Blog as Beat (1 comment)
‘… the Internet changes the concept of the beat: A blog such as ours becomes a valued partner of political reporters offering them additional sources and fresh angles for stories.”
By Juanita León
A Journalistic Vanishing Act (6 comments)
‘As a refugee from daily newspapering, I’m one of thousands of arts journalists who in the past couple of years have found themselves footloose.’
By Elizabeth Maupin
From Newsroom to Nursery—The Beat Goes On (6 comments)
‘That is when I had the epiphany: These early years of motherhood were like being a rookie reporter on the beat.’
By Diana K. Sugg
Advice About Beats
By Diana K. Sugg
Family Beat: Stories We Tell Around the Kitchen Table (1 comment)
‘If we tell them well, it won’t matter what medium we use. They can be our saving grace.’
By Beth Macy
The Beat: The Watchful Eye
It’s Expertise That Matters
‘The next wave of journalistic progress will channel its power from the underlying principle of the reporter’s beat …’
By Michael Riley
When Local Eyes Were Watching Their Lawmakers
‘As beat writers know, it’s in doing these routine stories that they sniff out situations worthy of deeper digging.’
By George E. Condon, Jr.
A Changing of the Guard in Washington, D.C. News Bureaus
By Jan Gardner
Statehouse Beat Woes Portend Bad News for Good Government (1 comment)
‘There’s an analogy between statehouse beat reporters—well, beat reporters in general—and cops on the beat who know the neighborhood and everyone in it.’
By Gene Gibbons
Uncovering an Uncovered Story in Bell, California
By Jonathan Seitz
Argo Network: NPR’s New Group of Beat-Driven Blogs
By Jonathan Seitz
Investigative Reporting About Secrecy (1 comment)
‘… it would be a terrific investment of reportorial resources, not to mention a valuable public service, to dedicate an entire beat to secrecy.’
By Ted Gup
The Beat: The Science Angle
There’s Something to Be Said for Longevity
‘… the hardest part of my job often isn’t getting people to talk. It’s sifting through the streaming fire hose of news to figure out which stories truly warrant more attention—and deciding how best to tell them.’
By Craig Welch
The Science Beat: Riding a Wave, Going Somewhere (1 comment)
‘While I can’t figure out who is paying a lot of these science reporters, the quantity of what they produce does not seem to have fallen off nearly as much as the cratering of traditional U.S. news media would predict.’
By Charles Petit
The Guardian Brings Scientists as Bloggers Into the Mix
By Jonathan Seitz
Guardian Blogger Spoofs Science Journalism (1 comment)
By Jonathan Seitz
Eclectic, Entertaining and Educational—The 21st Century Science Beat
‘While the science beat is old—dating back to even before Sputnik—the approach we take is new. ’
By Paul Rogers
Curator’s Corner
Expanding the Vision of the Nieman Foundation
‘Ten years later, as I prepare to retire in June, the foundation has a respected voice in the vibrant conversations about the future of journalism.’
By Bob Giles
Letters to the Editor
VietNamNet: Responses to a Fall 2010 Nieman Reports Article
The Beat: The Topic as Target
Modern-Day Slavery: A Necessary Beat—With Different Challenges (2 comments)
The nonprofit Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism is dedicating a gift of funding to support a reporter’s effort to gather and tell these stories.
By E. Benjamin Skinner
Visual Stories of Human Trafficking’s Victims (1 comment)
An Essay in Words and Photographs
By Melanie Hamman
Geographic Fortunes—and Misfortunes—Define This New Midwest Beat
‘Although the challenges facing this Midwest region are primarily economic, Changing Gears’ mandate is more than to just tell business stories.’
By Micheline Maynard
Community Host: An Emerging Newsroom ‘Beat’ Without a Guide (4 comments)
TBD’s community engagement team listens—and responds—in a city where everyone is talking: Washington, D.C.
By TBD’s Community Engagement Team
The Beat: The Sports Reporter
The Sports Beat: A Digital Reporting Mix—With Exhaustion Built In
‘It’s thorough in the way a thousand-piece jigsaw puzzle is thorough; it’s all there, the consumer just has to put the pieces together.’
By Dave Kindred
Red Smith: He Made Words Dance
By Jonathan Seitz
Frank Deford: Sports Writing in the Internet Age
Excerpt from a speech by Frank Deford
The Sports Tweet: New Routines on an Old Beat (2 comments)
‘As much as possible, I adhere to the same reporting rules with social media when it comes to breaking news. Do I have a reliable source? Is this information on the record? Am I absolutely sure the information is accurate?’
By Lindsay Jones
The Sportswriter as Fan: Me and My Blog
‘Our blog made no bones about its utter subjectivity, but we were seen as more objective than those for whom objectivity was a commandment.’
By Jason Fry
It’s a Brand-New Ballgame—For Sports Reporters
‘This is why the advice is simple: Don’t look down from that tightrope; your safety net is gone, likely forever.’
By Malcolm Moran
Gay Talese: On What Endures in Sports Writing Amid Change
A Shrinking Sports Beat: Women’s Teams, Athletes
As newsroom staffs shrink and eyeballs measure interest, women’s sports coverage is losing ground it once seemed to be gaining.
By Marie Hardin
Words & Reflections
From Journalism to Self-Publishing Books
‘Our experience with print-on-demand books offers promising and challenging news.’
By Fons Tuinstra
Figuring Out What a 21st Century Book Can Be (1 comment)
When an author’s insistence on publishing under a Creative Commons license met resistance from book publishers, he decided to self-publish his book with Lulu.
By Dan Gillmor
Creating a Navigational Guide to New Media (1 comment)
Two veteran journalists illuminate the convergent paths ahead—for those who consume news and those who report it.
Excerpt from a book by Bill Kovach and Tom Rosenstiel
Measuring Progress: Women as Journalists
In ‘The Edge of Change’ the perspective is forward-looking, even if many of the challenging issues of the past endure for female reporters and editors.
By Kay Mills
Nieman Notes
Returning Home to Sri Lanka to Face Difficult And Delicate Questions in Perilous Times (2 comments)
‘In the capital’s cafés and elegant drawing rooms open criticism of the state was soundly rejected on the funny logic that war must be won at all costs.’
By Suvendrini Kakuchi
Class Notes
Compiled by Jan Gardner
Unforgettable Characters Encountered in Covering the Civil Rights Movement (3 comments)
‘Looking back on these people who are larger than life, I wonder: In fiction, who would believe them?’
By Wayne Greenhaw