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Al's Morning Meeting

Home > Al's Morning Meeting
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Al Tompkins
Story ideas that you can localize and enterprise. Posted by 7:30 a.m. Mon-Fri.


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A dozen sites
I'm diggin'


1. You can lay subtitles or text bubbles on video -- any video. I will be using this to teach about storytelling.

2. Canon responds to the Nikon D90 with its own SLR still camera that records HD video.

3. Why do 97 percent of this railroad's workers get disability checks?

4. I now use Utterz to file audio reports. You can use your computer's mic or any phone. It's simple and would be a great reporter's tool.

5. I used Monitter to monitor what people said on Twitter about Ike. Just change the subjects to whatever you want to look out for.

6. I'm reading all about the Nikon D90, which shoots photos and HD video with the same $1K body.

7. Qik streams live video straight from a cell phone.

8. This fall many PBS stations will air this documentary on whether there is a water crisis in the Southwest.

9. This site watches TV and Web mentions of candidates. It also monitors Tweets and more.

10. The first look at the $179 Google phone.

11. Instead of scheduling meetings by e-mail, everybody can work out a time and date online.

12. Here are tons of GREAT tools that will help you find anything on flickr.

Sites marked with a * have been added recently.

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EDITOR'S NOTE: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas, edited story excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites, as well as original concepts and analysis. When the information comes directly from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be provided whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but depends on the accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. We will correct errors and inaccuracies when we become aware of them.


Chelsea Is Fair Game
When she was a kid, Chelsea Clinton was, and should have been, more or less off-limits for news coverage. But now that she is campaigning for her mother and is deriding President Bush, I think she is fair game for tough questions.

I am writing today's column from Lexington, Ky., where, as it so happens, Ms. Clinton is as well. She still answers no questions from journalists. That does not mean they should not ask, or that they should comply with silly press requirements.

The fleas come with the dog: Be a public figure and you get to answer tough questions.

CJR notes
:

Chelsea's write-ups have been write-arounds: she still refuses to do press interviews, Team Clinton's logic being, as The Nation's John Nichols put it, "that the daughter of the candidate could…handle questions from crowds but not from journalist -- apparently on the theory that the journalists would be indelicate." And on the specific assumption, Nichols wrote, "that a reporter would have asked Chelsea Clinton about her father’s affair with a White House intern."

Posted by Al Tompkins 12:01 AM Apr 2, 2008
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