aloha nico.

  • Archive
  • RSS
  • Ask me anything
I didn’t begin as a reporter at my school paper (was rejected, actually) or an intern at a magazine. I began as a blogger. In 2003. Sources didn’t return the calls of bloggers in 2003. And so I developed a heavy reliance on, and a healthy attachment to, the ugly stepsister of reporting: research. Since I couldn’t depend on experts to tell me what they thought, I had to read what they’d written. And that had some drawbacks — there really is no substitute for talking to people — but also some advantages. The difference between reading a think tank paper and interviewing the author is the difference between learning what an expert thinks you should know and learning what you think you want to know. There are advantages to both. But I think traditional outlets have a tendency to overvalue the benefits of interviews and undervalue the benefits of document diving.
Ezra Klein, explaining correctly why bloggers often provide better insight and analysis than traditional reporters (via jeffmiller, asprettyasasong, somethingchanged, tarts, buyhercandy)

Source: jeffmiller

  • 2 years ago > jeffmiller
  • Comments
  • Permalink
  • Share
    Tweet

Recent comments

Blog comments powered by Disqus
← Previous • Next →

About

I enjoy rich text evernote checklists, hefeweizen, the colour purple (the actual colour, and not the movie or book), debbie downerism, change purses, and stopping to get coffee even though I'm already mad late for work.

email me? nmitchellduff at gmail dot com

or
find me on aim, facebook, flickr, foursquare, last.fm, twitter, or empireavenue

Twitter

loading tweets…

  • RSS
  • Random
  • Archive
  • Ask me anything
  • Mobile

Effector Theme by Carlo Franco.

Powered by Tumblr