Digital journalism – Course syllabus

This course is designed to acquaint students with many aspects of digital journalism and to help them become better storytellers. We will combine the bedrock skills of researching, reporting and news writing with modern multimedia tools to create dynamic stories that engage and excite audiences. Then we will push a button and unleash those stories into the world.

We will create news stories and blogs, podcasts, videos, and photo galleries. Students will design their individual WordPress websites, where they will display their work. Class will begin with a short lecture, followed by hands-on digital production using such programs and apps as: iMovie, Audacity, Storify, Twitter and WordPress.

We will spend the bulk of our time making stuff. There will be many opportunities to collaborate, showcase your work in class, and at the end of the semester you will leave with a digital portfolio that makes you marketable to today’s editors.

Professional Bay Area multimedia journalists will visit class to discuss how emerging technologies are revolutionizing their craft. They will lend their expertise to the students, and answer their questions about the realities of today’s digital newsroom. This course will help any Mills student who wants to learn how to construct a digital narrative with a beginning, middle and an end, in a way that engages readers who have come to expect mobile, interactive, news.

The course is designed to strengthen students in several areas: embracing creative risks, being fearless in the face of technical challenges, and working collaboratively to solve problems. We are not aiming for technical perfection but rather for interesting content and creative approaches to telling stories.

Future of Digital News Market Lies in Regional Languages

As the modern world has more ‘prosumers’ (consumers-as-producers), can a systemic reorganization of our media be far behind? Anubhav Mishra writes about the emergence of neo-journalism in regional language media and its ramifications on the growth of the Internet in India.

Vernacular digital media in India didn’t see much development until the mid-2000s. With the telecom boom in the non-urban areas, where local languages flourish the most, connectivity has dramatically increased.

We can divide the nation by its communication experience, into ‘real India’, where people are connected with each other ‘offline’ or physically, and ‘virtual India’, where people are connected to each other through social media, blogs, YouTube channels etc.

Digital journalism: The bigger media houses have therefore begun to adopt neo-journalistic methods (integration of media platforms) in regional languages to reach out to the Indian masses. Only 10% of the literate 76% know English and of those 10%, about 2% are ‘technologically challenged’. So instead of focusing on English as the digital lingua franca, regional news houses have turned to regional languages such as Hindi, Gujarati, Marathi, Tamil, Telugu, Bengali, Kannada, Assamese, and so on. A few months ago, India was pleasantly surprised to see Facebook login page in Devanagari script.

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It’s a mobile world: Mobile phone purchasing capability of Indians has increased from 151 million sets in 2009 to 348 million sets in 2013 and is expected to cross 500 million mark by the end of 2015.The analysis by m-Portal suggests that while there were about 2 million Smart Phones in country in 2009, the numbers have increased not 2 or 5 or 10 but almost a whopping 15 folds to 29 million smartphones in 2013. By the end of 2015, this figure is expected to hit at least 50 million. This underscores the potential of the immense market for online news in regional languages. People with access to the technology are much more comfortable in—and starting to seek media platforms in—their own language.

App-based: It has also been found that people prefer a mobile application over the actual websites. Recently the Hindi-language channel ABP launched ABP Live across all smartphone platforms like Windows Store, Playstore and OS. Similarly Aaj Tak has a news app across all three popular platforms.

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Meanwhile, India’s net traffic is expected to increase fivefold by the end of 2015 and most of it will be accessed via mobile. As per the 2010 McKinsey digital consumer survey, while in 2010 internet had only 7% of penetration in Indian public, it is expected to rise up to 35% in 2015. Whereas 79% of the Internet-friendly population is expected to come online via mobile platform and 41% (that is, more than half of the above figure) will be exclusively via mobile. So how does growth in internet traffic interest the vernacular or regional news content producers? According to a latest study conducted by Internet and Mobile Association of India and IMRB International, regional content availability can boost the growth of Internet in India by 24%. The study said that in 2013 the regional language content users grew by 15% to 71.8 million from 45 million in 2012. Hence, the integration of regional language with news dissemination process and providing them proper technological platform can lead to immense growth of regional media.

*Loosely translated from Tamil, “You got that right!”

15 REASONS WHY JOURNALISM IS STILL ALIVE

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Everybody is a Journalist”. With more than 177 million smart phone users in India, the situation has worsened as the amount of content being generated everyday is superfluous. Citizen journalism is a new emerging trend that has made anyone with access to a smart phone the ultimate crusader for anything and everything, says Piyush D. Jha, Broadcast Journalist-to-be, India Today Media Institute.

The internet has brought with it a spectrum of information that can be difficult to process and leading to misinterpretation. There is a virus in the viral content which needs to be vaccinated right from its source. Everybody, it seems, is a journalist.

So why hasn’t journalism collapsed already? Why do we still watch news on TV, read the papers or install news apps?

Here are some factors:

1. Journalism depends on human interaction. So as long as there exists our compulsive need to interact with other humans, journalism will continue to stimulate us. Although automated news-writing systems have come up, there is no technology (as of now) that can cough up analyses and expert advice.

2. Journalism is extremely adaptive. When there was no technology, there were parchments. Now we have access to e-papers, news applications,websites, blogs. Journalism has always worked hand in hand with technology.
In fact a study reveals that 88% of Indian journalists spend over four hours online on any given workday. Most news companies and agencies have their own websites and Twitter handles that keep trending all day long.

3. Journalism is unbiased, and has no scores to settle. Non-journalists who take matters into their own hands often have their own vested interests involved. Also credibility is cardinal. Who would you rather trust?

4. Journalism provides analysis. Only trained journalists can explain a complicated event or process in a comprehensible narrative. Television and radio news is extremely relevant in India as 282 million people still cannot read and write. With so many people dependent on the media, journalism is certainly here to stay.

5. Good journalism, whether in print, on TV, on the internet, or on the radio, can impart citizens with social empathy and a deeper sense of community. The recent coverage on rapes in India has garnered worldwide sensitivity toward the issue.

6. Journalism serves as a public forum in the society. It gives a voice to the common man by allowing opinions and comments. There is instant feedback. It makes sure that everyone has a voice and that it is heard. It thereby renders the term ‘Citizen Journalism’ redundant.

7. Journalism mobilizes public opinion. The media makes sure that the rights of the poor and defenseless are upheld. Great media campaigns can change history and shape new laws. When you have a question to ask the government about their policies, the journalist does it for you at your convenience.

8. News means verified information. The journalist’s job is to provide information in such a way that people can assess it and then make up their own minds what to think. If a fact is unverified, it defeats the purpose of Journalism.

9. Journalism has fostered a sense of public courage: With the Supreme Court striking down the controversial Section #66A of the Information Technology Act, the importance of free speech and expression has simply been re-emphasized. So journalists, bloggers and tweeps: there is nothing to be afraid of. The digital revolution represents freedom which is a decisive break away from the old media oligopoly into a world which is more participative and democratic.

10. It’s big business. Journalists are no more mere stereotypes who roam around with#jholas clad in #kurtas, There is way too much money involved in the profession now. Media companies generated Rs 1.12 trillion in 2013. If journalism was dying, how did this revenue increase 19% in just one year?

11. There are over 100 colleges and professional institutions with over 12,000 students of journalism in India alone. This directly indicates the interest of the youth towards journalism. There is an entire generation of young reporters, photographers and editors who are prepared and enthusiastic to fulfill journalism’s role in a democratic society.
(http://www.mediawatchglobal.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Sixty-Years-of-Indian-Journalism-Education.pdf)

12. There are countless journalists alive and dead who have changed world history forever. Glenn Greenwald (https://twitter.com/ggreenwald) , the journalist who broke the famous WikiLeaks – NSA spying story, was given access to a cache of 58,000 documents gathered by a young security analyst and former intelligence agent,#EdwardSnowden.

13. Contemporary media = traditional media + online media. With the contemporary media increasingly becoming a mix of several genres, the interest in it has only peaked.

14. There is a clear opportunity for journalism to rebuild its credibility. The internet has become a market full of biased and often prejudiced opinions. There has never been a stronger need for reliable information. Only effective journalists can ask the right questions and get us the right answers at the same time.

15. Journalism is (still) a respectable field. As widely criticized as he is, the irrepressible news anchor #ArnabGoswami gets the highest ratings for the channel with his shows, underscoring the message that “you can love us or hate us, but you cannot stop us.”

ReAdapting Shakespeare-Maqbool

Movie review - Maqbool

Vishal Bhardwaj first forays into adapting Shakespeare for local audiences with his critically acclaimed Maqbool. Though Hindi cinema’s romance with Shakespeare began with Do Dooni Chaar(adaptation of Comedy of Errors) in 1968, Maqbool is Hindi film industry’s first adaptation ofMacbeth. By invoking the theme of Mumbai’s notorious underworld, Bhardwaj has contemporized Macbeth without diluting the complex and universal issues raised in the Shakespearean play. Using the age-old cautionary tale of unchecked ambition and its fateful consequences, Bhardwaj has created a film that works both as typical commercial gangster drama as well as thoughtful art cinema.

The noir world of Mumbai

Mumbai’s underworld has routinely been the context of many an Indian film—Nayagan (1987) in Tamil, Once Upon a Time in Mumbaai [sic] (2010) in Hindi are two representative biopics of infamous men, and conveniently glamorized crime thrillers. The former takes us through the life and times of underworld don Varadarajan Mudaliar. Mudaliar was a village boy who ran away to Bombay from his native Tamil Nadu. Sheer ambition and (per the film) love for the ghetto-dwelling Tamil immigrants of Bombay drove Mudaliar to smuggling. When his family is killed, he takes on the system.

The latter is apparently inspired by the life of smuggler, mildy romantic, life-respecting Haji Mastan. In the film, the protagonist (presumed to portray Mastan) is betrayed and murdered by his protégé, apparently the dreaded and ruthless terrorist Dawood Ibrahim, who is said to be the perpetrator of the Bombay bombings of 1993 that changed the security map of India.

Such films have attempted to portray the underworld as almost acceptable parts of life. Most films of that genre have drawn parallels between the underworld and the legitimate systems; hence, the conflict in those films is often between the underworld and the police, the common man or the government. Maqbool is no different in its portrayal of the underworld; yet the biggest difference is that this dark film entirely anchors its context in the underworld. Almost the only view of the “above-world” we see is in the final sequence when Maqbool is at the hospital to sneak a glimpse at this paramour. Ironically, that is the final sequence for his life, almost as though he (deliberately) throws the security of his underworld sneakiness to the winds and pays the price.

By including elements of mistrust, loss of innocence, forlornness and paranoia, Bhardwaj—predictably—categorizes Maqbool into the noir genre. The film echoes the cynical attitude and criminal motives that are typical of a film noir. Right from the beginning, the viewer is made aware of the doomed romance and the desperate desire. Corrupt cops and government agents play a major role in ensuring the rule of the gangsters. Dim lighting and slow pace of editing ensure the dark languor that the director intends. Symbolism is replete-sometimes forced, as in the case of a kundli, or the drawing of a horoscope, that is splattered by blood in the very first scene, serving as an exposition for the bloody future of Mumbai’s underworld.

Shakespeare’s three ‘weird sisters’ change to two corrupt policemen in the movie. The two policemen effectively play the role of soothsayer and a comic relief. Through the recurring use kundli motifs, the two cops also act as expositors of the movie, often predicting the events that occur in the unfolding drama. They create a sense of mystery and foreboding that is typical of a film noir. By portraying them as sidekicks to the gangsters, Bhardwaj makes a social commentary on the corruption that is prevalent in India.

The centrality of emotion

A prominent departure from Shakespeare’s Macbeth is the character of Nimmi in Maqbool. The change from being Lady Macbeth to being Abba-ji’s mistress gives Maqbool an additional reason for killing his father-like mentor. Maqbool’s lust for Nimmi gives the murder the dimension of passion crime, thereby expanding the dimensions of Maqbool’s tragic flaw of unbridles ambition to include jealousy.

However, the character of Nimmi remains faithful to the Bard, as strong-willed, cunning, amoral, sexually demanding and scheming. As with femme fatales of tragic drama she is the cause of the hero’s downfall and her own destruction. Nimmi and Maqbool are caught in the web of ambition as well as sexual motivation. His resentment at the idea of having to work under Guddu, who would become the heir to the gang after his marriage to Abba-ji’s only daughter, gives him another motive to murder Abba-ji. Somewhat in alignment with many other artifacts of the Shakespearean genre, the emotions of love and affection give way to acts of crime in the ‘larger interest’ of maintenance of order. However, in Bhardwaj’s version, emotion (sexual jealousy) is itself a factor, and this is a departure from the original. In a typical noir plot—as in Shakespeare—emotion is a garb, a mere camouflage for underlying conspiracy. In Maqbool, therefore, the factor of emotion takes on the centrality that popular Hindi cinema is accustomed to.

The unspoken conflict

Maqbool, as much an Aristotelian as a Shakespearean tragic figure and a king as much as a commoner, arouses sympathy. His tragic tension is visible when he fluctuates between absolute pessimism and moments of terrible guilt of the unspeakable crime—so unspeakable, it seems, that it is rarely spoken of even between Maqbool and Nimmi. As with Shakespearean protagonists, Maqbool is torn between the moral and the social, falling plop into the grey area between good and evil, right and wrong. The conflict between the wrong deeds and the right reasons is a Shakespearean favourite. That nuance seems lost on Bhardwaj though, as Maqbool, conflicted and tortured after shooting Abba-ji in a stupor-like stance, lives to regret it. His downslide begins even before he shoots Abba-ji, with the killing of the goats for the biryani. His visions of blood point to the guilt within him. Bhardwaj has managed to make the viewers sympathize with Maqbool till the end, making him the classic anti-hero.

Bhardwaj shines with astonishing regularity through his corpus of work in his ability to draw contemporaneous allegories. Despite drawing freely from commercial Indian gangster movies, Maqbool remains true to the original Shakespearean plot. The biggest irony in this underworld story-often glamorized in Indian cinema-is a parallel Bhardwaj draws between the (legitimate) state of Scotland and the illicit, dark world of Abba-ji’s and Maqbool’s Mumbai, where the wars for territory and money are almost farcically similar to those in a civilized kingdom.

The author has been in love with film making and literature. He finished his Post Graduation diploma in audio visual communication from , India Today Media Institute Noida.