Drone journalism up and flying; Kathmandu’s latest footage

Drone journalism up and flying; Kathmandu’s latest footage

By Robin Ewing This drone footage of Kathmandu does an incredible job of showing the scale of damage done by Saturday’s earthquake in Nepal. The only other way to get these kinds of images would be to hire a helicopter.     Drone journalism is up and...
The gray zone of plagiarism

The gray zone of plagiarism

by Robin Ewing The Columbia Journalism Review this week  published a thoughtful article on plagiarism and the trickiness of defining it in a digital world where “all ideas are secondhand, consciously and unconsciously drawn from a million outside sources.”...
“Feelings journalism” based on assumptions

“Feelings journalism” based on assumptions

An article from the New Republic last week discusses what the author calls “feelings journalism,” which is simply a new way of describing an old kind of writing: assuming we know what another person is thinking and feeling without actually asking. I often see this in...
Social media chats used in jailing of Chinese news assistant

Social media chats used in jailing of Chinese news assistant

By Robin Ewing The mainland Chinese assistant to a German journalist was arrested in Beijing in October after taking photos at Occupy Central in Hong Kong and posting them to her WeChat account. She is still being held, almost four months later, for “inciting a...