Even Ashley Highfield, the BBC's Director of New Media and Technology, is a citizen journalist now - I spotted his photo of the queues at Heathrow in a BBC News Online gallery today (click through to the third photo).
« news orgs should use flickr, youtube | Main | cnn + blip.tv for citizen journalist contributions »
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d834515f1669e200d834dccb9a69e2
Listed below are links to weblogs that reference even ashley is a citizen journalist now ;-):
The comments to this entry are closed.


We got to get into a conversation about CJ v eye-witness.
There is a lot of simple disussion to be had about people eho see and people who report.
Brien Friel (Irish Playwright) thinks there are seven sides to every story. I think we (us BBC types who have an iterest in this) really need a discussion about Eyewitness,storytelling, reporting , and journalism)
Just 'cause I take a photo or tell you whatI saw - that's not the truth of the event - only my interpretation of the event. The Radio 4 project on Memory has bee really interesting on memory/reportage - althoug they haven't raised that.
it's an important off line conversation
You lead it -- I'll follow.
It could be the most important conversation the BBC can have during the changing times we are experencing.
Posted by: Davy | 13 August 2006 at 12:48 AM
"Networked journalism" (Jeff Jarvis' latest phrase) is a better description than "Citizen Journalism".
Posted by: Nick Reynolds | 13 August 2006 at 08:48 PM