Gankytim said:Are they transparent about their higher education, google doesn't bring up much.
That's a good idea, although personally I would tell him/her to piss off.archiebawled said:Why not ask them?
Gankytim said:Are they transparent about their higher education, google doesn't bring up much.
That's a good idea, although personally I would tell him/her to piss off.archiebawled said:Why not ask them?
Because it's a witch hunt.archiebawled said:Why not ask them?
It amazes me that this still persists after all this time and so many people pointing out she didn't write these articles.Uhura said:A quick google search would have revealed it as a fake article but I guess the OP was too busy making his "totally unbiased" video to check the facts...
I don't think people understand how broad journalism can be applied. Without going over each other, straight-up reporting, as well as punditry and editorials are routinely lumped in under the journalism banner. That covers most or all of the people named. And reviews are sometimes counted as well, filling in any gaps with them.Zontar said:Wait, those people are what pass as video games journalists? I'm not saying that as a slight against them, it's just, as someone studying journalism, none, or at the very best a minority, of their work seems to be any real journalism.
How does he have time to manage both the Soviets and the Lizard People?MarsAtlas said:Jim Sterling doesn't work for Soviets, Soviets work for Jim Sterling!
Knowledge of subject matter is fine for opinion pieces, it's shit for news pieces. Most of these people are pretty strong for reviews but aren't so hot when they try to do news journalism.Lieju said:Speaking as a someone who comes from a family of journalists...
No, you don't need a degree to do that job.
Especially if we are talking about something specialized, like video-game journalism, what you need is a good understanding of the subject matter.
My mum has a degree and a 30+ years of experience, but she knows nothing about video-games.
Would you trust her opinion on games more than Sterling, for example?
She used to play Minesweeper a lot.
She could write a good-looking article that reads well, and bullshit to probably fool a layreader (she used to work for a daily newspaper where she'd have to write articles on subject matters she knew nothing about, and most importantly, do it quickly.) and given time, she could write a good article from a point of view of a layperson.
So what?
Now, if someone had a degree on game design or something, and a background in game development, then you'd have some idea they know about that side of things and can give you a different perspective than most people.
What were the mistakes on that article (that I haven't read) that were purely about biology? Did she misspell 'vagina' or something?Gankytim said:I figured someone calling themself a journalist would need a journalism degree. There is a Patricia Hernandez who has a degree, but she'd a Ph.D in biology and something tells me Ms. "Should killing female gamers in online games be considered rape?" didn't study biology.
And your video won't be particularly well researched if you go about it by asking random people on the net. Ask those people directly.
Here's a quick journalism tip:
Get actual sources. Someone telling you on a forum that Jim Sterling is actually a rocket scientist working for the Soviets is not particularly reliable information.
No, you sort of need to know why a certain piece of news is interesting or important. And what is just the publisher trying to work out hype, and what of that hype would actually interest people. And you need to understand your audience. If you're writing for a gamer-audience, you need to know what you can assume to be common knowledge.SecondPrize said:Knowledge of subject matter is fine for opinion pieces, it's shit for news pieces. Most of these people are pretty strong for reviews but aren't so hot when they try to do news journalism.
Well I think the issue comes from most people not knowing the difference between journalism the occupation and journalism the field. The former is what one would put under the banner of "news" (and is also what one would call themselves when asked what they do) while the latter is about, well, anything which is spreading information.Zachary Amaranth said:I don't think people understand how broad journalism can be applied. Without going over each other, straight-up reporting, as well as punditry and editorials are routinely lumped in under the journalism banner. That covers most or all of the people named. And reviews are sometimes counted as well, filling in any gaps with them.Zontar said:Wait, those people are what pass as video games journalists? I'm not saying that as a slight against them, it's just, as someone studying journalism, none, or at the very best a minority, of their work seems to be any real journalism.
Distinguishing "news" from "journalism" is sort of an artifact at this point.
Hell, we can mock Jim or Joe all we want, but a lot of our "real" journalism is coming from people who likely have equal or lesser credentials.
I wasn't suggesting that you don't use game knowledge for news pieces, given the context and what I was replying to. When all you have is game knowledge, it is shit. You'd need a mix, and these people don't have the journalism part of that mix.Lieju said:No, you sort of need to know why a certain piece of news is interesting or important. And what is just the publisher trying to work out hype, and what of that hype would actually interest people. And you need to understand your audience. If you're writing for a gamer-audience, you need to know what you can assume to be common knowledge.SecondPrize said:Knowledge of subject matter is fine for opinion pieces, it's shit for news pieces. Most of these people are pretty strong for reviews but aren't so hot when they try to do news journalism.
Do you need to explain what an X-Box is? Or terms like MMO, or some cult classic from the 80's? Some specific terminology only used in Eve online?
Also you need connections and you need to know where to get the news.
Or are you saying you could write news articles for topics you know nothing about?
Then again, most 'news' articles on this site for example are regurgitated from other sources...
Still even they need to know what stories to go for, and how to present them in a way that interests the intended audience.
I agree for the most part, but it's fairly common to see newspeople calling themselves journalists.Zontar said:and is also what one would call themselves when asked what they do
You've just described almost every mainstream journalist and newscaster in the US at the very least. And a lot of my news is from the BBC or Guardian, where I'm not always convinced they're knowledgeable (though better at the reporting and journalism parts). In other wirds, while it's definitely an American thing, I'm pretty sure it's not solely an American thing.Lieju said:Or are you saying you could write news articles for topics you know nothing about?
TB actually shows credibility by stating where he does not have experience and sticking to what he can objectively criticize. Angry Joe does to some degree acknowledge he's not perfect, and I guess Jeff and Jim just have their experience from their years of covering games. How Jeff covered Kane and Lynch demonstrates the best one can do to corporately careful with an un-redeemable game, and they still axed him for it. smh. No one would've been THAT nice.Gankytim said:I'm putting together a video on video game journalism. From the sensationalist (Hernandez) to the truth hammer (Kain). I'm putting it together in a totally unbiased format, looking strictly at their qualifications and pointing out their known biases, preferences for certain companies, things like that.
And I'm sort of stuck on finding the education status of these people:
Jim Sterling.
Patricia Hernandez.
Patrick Klepek.
Angry Joe.
Totalbiscuit.
Jeff Gerstmann.
Are they transparent about their higher education, google doesn't bring up much.
You say this, but given a story on vaccinations journalists are expected to actually seek out opposing views. My cousin is a journalist, and he complains about this too. He just hopes the public is clever enough to believe the educated doctor over the crackpot.MarsAtlas said:Its not "balanced" if one side is full of shit. Giving this "balance" to a story regarding vaccination, and inviting in an anti-vaccinationist isn't making it balanced - its giving it imbalance, because their position hasn't earned any credibility, and is giving them undeserved credibility. You said it yourself - "an actual journalistic report is supposed to be worried about facts." Thats all an unbiased news report should be about, not putting a flat-earther and a Nobel Prize winner on the same pedestal in the name of "fairness" or other similar bullshit. After all, when a police officer is on the news giving a statement about some sort of criminal activity, we don't have the criminal come up on TV right after them saying "No no no, its all just a big misunderstanding!" We don't have journalists interviewing members of Al-Qaeda whenever the Secretary of Defense makes some sort of statement about "The War on Terror". Non-editorial journalism isn't obliged to be nice to bullshit just because some people believe it.Weaver said:Video game journalism simply isn't real journalism most of the time. For example an actual journalistic report is supposed to worry entirely about facts. When doing opinion interviews you're supposed to interview two or more people from opposing sides of whatever topic to give balanced coverage and opinion.
There is a huge difference between reporting opinions and reporting facts. When you report on research findings on dangers of vaccinations or whether the earth goes around the sun or vice versa you are talking about scientifically determined facts.MarsAtlas said:Its not "balanced" if one side is full of shit. Giving this "balance" to a story regarding vaccination, and inviting in an anti-vaccinationist isn't making it balanced - its giving it imbalance, because their position hasn't earned any credibility, and is giving them undeserved credibility. You said it yourself - "an actual journalistic report is supposed to be worried about facts." Thats all an unbiased news report should be about, not putting a flat-earther and a Nobel Prize winner on the same pedestal in the name of "fairness" or other similar bullshit. After all, when a police officer is on the news giving a statement about some sort of criminal activity, we don't have the criminal come up on TV right after them saying "No no no, its all just a big misunderstanding!" We don't have journalists interviewing members of Al-Qaeda whenever the Secretary of Defense makes some sort of statement about "The War on Terror". Non-editorial journalism isn't obliged to be nice to bullshit just because some people believe it.
Not really, in fact most $SUBJECT journalism jobs I've seen would rather have a degree in $SUBJECT than in journalism.Gankytim said:I figured someone calling themself a journalist would need a journalism degree.
Gerstmann and Klepek have users in giantbomb (the site they run), and they are fairly open about answering to the community if you are respectful when asking.Gankytim said:I've attempted, and I'll give them the benefit of the doubt, maybe my message got buried under multiple dozens of others, or in the case of Gertsmann, I might have hit up a contact thing too old.archiebawled said:Why not ask them?Gankytim said:I'm putting together a video on video game journalism.
Are they transparent about their higher education, google doesn't bring up much.
I know a few journalists (of varying ages), and none of them have journalism degrees. Mostly they have English degrees (although one has never been to university at all).Gankytim said:I figured someone calling themself a journalist would need a journalism degree.