Author Archives: Dave Poulson

Stephen King, ledes and reporting on the environment

Stephen King

Stephen King


By David Poulson
Stephen King recently offered advice useful for journalists covering the environment.
I don’t mean covering it as a horror story – although that’s certainly a reader engagement strategy we all use often enough.
The prolific author of scary tales like The Shining and Carrie and of the current mini-series Under the Dome, tells the Atlantic about crafting first sentences.  He spends months – even years – rewriting them, often while lying in bed before falling asleep.
Any writer can benefit from what King has to say about minimalist first sentences chock full of meaning and that establish the voice that carries through the piece. Follow that link; read what he says.
That said, no journalist in the deadline-a-minute crunch for news can afford the luxury of nightly rewrites while lying in bed. My students panic when I suggest they spend half their writing time before deadline crafting a lede.
Continue reading

Knight Center alum boosts the Great Lakes on national television

http://www.hulu.com/watch/519902
Andy McGlashen, an alum of the graduate program at Michigan State University’s Knight Center for Environmental Journalism, showed his Great Lakes roots recently on the Jimmy Fallon Show.
McGlashen was called up from the audience to participate in the program’s Wheel of Game Shows segment.  Fallon immediately asked, “What is your name and what is on your shirt.”
McGlashen said he was sporting the outlines of each of the Great Lakes of Michigan. Fallon’s response: “Hey, very cool. I love that.”
Then he compared the design to a Rorschach test
Andy makes his appearance at about 2:40 in the clip above.
 
 

Take this course and create your own dam cam

Here's a screen grab from the "dam cam" on Ohio's Cuyahoga River

Here’s a screen grab from the “dam cam” on Ohio’s Cuyahoga River


A dam removal story now on the Knight Center’s Great Lakes Echo news site is a great example of the kind of remote sensing reporting MSU journalism students will do this fall in JRN 472, News eye in the blue sky.
The story is an audio report about the removal of two dams on Ohio’s Cuyahoga River. It’s accompanied by live video of the dam removal process.
It’s a creative report for a number of reasons.
Continue reading

Knight Center class at MSU examines drone journalism and other high technology ways to extend your nose for news

Could a drone bring Bigfoot into focus?

Could a drone bring Bigfoot into focus?


By David Poulson
Could drones help break what could be the biggest environmental news story in memory?
An Idaho State University anthropology professor plans to use a drone-mounted video camera to hunt for evidence of Sasquatch.
Why should he have all the fun? Journalists, too, should be looking for ways to use unmanned aircraft as reporting tools as the rules of their peacetime use evolve. That’s the kind of thing we will be exploring this fall in Michigan State University’s JRN 472, Clear eye in the blue sky.
Continue reading