BBC College of Journalism
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- What the blogs say: stormporn, word clouds, investors and glass eyesby Charles MillerRemember Hurricane Irene? Its US television coverage, said Jeff Jarvis, illustrated "the predictable and numbing repetition, alarmism and idiocy that is TV". It was "laughable" to see "crews everywhere, all shooting the same wind and water, yet saying nothing new"....
A guide to the 'laws of war' and the constraints on reporting conflict.
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Interviews, links and discussion
Discussion
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My 9/11: I missed the second tower being hit - the phone line didn't reach the doorby Stephen EvansI was on the ground floor of the South Tower when the first plane hit the North Tower. It sounded like a huge skip of...
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Alex Crawford: making history in Libyaby John MairShe trended worldwide on Twitter. Alex Crawford of Sky News was one of the first three journalists - all women - to enter Green...
- How do I become a journalist at the BBC?by Jonathan Baker
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Video: Paul Mason Reflects
The College of Journalism's Matthew Eltringham spoke at length to Newsnight's Paul Mason in the latest CoJo 'Reflections' event from the Frontline Club in London.
Describing his brief as "people, planet and profit", Paul stressed the importance of knowing a story so well you could tell it to a man down the pub: "If I don't understand it, I've got no chance of explaining it - so I'll go back and work on it until I do."
Paul also outlined how social media and blogging are integral to what he does.
Video: What Now for Libya?
Watch Professor Fawaz Gerges, the Director the Middle East Centre at the London School of Economics, and David Loyn, BBC International Development Correspondent, in an enlightening assessment of what to expect next in Libya.
They outlined the key factions within Libya's National Transitional Council, the latest developments and what impact they could have on the rest of the region.
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