Friday, December 25, 2009

Small Town News


As newspapers around the country continue their struggle to survive, those in small towns sometimes thrive, though not without their own drama, humor, and even controversy. Tina Tidmore, who created the Clay News in a suburb northeast of Birmingham, knows all too well the challenges of running such an enterprise. Hear why she started her paper - and why she closed it down - in the latest episode of my podcast, Media Talking Media. Follow the link: http://www.archive.org/details/MediaTalkingMediaEpisode3-TheTinaTidmoreInteview

Friday, December 18, 2009

Today's Manifesto


Earlier today I was having lunch with some of my colleagues, many of them, like me, recently dispossessed of a job. As I stood in line, I saw a familiar face behind the counter taking our orders. It was a young woman named Cory, who I had met just a couple of months ago at a workshop for journalism students at the University of Alabama. When we met, Cory was editor at a small local magazine. Now, her magazine having folded, as so many do these days, she works in a downtown restaurant.

She introduced herself, saying, "I'm a former journalist too." I corrected her. "We're still journalists," I said.

Times are tough in the magazine business, and in the print business in general. Many of us have been forced to do something else to make ends meet. Others may yet find a similar fortune awaits. Still, given those circumstances, it's important to remember that we don't stop being journalists, we  don't stop being writers, just because something happens to our paying gig.

Journalists are journalists because we have a skill -sometimes a talent - and an inclination to write, to chronicle, to document, to tell stories, to inform. That inclination can be assaulted by economic forces, or by bean-counting bureaucrats who don't know a good story from a hole in the ground, but our God-given talents and hard-won skills remain inviolate.

They can't take that away. Sometimes we lose sight of the simple fact that we were hired because we had something to offer, something to give, something of value. Something intrinsic. We may mistakenly think, as I know some do, that our talents depend entirely upon the approval of others. That, as I say, is a mistake. The talent you walked in with goes with you when you leave. You remain fundamentally who and what you were before you had this job.

It's not the job that validates you as a writer. It's the work. And you can choose to keep writing.

Writing has always had a subjective element to it. One likes your work, another doesn't. Sometimes it's easy for an editor to mistake his opinion for Holy Writ - which it ain't. It's a preference for one word over another, one story format over the other, this sentence structure instead of that one. To some degree, we all write in the dark, hoping that something we put out for public consumption will find a receptive audience and resonate with someone. Sometimes we win in this effort, sometimes we don't. 

Neither eventuality means that we should give up trying. Writers have to write because somebody needs to tell the stories. We have a duty to use what we have to give something of value to someone else. Through words that educate, that entertain, that enlighten, that enrage, that empathize, we can do just that. 

So to any of my colleagues who are feeling down, I would say, get your chin up. Don't give up on yourself. Don't forget that you have something of value to offer. Don't let a misfortune of economy or shortsightedness make you forget who you are, and what you are.

They can take the job. They can kill the place you work. You may choose to stop writing, but don't let anybody tell you that you are less than what you know in your heart that you are - a writer. Period.



Media Talking Media Episode 2 On The Air



Blog master Wade Kwon gives the lowdown on blogging on the latest episode of my new podcast, Media Talking Media. It's on the air right now and right here: http://www.archive.org/details/MediaTalkingMedia-TheWadeKwonInterview

Check it out, and check out our new theme music! It's a work in progress!

Friday, December 11, 2009


Consider this a sort of commercial. My new podcast, Media Talking Media, is available for free (which is why I say, "sort of a commercial") at the very impressive sounding Internet Archive. Episode 1 stars versatile and interesting local artist/actor/comedian Chris Davis. (That's him on the right)

Check it out, let me know what you think, and stay tuned for the next episode.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Where It's At

If you've been wondering what's happened to the blog, let me just tell you -- things have been crazy around here. And by "around here" I mean, in my head.

After the layoff, I had this sudden, irresistible burst of creativity, resulting in several projects being opened at one time:

1)starting this blog;
2) creating my freelance web site;
3) coming up with the second longest name for a freelance web site that I could, namely nickpattersonfreelance.com;
4) starting to build a cabinet, which for the past two weeks, has resembled an upright coffin;
5) updating and finishing my LinkedIn profile;
6) deciding to tell people what I was up to on Twitter;
7) remembering what my Twitter name is;
8)remembering what my Twitter password is;
9)considering whether I should start a second blog;
10) creating a podcast from scratch;
11) eluding the men in the white coats.

So, finishing the first version of the web site, beginning regular check-ins at LinkedIn, posting the first podcast, remembering why I never use Twitter, and surrendering to the guys in the white coats --who only wanted to sell me ice cream -- I am back to being IroNick.

Since I've been gone, a lot of good humor has been going to waste, starting with the SEC championship. Had I been more timely with the blog I would have pointed out that Tim Tebow has now made clear the difference between crocodile tears and gator tears. And I might have noted that he certainly made crying like a little girl look supermanly. Then I would have stopped.

I might have had some words for Tiger Woods, who has finally given David Letterman something to joke about. Wait for it...

Or, I might have found some grim humor in the fact that Birmingham has now had 17 mayors since September. Not that there's anything wrong with that.

But since I missed my chance at all of those things - or things that were actually funnier -- I'll just have to find something else. As soon as I do, I'll let you know. Meanwhile, I need to try to turn that coffin into a cabinet. I also need to get some sleep, although that has nothing to do with the cabinet. And I better hurry. I just thought of ten more things I need to do.