You can follow Media Helping Media on Twitter @helpingmedia on our Posterous blog, on our Facebook page, and on our LinkedIn group

Media Helping Media

free training resources and support

Buy Autodesk Vault Workgroup 2012
Buy CS5.5 Web Premium
Cheap Creation Suite Standard 2012
Cheap Indesign CS5.5 for Mac
Buy Flash Professional CS5.5
Cheap Permissions Audit SQL
buy viagra online
viagra to order
Buy Levlen Online
usa cialis
cialis sale
Buy Antabuse Online

About MHM

Media Helping Media logoHelping journalists where the media is still developing

MHM Social Networks

Media Helping Media page on Facebook  Media Helping Media on Twitter      Storify
Media Helping Media's blog on Posterous  Media Helping Media on Tumblr  Media Helping Media on Flickr  Media Helping Media on YouTube  Media Helping Media on Slideshare

Latest comments

Google Adverts

Reproducing MHM content

Creative Commons License
Creative Commons License

Search this site

Currently on the site

We have 39 guests online

Facebook page

@helpingmedia on Twitter

Google Adverts

Latest training resources

The growth of social networking middle media
News Archive - Global
Written by David Brewer   
Friday, 20 November 2009
Share/Save/Bookmark

A few colleagues have asked me what I meant when I wrote about ‘middle media’, something I have seen emerging in some of the transition countries in which I have been working.  It was clearly evident at an event last week in Kiev called MediaNext, orgainsed by Internews Ukraine and the European Journalism Center (EJC).

Put simply it's a grouping of professionals who use blogging and social networking to cover the issues that have been overlooked by others.

It's when the solo voice links up with kindred spirits and recognises that the group power offers the opportunity to impact society in a much more meaningful way.

So here is my definition.

Middle Media is a group of people ...

  • positioned in between mainstream media and the social networking information overload

  • motivated by a desire to cover the issues that their country’s mainstream media may have neglected or chosen to ignore

  • brought together either by a single issue (often to do with human rights such as the imprisonment of blogging colleagues), or stimulated to organise by the growing number of in-country media training centres

  • who realise that a loan voice is powerful, but when those voices are grouped through social networking a new dynamic is created

  • from a mix of backgrounds and perspectives from journalists, PR professionals, students, teachers, sociologists, economists, business people and the unemployed

  • free of age barriers and limitations based on qualifications

  • willingly embracing new technology

  • aware of the positives of the viral effect of social networking.

 

In my opinion it is an awsome prospect that could challenge all accepted ways of communicating and sharing information. It goes beyond blogging to a new collective that promises more impact than any traditional newsroom.

If anyone wants to add to the definitions of Middle Media, please either add comments below, or join the discussion on the Media Helping Media Facebook group.

 

 
David BrewerThe author of this piece, David Brewer, is a journalist and media strategy consultant who set up and runs this site, Media Helping Media. He delivers media strategy training and consultancy services worldwide and his business details are at Media Ideas International Ltd. He tweets @helpingmedia.
 

 

Add comment

Please check the site's rules for posting before adding your comments. Thanks


Security code
Refresh

Featured training resources

Selected from our training archive and regularly refreshed

Google Adverts

 
Joomla 1.5 Templates by Joomlashack