Poynter Online
Go


Top Story

Who? Here's a Primer on GOP Veep Choice Sarah Palin
Most Recent Articles
Most E-mailed
Recent Comments
Recent Tags
Community Activity

Poynter Training
Poynter Seminars
Small, in-person training experiences.
News University
Today's most popular courses on NewsU, Poynter's e-learning site for journalists.
Webinars
Our online classroom is just a click away. Learn more.
All Webinars

Al's Morning Meeting

Home > TV & Radio > Al's Morning Meeting
Tools: Text Sizeor, Print, RSSRSS, Subscribe via e-mail
Al Tompkins
Story ideas that you can localize and enterprise. Posted by 7:30 a.m. Mon-Fri.
CHECK AL's TWITTER FEED for nonstop story ideas throughout the day.

UPDATED: JOIN AL ON THE ROAD AND LIVE ONLINE

APPLY FOR BROADCAST AND ONLINE SEMINARS

SEND AL YOUR STORY IDEAS

A dozen sites
I'm diggin'


1. Check this cool weather site by  the Las Vegas Sun. Make sure you see the top of the page forecast grahics.

2. Stay on top of Gustav with this site that includes radar, satellite, tracking maps, warnings and more.

3. The coolest storm tracking site I have seen in a while.

4. Vloggerheads fights back against YouTube chaos.

5. YouTomb is where videos go after they're booted off YouTube.

6. The evolution of voting in America is shown by interactive mapping.

7. The Las Vegas Sun has a crew driving to the Democratic National Convention and is filing multimedia stories along the way.

8. I have never seen anything like this amazing "Swan Lake" performance. [Flash]

9. The Livescribe Pulse Smartpen links written notes with audio. Cool for journalists and students.

10. An educator friend of mine in Lebanon reports that citizen- generated news is all the rage in Arab countries.

11. Here are photos of folks learning Soundslides in Poynter's recent seminar "Multimedia for College Educators." We'll offer this twice in 2009, in February and July.

12. This is my current home page.

All of my Diggin' sites are saved on Poynter's del.icio.us page.

EDITOR'S NOTE: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas, edited story excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites, as well as original concepts and analysis. When the information comes directly from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be provided whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but depends on the accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. We will correct errors and inaccuracies when we become aware of them.


Wednesday Edition: Costs Force Spring Break Sacrifices
RELATED RESOURCES
Like Al's ideas? Hear more in our broadcast and online seminars.

Get Al's Morning Meeting updates as an RSS feed:
* Copy this link and add it to your feed reader

Sign up to receive Al's Morning Meeting by e-mail:
* Click here (sent Monday-Friday at 7 a.m.)

Buy Al's book, "Aim for the Heart," here, and Poynter receives a small cut as an Amazon affiliate.
USA Today reports:

The cost of spring break travel is soaring, and travelers are responding by taking shorter trips.

"People are shortening their vacations to afford them," says Amy Ziff, editor-at-large at Travelocity, the No. 2 online travel agency. "Travel's expensive again."

For the first time in six years of tracking its bookings, Travelocity this year has seen the average duration of spring break trips fall below five days.

The 4.9-day average in 2007 is down nearly 7 percent from a year ago, and down nearly 17 percent from 2002. That's a reduction of one full day since tracking began. The averages measure domestic and international trips booked for late February and March.


Gore Testifies

A question hangs in the air today. Is former Vice President Al Gore's congressional hearing appearance this morning the beginning of his run for the presidency? Gore will testify on global warming before the Energy and Commerce Committee's Subcommittee on Energy and Air Quality at 9:30 a.m.

Gore has been nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize. His film, "An Inconvenient Truth," won two Oscars. Rolling Stone magazine is urging him to run for president. A Web site called draftgore.com is fueling the fire. C-SPAN will carry the testimony live. I am sure cable stations will, too.


No More Secret Dockets

This month, the policy-making body for the federal court system is urging the courts to do away with secret dockets. The move is in direct response to findings by The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press revealing that some cases were making their way through the court system without being recorded in any way. The RCFP reports:

Last year, an investigation by The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press revealed that 469 criminal cases were not docketed in the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., during the five years ending Dec. 31, 2005. These defendants were indicted -- and in many cases, prosecuted and sentenced to prison -- in complete secrecy.

The findings were a surprise to officials in that federal trial court, including Chief Judge Thomas Hogan.

"None of us paid attention to that," he said today. "It was reporters who figured that out." [...]

Keeping cases off the docket differs from sealing them. Sealed cases are assigned case numbers that appear on the docket. The only way to determine the existence of off-the-docket cases is to scroll through public dockets searching for missing case numbers. That means the public has no way of knowing the cases exist – and has no way of challenging the secrecy.

If a member of the public were to type a case number of an off-the-docket case into the court's electronic filing system, the computer would read, "No such case."


Fixing NFL's Overtime Rule

The NFL may change its crazy way of settling tie games soon.

As you may know, overtime games are settled by the "first one to score" method. But it's been found that 29 percent of the time, the team that begins with the ball scores first. Sports Illustrated has more on how the rules might change, and includes this chart that shows how lopsided things are right now:

Year / Overtime Games / Won on First Possession / Percentage

2006 / 11 / 5 / .455

2005 / 14 / 5 / .357

2004 / 12 / 4 / .333

2003 / 23 / 6 / .261

2002 / 25 / 10 / .400

Five-year totals: 85 overtime games, 30 won on the first possession (35.3 percent).

Totals from 1974 to 2001: 317 overtime games, 87 won on first possession (27.4 percent).

Overall: 402 overtime games, 117 won on first possession (29.1 percent).


Al's Morning Multimedia

CBS4 in Denver is blogging live from inside the federal courtroom where former Qwest CEO Joe Nacchio is on trial. Check out the blog here. I suppose this is the best we can do until the federal courts come out of the dark ages and allow the same camera access the Iraqi government did at Saddam Hussein's trial.


We are always looking for your great ideas. Send Al a few sentences and hot links.

Editor's Note: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas, edited story excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites, as well as original concepts and analysis. When the information comes directly from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be provided whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but depends upon the accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. Errors and inaccuracies found will be corrected.

Posted by Al Tompkins 7:15 PM March 20, 2007
Tools:
Comment, e-mail, Permalink, Share
View items published between:   &   
(MM/DD/YYYY) (MM/DD/YYYY)
Username
Password
New User? Signup Now
Poynter Careers
Ask The Recruiter Ask The Recruiter Friday: Can a Journalist be a Singer?
Colleen on Careers Colleen on Careers You Worked Hard to Get the Interview, Make it Count