Curing Winter Sports Injuries With … Stem Cells?
My latest is up at Snowshoemag.com:
Curing Winter Sports Injuries With ... Stem Cells?
It profiles Dr. Chris Centeno, a Colorado MD promoting a stem cell-based treatment for knee and other joint injuries. Interesting stuff. Hopefully I'll never have a need for his services, but it's good to know the non-surgical option is there.
The News Merchant
Like it or not, this is the reality of TV news. From The Atlantic:
There is no single term that fully captures what Garrison does for a living, although it involves a lot of time spent cajoling people over the phone. He’s sometimes called a fixer, a story broker, or—his preference—an independent television producer and consultant, but all the titles mean the same thing: Garrison gets paid to bring tabloid stories to TV news programs. Missing toddlers, murdered coeds, septuplets, serial killers—an endless parade of freaks and victims is marched through the studio sets of Dateline NBC, 20/20, Good Morning America, Inside Edition, and countless other shows, all to satisfy viewers’ seemingly insatiable appetite for real-life tears and melodrama. Sometimes network bookers go out hunting for subjects themselves, armed with bouquets of flowers and boxes of tissues and the names of their star anchors (Diane Sawyer, Matt Lauer) as chits. In many cases, though, Garrison gets there first, locks up the rights to the person’s story, and becomes an unavoidable middleman in whatever transactions follow.
In addition to feeding what Garrison likes to call “Oh my God” stories to news networks, people like him serve another purpose: they make it easy for mainstream media outlets to pay for interviews while obscuring the fact that they do. The agent delivers the interview, and in return the network makes him a paid producer or consultant for that particular program; what he then does with the money—keep it or share it—is his own business. (For his part, Garrison tends to keep the whole fee, while sometimes promising to try to secure a book or movie deal for the grieving mother or accused murderer’s ex-girlfriend he is representing.) If the person has a diary or photo album to sell for on-air use, Garrison can help with that, too.
Snowshoe Reviews
Six years after my debut in Snowshoe magazine, I'm back contributing reviews to the now web-based Snowshoemag.com. Below are a few clips:
Book Review: Hypothermia, Frostbite and Other Cold Injuries
A Golden Age for Journalism Jobs?
No question, times are tough for journalists. But the good news, according to Michael Mandel, is that the shifting tides of the news business are finally creating new job opportunities in the media space.
In terms of jobs, journalistic occupations are outperforming the overall economy. However, many of the journalistic jobs are not being created in conventional journalism industries.
... The average number of employed “news analysts, reporters and correspondents” for the prior 12 months (so the number for June 2010 includes July 2009-June 2010). These numbers are based on the Current Population Survey, a monthly survey of roughly 60,000 households conducted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the Census Bureau. As part of the survey, respondents are assigned occupations on the basis of the “the kind of work the specified person usually does and on a description of his/her most important activities or duties.” (A direct quote from the CPS interviewing manual)
The interesting thing about this trend is that the new jobs aren't being created at the editorial level (which is what I'd expect, given the rising ranks of "citizen journalists" and other non-professional content creators) but for reporters and correspondents.
Overall the number of employed journalists, based on the CPS, has increased by 19% over the past three year. Meanwhile, the number of employed college graduates has risen by only 3%, and overall employment, as measured by the CPS, has dropped by almost 5%.
... Unlike reporters, the number of editors is down over the past three years, by about 2%. However, if we add together the two categories (“news analysts, reporters and correspondents” plus “editors”) the total employment gain over three years for “journalistic occupations” is a decent 5%, beating out the overall gain for college grads.