Blog:
Emily Harris joins the Journalism Accelerator as editorial director
“What would you really love to do right now?” a friend asked me this summer. Beyond the immediately obvious, she meant. Which meant I had to come up with something besides what I was doing at the moment. Which was, I think, stuffing sun-warmed raspberries in my mouth as fast as I could pick them. I told her I’d love to find a way to get into the middle of dissecting and reporting on the changes happening in journalism right now. And I’d love to do it writing for a website that was itself trying new things.
Lo and behold. As I wrote to Lisa:
You’re experimenting, and that is what it’s all about right now. I also like that you are experimenting while remaining centered around core journalistic values of free-flowing, transparent, accurate information.
I’ve reported from places where accurate information could be pretty hard to get, such as Russia soon after the Soviet Union fell apart and Iraq between 2003-2005. Working in a war zone for NPR, I learned again how important on-the-ground, eyewitness reporting really is, and how much better, always, it is to have more than one journalist covering a given story.
When I spent a year at Stanford on a Knight Journalism Fellowship, two of my fellowship colleagues got buyout offers. The changing pace and face of journalism couldn’t have become more clear. Hosting a regional talk show on the public broadcasting station in Portland, Oregon, made it obvious people really want to know what’s going on – at least with issues that directly affect their lives.
So, what will I learn from the JA? A lot, I trust, about the value placed on journalism – defined here as accurate, useful information created on the public’s behalf that gives people a tool to engage as citizens. And a lot about how publishers, editors and reporters are experimenting with new business models to stay in the game.
As editorial director, I’ll help set the tone, but the JA remains a forum by and about you – and all of us pushing the unwieldy journalism beast forward.
Now, just for fun, a short favorites list: Three books that have kept me loving my work.
- My War Gone By, I Miss It So. Anthony Loyd gets a heroin high off the Bosnian frontlines and captures the shallow attention to war in his own disaffected writing. I like his no-holds-barred descriptions of what it’s like there.
- The Walk Book. Janet Cardiff – sound, memory, place. It’s always a bit over my head but awesome.
- How To Write A Lot. Psych prof Paul J. Silvia sweeps away all the excuses. No special nook? He writes in the bathroom. Oh yeah, and turn off the email.
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2 comments so far.
Very exciting things happening here at JA. Welcome aboard, Emily.
Thanks Ben. A week or so in – I’m thrilled to be here!