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Calif. Web site outsources reporting [uses reporters in India to cover Pasadena City Council]
AP ^ | May 10, 2007 | JUSTIN PRITCHARD

Posted on 05/10/2007 5:20:50 PM PDT by freedomdefender

PASADENA, Calif. - The job posting was a head-scratcher: "We seek a newspaper journalist based in India to report on the city government and political scene of Pasadena, California, USA."

A reporter half a world away covering local street-light contracts and sewer repairs? A reporter who has never gotten closer to Pasadena than the telecast of the Rose Bowl parade?

Outsourcing first claimed manufacturing jobs, then hit services such as technical support, airline reservations and tax preparation. Now comes the next frontier: local journalism.

James Macpherson, editor and publisher of the two-year-old Web site pasadenanow.com, acknowledged it sounds strange to have journalists in India cover news in this wealthy city just outside Los Angeles.

But he said it can be done from afar now that weekly Pasadena City Council meetings can be watched over the Internet. And he said the idea makes business sense because of India's lower labor costs.

"I think it could be a significant way to increase the quality of journalism on the local level without the expense that is a major problem for local publications," said the 51-year-old Pasadena native. "Whether you're at a desk in Pasadena or a desk in Mumbai, you're still just a phone call or e-mail away from the interview."

The first articles, some of which will carry bylines, are slated to appear Friday.

The plan has its doubters.

"Nobody in their right mind would trust the reporting of people who not only don't know the institutions but aren't even there to witness the events and nuances," said Bryce Nelson, a University of Southern California journalism professor and Pasadena resident. "This is a truly sad picture of what American journalism could become."

It is a shaky business proposition as well, said Uday Karmarkar, a UCLA professor of technology and strategy who outsources copy editing and graphics work to Indian businesses. If the goal is sophisticated reporting, he said, Macpherson could end up spending more time editing than the labor savings are worth.

This is not the first time media jobs have been shipped to India.

The British news agency Reuters runs an operation in the technology capital of Bangalore that churns out Wall Street stories based on news releases.

Macpherson appears to be the first to outsource community journalism — work that by definition has been done by reporters who walk the streets they cover.

Macphersons said his Web site, which he runs out of his house, gets about 45,000 unique readers per month but is not yet profitable. Up until now, his main help has consisted of his wife and an intern.

Macpherson posted the help-wanted ad Monday on the Indian edition of craigslist.com. Within days, he said, he had hired two Indian reporters, one a graduate of the journalism school at the University of California at Berkeley.

He wants them to broaden pasadenanow.com's content from news releases and event listings to analyses of issues before the council, and perhaps eventually to investigative reports.

Projected annual cost: $20,800 for the pair. Not bad wages for an Indian journalist and cheap by U.S. standards, especially if each one produces the expected 15 weekly articles.

Pasadena city spokeswoman Ann Erdman said coverage from afar shouldn't pose problems if the articles are well-edited. In any case, she said, "Local government is certainly not in the practice of dictating to local business who they can hire and where those employees should live."

___

Associated Press Writer Matthew Rosenberg in New Delhi, India, contributed to this report.

___


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To: Bernard Marx
But you can mail in the content of most papers' op-ed pages from anywhere.

Maybe smaller papers, which run op-eds of syndicate writers about national and global subjects. But major urban papers, such as the NYT, Chicago Trib, and LA Times carry quite a bit of major local issue op-ed.

How can Kinsey get a feel for 100,000 illegal aliens at a rally being encouraged by the L.A. Mayor, while sitting in sight of the Space Needle? What opinions of his would be valid about the Rodney King riots to me, who saw the flames and looters first hand? Where does he get off explaining gangs to someone whose next door neighbor has Avenue 43 grafitti on his wall? What does the Orange Crush or the East LA interchange really mean to someone who is on the other side of the U.S?

But, the fact that op-ed content has more to do with events filtered through social dogma than local impact allows people like Kinsley to be interchangable with any other Lib opinion leader. It's not what is happening in the community that's important to these people; it's how it reflects on their pet issues. Thus Columbine becomes "gun control", MS13 becomes "immigration issues", wild fires become "global warming". Each is just an editorial hobbyhorse to push partyline dogma.

21 posted on 05/11/2007 9:27:00 PM PDT by LexBaird (98% satisfaction guaranteed. There's just no pleasing some people.)
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To: LexBaird
Each is just an editorial hobbyhorse to push partyline dogma.

Like I said.

22 posted on 05/11/2007 10:25:05 PM PDT by Bernard Marx
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