journalism

The Mad Editor’s Round-Up #20.5: Special Saturday Edition

News

I was surfing the ‘net this morning while eating a bowl of oat flakes. Thought I’d through together an impromptu Mad Editor’s Round-up. So, dig out your eyeglasses and welcome to a special Saturday edition of the Round-Up.

Carolyn Kellog reports on the LA Times website on the success of book blogs as "Book bloggers catch on with publishers".

E-books pave way for more blockbusters, serials …

DC Comics follows Marvel onto the IPad

In no surprise here category, LimeWire Sued by Music Publishers

 

Writing Tips

Lisa Mason explains “Why You Shouldn’t Write Your Articles in Parts”.

 

Mary Anna Evans says, “Know Where You’re Going”.

 

Writing

John Updike: A Great Writer at Work in the NYT.

Brett Easton Ellis returns to his roots.

 

ETC.

In the It-Takes-One-to-Know-One category, media fruit-loop, Glen Beck agrees with the late Sen. Joseph McCarthy.

 

The Communication Exchange offers up a quiz

 

Vampire’s fangs have become dull according to some writers.  Even Stephanie Meyer has grown weary of them.

 

And that’s all for now. I suspect this being Summer, you’ve probably got better things to do on a Saturday than read this or any other site but, hey, I could be wrong. Maybe you’re a shut-in or laid-up with a broken ankle or whatever.  Me, I’m outta here in a few minutes because I definitely have better things to do on a Saturday than read any more blog posts or articles. 

So, this quickie Round-Up is thus ended. See you all on the flip-side. Same Bat Channel and all that. . .  Ciao.

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Content Aware Fill in the New Photoshop Makes Faking Photos Easier Than Ever

Adobe’s got a new tool for Photoshop that makes photo editing even easier. Imagine you want to convince people you know a famous celebrity. You take a picture from one of those Outer Banks beach rentals you stayed at last summer and you plop an image of you standing next to Lady Gaga. This new tool makes the image look real whereas earlier versions of photoshopped images always looked obvious and fake. This innovation will be both a blessing and a curse for publishers.

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Do Print Magazines Have a Point About Article Farms?

The other day, I was reading an article on some tech news website in which the author was lamenting the "inevitable" death of print magazines and the lack of quality control online (terribly ironic when one considers that he had written this article for an online publication). I am always suspect of an advocate of print publishing who makes a blanket statement about the poor editorial standards of online publishers. Not that there aren’t plenty of instances of lackadaisical editorial standards online (which we’ll get to shortly), but given that there are plenty of instances of lapses in both editing and fact-checking in offline publishing, it’s not at all fair to say that offline automatically equals quality and online automatically equals low quality. To prove his point, though, the author pointed to a well-known article farm. The term "article farm" is obviously a derogatory term. Simply put it’s a site that offers both free and custom-written articles about a variety of topics based on certain keywords. Like me, if you’ve been involved in online writing and publishing, you’ve probably written for these sites at some point and used some of these articles for your newsletters and websites.

Which brings me to a site called articlealley.com. Just this morning I was asked to review this site. It is, by definition, an article farm that employs many, many writers to produce both free and custom articles. There are a number of custom-writing packages offered ranging from $40 for a single article to $23 per article for bulk purchases. I couldn’t help think about the previously mentioned article while I browsed this site. Although this company promises high standards of quality control for it’s custom articles, I am assuming that the same writers creating this content are the same guys and gals writing the free articles available on the site. If so, let the buyer beware. Having read a number of the free articles on the site, I have to tell you that the quality control is non-existent. The information contained in the article is generic and unoriginal. Copyediting and proofreading are likewise non-existent. Many of the articles don’t even seem to be written by writers who speak and write English as a primary language. One such article, “Kanye West Lady Gaga A True Rock Performer” is the perfect example of what I’m talking about. That gives me pause.  Read that article and tell me honestly you’d pay Azeem to write for your website. Because if you are paying $40 for an article that you have to edit and rewrite yourself, you’d be better off  writing it yourself to begin with and saving your money.

I know of several of these so-called article farms that actually do demand a certain standard from their writers and do take some time with an article and demand rewrites prior to approving an article. Unfortunately, many don’t and that makes everyone who publishes online look bad. My hope is that articlealley.com has higher standards for its custom articles and will be more discerning in the future when it comes to their free articles. Because when it comes to generating traffic and ad revenues, quality is much more important to the equation than keyword density.

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