Hello everyone, and welcome to the class blog  for Clay Carey’s section of  Journalism 231a (News Writing). I hope this blog will become a place where we  can read, discuss and learn from excellent journalism.
For that to  happen, the class must populate it with good stories. I want those stories to  come from a variety of sources, and I hope that in the process of seeking them  out we all discover high quality news sources that we didn’t know about prior to  this class.
In this post, I will share some of the outlets that I turn to  for good journalism. I will also set up some ground rules for blog posts that  should keep all of us on the same page as we look for stories to  post.
Sources I want you to use 
Newspapers: You should get in the habit of reading  them every day. Read The Columbus  Dispatch, and the metro daily from your hometown (for me, that is The Tennessean in Nashville).  Read The New York Times and other  major newspapers such as The Los Angeles  Times or the Miami  Herald.
Magazines and alternative weeklies: Magazines such as  Time and Newsweek sometimes  offer outstanding journalism. So do alternative weekly newspapers (such as the  Nashville Scene from my  hometown), although they typically write in a different style. Impressive  articles from other magazines are also welcome, as long as they focus on news  events or current social issues.
Web-only outlets: Sites such as Slate and ProPublica do great work. So do smaller  local nonprofit news organizations such as Texas Watchdog and Voice of San Diego. Feel free to post  stories from these sites, but make sure the articles you post are news, not  commentary or blogs (more on this later).
Sources I don’t want you to use
Blogs: If a blog post  directs you to an article produced by an established news outlet, feel free to  post and discuss that article. Bloggers sometimes produce quality work, but I do  not want you to post blog entries for our discussions.
The local  newspapers: By “local,” I mean the newspapers that cover Athens – The Post, the Athens News and The Athens Messenger. They  sometimes produce good work, and you should read each of them. But the point of  this blog is to expose your classmates (and me) to journalism we might not  otherwise see. Most of us should see the stories in those three papers  anyway.
Editorials and Commentary: We will focus on straight newswriting  in this class, so I want our Thursday discussions to focus on straight news  stories.
Some things to remember 
Use Twitter: I  follow several organizations and individuals on Twitter who post links to great  stories. In addition to the news organizations I’ve already mentioned  (especially @nytimes), I recommend  @longreads, @niemanstory, @briefreads and @poststorylab. There are many more  – if you find a great one, please share it here.
As you become fans of  particular writers, you should also follow those writers if they have Twitter  presences. Writers whom I admire and follow include Todd Frankel of the St. Louis  Post-Dispatch and John  McIntyre of The Baltimore Sun.
Think stories, not just  articles: We will spend a lot of time talking about writing in this class, so we  should spend a lot of time talking about writing on this blog as well. But when  you post articles that have well planned and executed multimedia components,  please discuss those as well. Think about stories as a combination of text  articles and multimedia, and discuss ways in which each element adds to the  overall story.
Provide links:  Obviously, you should provide hyperlink to the stories you want to discuss here.  You should provide other links that provide additional context as well. The more  links a blog has, the better it serves its readers.
With that, I will stop. I look forward to reading and  discussing great stories here!
 
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