I don't know mate, I see what you're saying, but I honestly think I'm still a closet misogynist that wasted over a month of his life hunting down a relatively unknown female developer, because she happens to be a woman. It just sounds like me, you know?VectorSlip said:All in all please don't just resort to calling people trolls. Its not conductive to discussion and get's nobody anywhere.
I wouldn't necessary put it like that.VectorSlip said:There isn't much to discuss beyond the approval being voiced in this thread. I mean who would legitimately argue against high journalistic standards.
The second article is about the opinions and experiences of female game devs yes. But their responses actually leave room for discussion.
Indeed. When the group of gaming websites ran with the headline idea "Gamers are Dead", I was infuriated beyond belief. These people basically said to me, "Our own demographic is irrelevant, at this point, so we're going to run with the notion that attacking them in op-ed articles is the best thing to do in this scenario". I took that as a collective cue from them that they don't want my attention or money; which is fine by me, as I am more comfortable giving it to people like Angry Joe, ReviewTechUSA, TotalBiscuit, AlphaOmegaSin and boogie2988. These people cover my gaming inquiries and views far, far better than those other gaming websites ever did, and I am glad to give them my attention and money in the form of views and subscriptions.JSRevenge said:Success is the best revenge. If The Escapist would prefer to focus on quality journalism while ignoring the fires burning around them, that sounds pretty good to me.Myxam said:@John Keefer
I admire your stance. Though I'd prefer a condemnation of their actions (Sex is worth a lot more than a T-shirt I bet), I can't gripe at you not wanting to talk bad about your colleagues. However, if we do not hold the writers to an ethical standard -- we will see the Fifth Estate die a death just like Telecast News and the Paper Medium (which is surprisingly coming back where I live). I respect you sir, but I can not agree with you. Though I do pray that future journalists in this industry will have you and this declaration, as their Walter Cronkite.
What do you want them to say? They've published pieces talking about what started it, the IRC logs, how events developed, allowed free discussion in the forums, etc. At this point, there's nothing new happening that needs urgent reporting, it's just people keeping the pot on the stove after the water's boiled.Houseman said:I enjoy all the little scraps and tidbits of Gamergate coverage from this site that I can get, but that's all they seem to be. Scraps and tidbits. I'm left wanting for something more substantial than "Yeah, some stuff is happening, but here's how much integrity we have!"
I believe you. You're cool. The Escapist is cool. I want to hear about the other stuff that's happening without having to keep a 24/7 eye on twitter and 8chan, though. I want my news to come from actual journalists on an actual news site.
Is that too much to ask?
Great article, but I'd like to see some actual coverage of the newsworthy thing that's happening right now. You guys have the integrity, so I can trust what you guys say about it, right? So say something about it.
Very well written, Mr. Keefer. And I don't for one moment blame you for keeping one of those bomber jackets, because it can be terribly expensive to get those of a decent quality. I just hope you disclosed it if you reviewed the piece that got you the jacket you kept.John Keefer said:The Changing Face of Journalism: How We Will Meet the Challenge
The video game press faces different battles than journalists of years ago. But trying to do things properly should never be an issue, even without GamerGate. Here's what The Escapist will do.
Read Full Article
I don't know about that - phone calls are much easier and you don't have to gather good audio for a newspaper piece. Not everyone gets their feet on the ground these days. I do, when I have the time.John Keefer said:I think I covered that in the paragraph on Fox, CNN, MSNBC and the like. It is incredibly hard to watch ANY news these days as you do not know what to believe. Local news tends to be better than network news, but having been raised on old school reporting and watching investigative pieces on TV, it is hard to stomach the stuff that passes for "journalism" today. I still trust newspapers, what little of them still exist, because the reporter still must get out into the community and do his legwork for a story, talk to sources and follow paper trails. Being an old fart makes me old schoolSleekit said:with respect to the subject matter of the piece i would also kinda like to hear any thoughts Mr Keefer might have on political and crime reporting if he felt so inclined as personally i feel these are the areas that hold the most dangerous gear change with respect to tone and responsibility.
I'm very disappointed that you didn't mention clickbait.John Keefer said:The Changing Face of Journalism: How We Will Meet the Challenge
The video game press faces different battles than journalists of years ago. But trying to do things properly should never be an issue, even without GamerGate. Here's what The Escapist will do.
Read Full Article