The Next Newsroom Project

Building the ideal newsroom for the next 50 years

tom abate
Share 
  • Blog Posts
  • Discussions
  • Newsrooms
  • Photos
  • Photo Albums
  • Videos

Tom abate's Friends

 

tom abate's Page

Latest Activity

Comment Wall

You need to be a member of The Next Newsroom Project to add comments!

Join this Ning Network

  • No comments yet!

Profile Information

Organization
day job reporter, sf chronicle; also blog at MiniMediGuy.org
Title
reporter and blogger
Location
northern california
About Me
Tom was born in Brooklyn in 1954, the oldest of six children in a family of Italian and Greek descent. He attended St. Edmund’s Elementary School and Regis High School before entering New York University in 1972. He dropped out of college after a year and enlisted in the U.S. Navy in 1974.

Tom got his first exposure to print and broadcast journalism at the Defense Information School, the training institute for the Armed Forces Network. For three years he ran a closed-circuit radio and television station aboard a Navy ship in the Pacific. Discharged in 1978 as a petty officer second class, Tom entered UC Berkeley and starting writing for the campus paper, the Daily Californian. In 1979 he was elected editor-in-chief. The paper was on the verge of bankruptcy. Tom helped lead the financial turnaround and broke a story about the H-bomb that put the paper in the national spotlight.

Tom graduated Berkeley summa cum laude in 1980 with a major in political science and a minor in Mandarin. He married his college sweetheart, Mia Ousley, in a big fat Greek wedding in Sacramento. They sought their fortunes in the Northern California town of Eureka where they narrowly averted disaster when Tom partnered with a bogus newspaper publisher. (I tell that tale in a blog posting titled: “The time I bought half-interest in a newspaper from a man with wooden teeth”) They bounced back and started a typesetting business, and created a national mail order business setting type for small press book publishers.

In 1989, Tom took another run at publishing by launching an alternative paper, the North Coast Journal. It continues in publication in Arcata, California, under a new owner. Tom sold the paper and moved his family back to New York City to attend the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University. He earned his Master’s degree in 1991 and won a Pulitzer Traveling Fellowship.

In 1992 Tom became the Silicon Valley reporter for the San Francisco Examiner. In 1997 he moved next door to the San Francisco Chronicle to cover biotechnology. He is the author of “The Biotech Investor” published by Times Books. Tom covered economics for the Chronicle during the 2004 presidential race. In 2006 he returned to the Silicon Valley beat to cover innovation.

Tom and Mia have two sons, Julius, 19, and Aeneas, 15, and a daughter, AnaSofia, 4. They now live in San Leandro, California. In 2004 the family built a new house on the Humboldt County homestead that is a legacy of their business days.

In 2005 Tom started blogging at MiniMediaGuy.org, where he draws on his life experience, reportorial skills and Silicon Valley insights to think out loud about the business, technology and culture of media.
Your Website
http://minimediaguy.org
Share your thoughts about how the newsroom of the future should be different . (And if you do, please post a copy of your answer in the forums).
Briefly. Today's newsroom is a hierarchy. Authority flows down. The whole premise of the newsroom is to filter and judge. All the news that's fit, so to speak. That may have been appropriate during the 20th Century when hierarchies ruled. Big business, big labor, big government, big media. But the network changes that. Truly. The network is decentralized. How the hell does a hierarchy cover a flat world. Very badly. My alternative? Well I said it so succintly elsewhere that Editor & Publisher columnist Steve Outing included a snippet in a piece about waving a magic wand to change the newsroom:

"Tom Abate, a longtime newspaper reporter who blogs as MiniMediaGuy, says that with a magic wand: "I would give every daily newspaper employee, starting with reporters and editors and working down to the mail room, a blog. And some instruction on the dos and don'ts. And then instruct the editors to read the blogs.

"Ideally these staff-written blogs should be a collection of detailed conversations about all the beats within the paper. And the editors should read those blogs as clues to future stories. Some issues may ripen on the blog and become stories for the mass audience in print. Astute editors also will spot trends by pulling together disparate blog items that all show, for instance, citizens creating local charities, or whatever," Abate says.

(Abate also has a great blog post) that covers some of this thinking: )
 
 

About

Chris O'Brien Chris O'Brien created this Ning Network.

Members

  • Mark Buzan
  • randy stano
  • Dan Rader
  • Chris O'Brien
  • Sandy
  • Ambika Kumar Doran
  • Carl Schierhorn
  • JC Payne
  • Jay Furst
  • John Moore
  • Ann Baekken
  • Jon Fjeld
  • Kelly Toughill
  • Paul Baron
  • vara prasad

What we're reading

Subscribe to get Next Newsroom Project updates

Enter your email address:


Delivered by FeedBurner

Next Newsroom Search


Custom Search
 

© 2009   Created by Chris O'Brien on Ning.   Create a Ning Network!

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service