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Playlist: Grant Potter's Favorites

Compiled By: Grant Potter

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My Dad's Records

From Canadian Broadcasting Corporation | Part of the CBC Radio's Outfront series | 14:04

Kent Hoffman draws an intimate portrait of his late father through the memories triggered by an inherited record collection.

Prxoutfrontplain_small My Dad's Records Producers: Kent Hoffman and Carma Jolly Kent Hoffman draws an intimate portrait of his late father through the memories triggered by an inherited record collection. When Kent and his five-year-old son Evan sit down for the first time and listen to the record collection, what evolves is no mere sentimental journey. It is an evocation of how the quirky musical tastes of a father become the legacy of a son, and grandson. Told with wit and affection, My Dad's Records considers how musical memories can be both deeply personal and elusive. Broadcast on CBC Radio One's Outfront June 16, 2004 September 1, 2004 SEE ADDITIONAL LICENSE TERMS Outfront Opening and Closing Theme available - (see Rundown section for more details)

News 2.0: The Future of News in an Age of Social Media- Part Two

From Canadian Broadcasting Corporation | Part of the The Future of News in an Age of Social Media series | 53:07

Two one-hour CBC Radio programs about changes to our understanding of 'journalism' now that anyone can create, report and publish news.

Ireport-clarenceny-plane-crash_small

For more than a hundred years, the tools of journalistic production – the ability to report, photograph and record events and distribute that material to a mass audience – have resided in the hands of a small group of people who, by convention and by law, have been called journalists.

But in this 21st century the tools of production now belong to just about everyone. Thanks to "Web 2.0" technology – blogs, wikis, social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter and video sharing sites like YouTube – billions of people can transmit text, photos, and video instantly to a worldwide audience at virtually no cost. The tools of journalism are no longer the exclusive preserve of journalists.

Web 2.0 has made the creation of highly interactive online communities both easy and inexpensive. And these online communities have become important reference points in many people's lives, often replacing more traditional sources of influence, including journalists.

What is now called the "mainstream media" has lost its control over the tools of its trade, and its importance as a centre of social and political influence. The business and philosophical model both appear to be broken, perhaps irrevocably.

There is much to celebrate about this democratization of the media, but there are also reasons to be concerned about the loss of an independent, professional journalistic filter at a time when everyone can be their own media. Can online communities of "citizen journalists" be counted on to help us make informed choices as citizens and consumers? What's lost, and what's gained when "News 1.0" gives way to "News 2.0?"

News 2.0: The Future of News in the Age of Social Media- Part One

From Canadian Broadcasting Corporation | Part of the The Future of News in an Age of Social Media series | 52:14

Two one-hour CBC Radio programs about changes to our understanding of 'journalism' now that anyone can create, report and publish news.

Ireport-clarenceny-plane-crash_small

For more than a hundred years, the tools of journalistic production – the ability to report, photograph and record events and distribute that material to a mass audience – have resided in the hands of a small group of people who, by convention and by law, have been called journalists.

But in this 21st century the tools of production now belong to just about everyone. Thanks to "Web 2.0" technology – blogs, wikis, social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter and video sharing sites like YouTube – billions of people can transmit text, photos, and video instantly to a worldwide audience at virtually no cost. The tools of journalism are no longer the exclusive preserve of journalists.

Web 2.0 has made the creation of highly interactive online communities both easy and inexpensive. And these online communities have become important reference points in many people's lives, often replacing more traditional sources of influence, including journalists.

What is now called the "mainstream media" has lost its control over the tools of its trade, and its importance as a centre of social and political influence. The business and philosophical model both appear to be broken, perhaps irrevocably.

There is much to celebrate about this democratization of the media, but there are also reasons to be concerned about the loss of an independent, professional journalistic filter at a time when everyone can be their own media. Can online communities of "citizen journalists" be counted on to help us make informed choices as citizens and consumers? What's lost, and what's gained when "News 1.0" gives way to "News 2.0?"