STEPHENSIFF.COM     the personal web site of Steve Siff

 10 Herrold Ave. / Athens, Ohio / (330) 647-4298 / stephensiff@yahoo.com

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[About me]

 

I am a PhD student in journalism/

mass communications at the E.W. Scripps School of Journalism at Ohio University, where I teach a range of undergraduate journalism courses. Prior to grad school, I was a reporter at The Vindicator, the daily newspaper in Youngstown Ohio.

 

My hobbies include winemaking and working on my classic VW Dormobile camper. Once in a great while I write a book review.

 

Inside you can find:

Ancient story about  me in Cleveland Jewish News

 

Pictures of my cats Sally and Daisy.

 

Instructions to make your own wine

 

Tips for beating a speeding ticket

 

Contact me:

10 Herrold Ave.

Athens, OH 45701

(330) 647-4298

stephensiff@yahoo.com

 

Web site for J233 Infogathering

(click here)

 

AEJMC SCHEDULE:

I'm scheduled to present three papers at the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communications national conference Aug. 9-11 in Washington, D.C.:

 

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“Selling LSD: Clare Boothe and Henry Luce and Coverage of LSD in Time, 1954- 1968,” Magazine Division Session on “Selling LSD, Science and Technology, Third- Wave Feminism, and John Lennon,” 8:15 to 9:45 a.m., Saturday, Aug. 11. Top Student Paper.

 

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“Microeconomic Factors Influencing the Online Distribution of News: A Theoretical Approach,” Media Management and Economics Division Session on “Building Better Blogs, Better Web Sites, and Better (Virtual) Nude Beaches: Some Suggestions for Managing the Online World,” 11:45 a.m. to 12:45 p.m., Sunday Aug. 12. Third-Place Student Paper.

 

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“You Must Read This: A Content Analysis of Most E-Mailed Stories from Five News Sites,” Newspaper Division Session, 8:15 to 9:45 a.m., Saturday, Aug. 11. This poster session conflicts with the magazine session, so l may have to set up my poster and run.

 

Other conference events I'm planning for include:

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KTA/AEJMC Awards Luncheon, 11:45 a.m. to 1:15 p.m. Friday, Aug. 10

 

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BGSU Scholar Recognition, 1:30 p.m. to 3 p.m., Friday Aug. 10.

 

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Media Management and Economics members meeting, 6:45 p.m. to 8:15 p.m. Friday, Aug. 10.

 

BREAKING NEWS:

HS Journalism Workshop: I'm pleased to be leading a workshop on information gathering at the 62st annual E.W. Scripps High School Journalism Workshop on Friday, June 22.  Links for the workshop are here.

 

Lecture on 19C newspaper economics: PowerPoint of lecture for Richard Vedder's Economic History of America is here.

 

2006 AEJMC update: I'll be in San Francisco in August to present three papers at the Association of Educators in Journalism and Mass Communications national conference:

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“Carrying the Banner: The Portrayal of the American Newsboy Myth in the Disney Musical Newsies,” History Division.

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“Anonymous Sources and Reader Credibility,” co-authored with Tom Hrach, Media Ethics Division.

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“Diversity in the Newsroom and Coverage of Tragedy: How Ohio Newspapers Covered Hurricane Katrina,” with Wei Kang, Mohamed Sati, and John Wing, Mass Communication and Society Division.

7/6 On the road: Thanks to the E.W. Scripps School of Journalism for a grant to continue research into Time-Life publisher Henry Luce at the Library of Congress this summer. Looks like I'll be at the library in D.C. from Aug. 13 to 19. This project is an outgrowth of a paper I presented at the AEJMC Southeast Colloquium in March 2006 called "Time, Life and the Diffusion of LSD."

4/1 Cool conference: The Institute of Applied and Professional Ethics is putting on a neat conference on Blogging ethics in Athens this weekend. I'm presenting a paper, “Credibility: Blogging Ethics from the Consumer’s Perspective,” at the 9 a.m. Saturday session.

1/1/06 A new year: One quarter of coursework done, only five (or so) more to go ...

8/8 Pickets, writes and leaves: The nine-month strike against the Youngstown Vindicator ended Wednesday, when our union narrowly approved a contract not so different from ones we rejected in December and February.

Writing for the strike paper, The Valley Voice, Harold Gwin observed, "When it was over they [the strikers] had mixed reactions, but little jubilation."

The final issue of the Valley Voice was pulled off the press as part of the settlement deal.

The following day, I packed my life into a 17-foot U-Haul and said goodbye to Youngstown and The Vindicator. I finished moving into my awesome 2-bedroom house in Athens today.

 

7/18 Another award: My stories on the insurance mess in Trumbull County won second place for government coverage in this year's Ohio Society of Professional Journalists contest. 

My co-editor at the strike paper, Norm Leigh, won first place for best use of a public record for his stories about credit card misuse by Columbiana County officials.

That makes two awards for striking Vindicator reporters; scab reporters, zero.

 

7/11 Bigger and better things: WYTV Channel 33 will announce on its 6 p.m. newscast tonight that my friend and collaborator, Peggy Sinkovich, is coming on board as an on-air reporter.

I'm also leaving The Vindicator - or, rather, the strike against The Vindicator - to take a fellowship to study and teach at Ohio University's Scripps School of Journalism. 

Peggy and I are just putting the finishing touches on our first screen play, which we're calling "The Bureau." I'll post the first act here soon.

 

12/13: Another idea: A makeover store at the mall. A makeover expert takes customers from the beauty salon to the clothing store to the make-up counter ... you get the idea. Sell gift certificates for the holidays.

 

12/03: On strike: The Youngstown Newspaper Guild strike against the my paper, The Vindicator, enters its third week. Here's to hoping it will end soon and we'll all be back to work. You can read general news about the strike here.

I've taken on co-editing the weekly strike newspaper, The Valley Voice, and also administer and design www.valleyvoiceonline.com.  

 

9/9: What the world really needs: is two new products, sold on TV and made in China: the "Mow-Joe" an insulated beverage holder that clamps onto your  lawn mower's handle; and "Protector TP", a plastic shield that guards toilet paper rolls from cat claws. (Cats - and not just mine - go for toilet paper. Don't know why.)

 

2/10: Off the air: The Youngstown Report, a PBS show where my friend and coworker Peggy Sinkovich and I appeared as pundits, is on hiatus due to financial problems.  So next fund drive give early and give often. 

 

11/15: Next project ? A self improvement essay based on rebuilding a VW engine. Possible chapters: "The sledge hammer is your friend" and "If it don't fit, don't force it."

 

PLACES:

BOYNE CITY, Mich. -- If the National Mushroom Hunting Championship were televised, pre-game interviews would take place on five school buses, rumbling in a convoy through unmarked woods 250 miles north of Detroit.

"I'm here for the national notoriety," Ray Liking, a bearded welder from Mineral City, W.Va., said before the contest last year. (FULL STORY)

NEW YORK -- From behind bags of trash, a dozen cat eyes gleam in the weak beam of a sweeping flashlight. Though a locked steel gate blocks the abandoned railroad tunnel in Manhattan's Riverside Park, someone had slipped seven pie plates, now empty, through the rusty bars. 

An eighth plate was full of kibble. (FULL STORY)

MUSICAL INTERLUDE:

Joy Division, Love Will Tear Us Apart, 1980. If you like this kind of stuff, a great, funny movie about that scene is 24 Hour Party People.

 

Jour 331 Toys - click here

The Investigations:

2005 award-winner:

The Insurance Mess

Wasted money, bad decisions, risky consequences.

Awarded second for government reporting in the 2005 Ohio SPJ contest.

6 convictions to date

Trumbull County Purchasing Probe

The series exposed a $500,000 bribery ring in  Trumbull County government and named crooked vendors, resulting in local and state investigations. So far, six people have been indicted on bribery-related charges.  These stories with Peggy Sinkovich won first for investigative reporting at the 2002 Ohio AP contest;  first for government reporting at the 2003 Ohio SPJ contest; and third for investigative reporting at the 2003 Ohio AP contest.

Building Inspections Lacking 

Most houses constructed in Mahoning County in 2002 were never fully inspected by an inefficient building inspection department.

The story won first for investigative reporting, 2001 Ohio SPJ contest, third for enterprise reporting, 2000 Ohio AP contest.

Cleveland's Vampire Games

Cover story, Cleveland Scene, March 10, 2004