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Web Reporters Disgruntled After Snub by Grammys.


Being a journalist can bring lots of perks perk 1  
v. perked, perk·ing, perks

v.intr.
1. To stick up or jut out: dogs' ears that perk.

2. To carry oneself in a lively and jaunty manner.
, from access to high-ranking officials to invitations to swank parties and events.

Unless you're a writer for a Web site.

That was the aggravating ag·gra·vate  
tr.v. ag·gra·vat·ed, ag·gra·vat·ing, ag·gra·vates
1. To make worse or more troublesome.

2. To rouse to exasperation or anger; provoke. See Synonyms at annoy.
 situation for many dot-com reporters at last week's Grammy Awards Grammy Awards

Annual awards given by the Recording Academy (officially the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences). The first Grammies (the name is a dimunitive of “gramophone”) were given in 1958.
, which for the first time did not give out media credentials to Internet reporters. The snub came even as the number of Web sites offering news grows exponentially.

During the awards show, Web reporters had to improvise im·pro·vise  
v. im·pro·vised, im·pro·vis·ing, im·pro·vis·es

v.tr.
1. To invent, compose, or perform with little or no preparation.

2.
 from their desks or find ways around the rules.

Launch.com discovered one of those ways. The Santa Monica-based company runs a music-oriented Web site, and wanted to get its reporters into the show. Because they couldn't get credentials, Launch relied on one of its secondary businesses - it runs a news service for radio stations.

"We were credentialed under Launch Radio Network," said Craig Rosen, vice president of programming. "There's other dot-coms that have figured a way around it."

At music site AllStar, a division of CDnow, Managing Editor Carrie Borzillo has been covering the Grammys ever since the site's inception in 1996.

"I do understand that there has to be a cutoff, but when AllStar's been covering it for three years straight, I was surprised (when our credentials were denied)," Borzillo said. "I think everyone worked around it as best we could."

AllStar hired two reporters and a photographer who were credentialed with other media outlets to do freelance work freelance work free nfreiberufliche Arbeit f  for the site.

"Because there's such a proliferation proliferation /pro·lif·er·a·tion/ (pro-lif?er-a´shun) the reproduction or multiplication of similar forms, especially of cells.prolif´erativeprolif´erous

pro·lif·er·a·tion
n.
 of these kinds of companies vs. the number of substantive mainstream media, we couldn't accommodate everybody," said Adam Sandler, spokesman for NARAS NARAS National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (Grammy awards)
NARAS Navigation Aids, Radar and ARPA Simulation (UK maritime course) 
. He added that all online companies were given the option to access images from an official Webcast run by the Academy's site, Grammy.com.

Executives at dot-coms have two explanations for their exclusion this year: There is no reliable measurement system for determining which sites are more powerful and important than others, and organizations connected to the Grammys didn't want competition for their own Web coverage.

"It's still a very misunderstood medium," said Lew Harris, editor in chief at entertainment mega-site E! Online. "They've got so many people screaming for things that they just haven't been able to ferret out Verb 1. ferret out - search and discover through persistent investigation; "She ferreted out the truth"
ferret

discover, find - make a discovery; "She found that he had lied to her"; "The story is false, so far as I can discover"
 the voices."

Competition is also a factor. Dot-com reporters were shut out from the American Music Awards The American Music Awards show is one of several annual major American music awards shows (among the others are the Billboard Music Awards, the Grammy Awards, and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony).  in January, and only one site, ABC ABC
 in full American Broadcasting Co.

Major U.S. television network. It began when the expanding national radio network NBC split into the separate Red and Blue networks in 1928.
.com, was granted exclusive access to the show.

"With the Grammys or the Oscars, they've got their own Web sites," Harris said. "They think it's going to be competing. They haven't gotten the idea that publicity is publicity."

Checkout.com was one of the sites that received streaming audio A one-way audio transmission over a data network. It is widely used on the Web as well as company networks to play audio clips and Internet radio. Computers in home networks stream audio (mostly music) to digital media hubs connected to home theaters.  and video from the official Grammy site, said David Zakon, Checkout's senior music producer. Checkout writers also attended the Grammys as ticketed guests, and wrote articles from their experiences and from network video feeds and newswire reports.

Writers for E! Online (at www.eonline.com) didn't send a reporter, but sent a photographer to work the red-carpet entrance. The site also used the E! television network's video feed for streaming video A one-way video transmission over a data network. It is widely used on the Web as well as company networks to play video clips and video broadcasts. Computers in home networks stream video to digital media hubs connected to a home theater.  of star arrivals and interviews.

Entertainment sites are now holding their breath about access to next month's star-studded Academy Awards show.

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences received about 550 media requests, about 40 from dot-coms, for passes to this year's awards on March 26. Up to 300 journalists will get passes, but the credential list has not yet been determined. Some dot-com reporters received credentials last year.

The Academy allots passes based on the importance of a medium, including audience size and demographics The attributes of people in a particular geographic area. Used for marketing purposes, population, ethnic origins, religion, spoken language, income and age range are examples of demographic data. . This would seem to favor Web sites, with a global reach and the potential f6r huge, young audiences. But additional weight is given to media based on market share and previous coverage of Oscar ceremonies.

"It's difficult to evaluate," said Leslie Unger, publicity coordinator for the academy. "Unfortunately, in my instance, I have a venue that stays the same size from year to year. So credentialing a new breed of journalists has to happen at the expense of old breeds of journalists."

Exclusion from events can't last, dot-com executives said. Some suggested a separate room be set aside for Internet reporters who could upload updates to the Web as events occur. Others just want legitimate sites to receive some consideration.

"I just think they should have thought a little more closely, and maybe pick five that are the main ones and give them that respect," Borzillo said. "And they didn't give us that respect or our competitors that respect."
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Article Details
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Author:DUNPHY, LAURA
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Feb 28, 2000
Words:759
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