
§ Subscribe
§ Podcast
- For Immediate Release
A weekly podcast for professional communicators from Shel Holtz, ABC and Neville Hobson, ABC.
Podcast Feed
Vote for FIR
§ PR Search
§ Places
- Shel's link blog
- Blogs I read
- Holtz Communication + Technology
- IABC
- Ragan Communications
- Society for New Communications Research
§ Dead Trees
- Tactical Transparency
by Shel Holtz and John C. Havens
- How to Do Everything with Podcasting
by Shel Holtz with Neville Hobson
- Blogging for Business
by Shel Holtz and Ted Demopoulos
- Corporate Conversations
by Shel Holtz
- Public Relations on the Net
by Shel Holtz
§ License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Monday, January 30, 2006
Maybe not all blogs should be journalism
Japanese athletes competing at the upcoming Winter Olympics won’t be able to blog about their experiences because their posts could be construed as journalism and disqualify them from the Games.
TMC Net reports that the Japanese Olympic Committee has informed its athletes that the Olympic Charter prohibits athletes from engaging in journalistic activities during the Games.
Statements from the Committee note that blogs constitute a grey area, but that it’s not worth taking the chance. “There is no clear-cut standard to judge to what extent journalist activities are allowed, but diaries and detailed reports are no good during the Olympics period,” wrote Shin Taira, a JOC publicist.
I’m not sure where I stand on this, considering all the wrangling in the blogosphere to be recognized as a form of journalism. Maintaining a personal diary that happens to be online—particularly one without advertising—seems to me a great way to draw more attention to the Games. The IOC should take a look at its policy and clarify what athletes can and can’t do…and give a thumbs-up to non-commercial blogging.





Digg/shelholtz
Flickr/shelholtz
Facebook/Shel Holtz
Linkedin/shelholtz
Twitter/shelholtz
YouTube/shelholtz
Del.icio.us/shelholtz
GMail/Shel Holtz
Technorati/shelholtz
MyBlogLog/shelholtz