Is it really interesting to watch journalists work? To listen into how they discuss how to handle a story? It might be. Editor John Moore over at California local paper Ventura County Star is experimenting with a newsroom blog, where he tells readers what stories the reporters and editors are working on for next day’s front page. The mix of stories is then updated as it changes through the day. Most of the posts seem to be plainly informative, but it’s when Moore gets more analytical the concept really comes alive. As in this answer to readers’ reactions to a concrete ethical choice made by the editors. But will Moore let the reader sit in on the really tough debates and decisions in the newsroom (and won’t he withhold information when the paper has a big scoop the next day? I guess so, otherwise he’d be scooping the paper on the blog!)? With a well-known concept from Erving Goffman/Joshua Meyrowitz: The newsroom is usually backstage, an area where the public is not allowed in. Ever. When Moore suddenly lets readers in there, he really can’t give everything away. So he establishes a kind of middle stage. The lines are blurred. It’s typical that a blog is used for this end. Now, I don’t think readers would be very impressed or shocked by what goes on in the newsroom. But in a time where journalism is challenged on many fronts, it really is a good idea to inform readers as much as possible about the how and especially why of the trade. Journalists will need to define their role, and these kind of initiatives can only help (thanks to Hans Henrik Lichtenberg at Newspaperindex.com, another new addition to my regional media/journalism blog cluster!).