Salon.com | The death of the news
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Saved by 5 people (0 private), first by anonymouse user on 2009-02-17
- Cpapapietro on 2009-02-18 - Tags news , journalism , internet , blog
- Dtspdmka on 2009-02-17 - Tags journalism , news
- Cynmccune on 2009-02-17 - Tags future of news , future of newspapers , journalism
- Cburell on 2009-02-17 - Tags webroundup , journalism , blogging , media
- Trexbean on 2009-02-17 - Tags no_tag
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Highlighted by cynmccune
Highlighted by cynmccune
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on 2009-02-17 by cynmccune
But the reality is that "he said, she said" journalism is what often passes for objectivity these days. It's a way to avoid angering your audience, and many news publishers value that more than truth-telling.
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Journalism as we know it is in crisis. Daily newspapers are going out of business at an unprecedented rate, and the survivors are slashing their budgets. Thousands of reporters and editors have lost their jobs. No print publication is immune, including the mighty New York Times. As analyst Allan Mutter noted, 2008 was the worst year in history for newspaper publishers, with shares dropping a stunning 83 percent on average. Newspapers lost $64.5 billion in market value in 12 months.
Highlighted by cburell
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If newspapers die, so does reporting. That's because the majority of reporting originates at newspapers. Online journalism is essentially parasitic. Like most TV news, it derives or follows up on stories that first appeared in print. Former Los Angeles Times editor John Carroll has estimated that 80 percent of all online news originates in print. As a longtime editor of an online journal who has taken part in hundreds of editorial meetings in which story ideas are generated from pieces that appeared in print, that figure strikes me as low.
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The information universe today is not, of course, comprehensive, nor could it ever be. What appears in the newspapers is a result of editorial whim and financial pressures. But this limited and capricious hodgepodge of information is far preferable to the self-selected alternative that awaits us -- it stimulates parts of our brain that would otherwise atrophy.
It's much easier to consume unfamiliar information in a newspaper than on the Internet.
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on 2009-02-17 by cburell
Really?
on 2009-02-17 by cynmccune
We could also argue that the Internet gives people what they need -- direct access to primary sources of information, in addition to lots of opinion and fun stuff.
Today, those institutions are threatened as never before, in part because of the disappearance of old-school publishers who regarded their media properties as a public trust, in part because of the rise of new media.
This bleak situation has given rise to a once-unthinkable notion: removing the news from market forces altogether by subsidizing it. In a recent Op-Ed in the New York Times, two business analysts suggested turning newspapers into "nonprofit, endowed institutions -- like colleges and universities."
Most journalists probably find something vaguely creepy about this idea; it's a little too high-minded, abstract and self-congratulatory to fit with their self-image as regular Joes and Jills. There are also legitimate concerns whether foundations or other public supporters would influence editorial content or direction. But the alternative is disturbing.
Highlighted by cburell
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And the he-said, she-said approach mandated by objectivity can be ridiculously stupid. If Joe says the sky is blue and Jack, who is widely known to be a delusional psychotic who has just taken two tabs of acid, says it's purple with pink polka-dots, is it really necessary to report what Jack says?
Highlighted by cburell
on 2009-02-17 by cburell
In other words, should we be reporting the Tax Break fundamentalists in the GOP?
Highlighted by cburell
No one can predict what the new information age will look like, and my version may be excessively dystopian. But one thing is indisputable: Reporting must be kept alive. With all its limitations and faults, it is a light that illuminates the world outside ourselves. And in an increasingly virtual and solipsistic age, that light is needed more than ever.
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