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Thursday, March 18, 2004
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Insiders Look at Future of Journalism, Online and OffThis is definitely the season for major studies of journalism, most recently a 500-page online report, The State of the News Media 2004
(stateofthemedia.org), by the Project for Excellence in Journalism
(journalism.org). Pulling together statistics and results of other studies, the report addresses everything from news
content and business issues to audience trends and public attitudes
toward the media. (The 34-page executive summary is downloadable as a PDF.)
Among the report's conclusions are that audiences are shrinking, except for
online media and a composite category the report calls "ethnic and
alternative news media." Cutbacks in newsroom staff numbers are endangering
the quality of the news, the report says, and -- especially online and on cable TV
-- there's "a tendency toward a jumbled, chaotic, partial quality in
some reports."
Other highlights raise big questions about control of the media, about maintaining the quality of reporting, and about whether
there's an economic model to make a new online journalism pay its way.
"If online proves to be a less useful medium for subscription fees or
advertising, will it provide as strong an economic foundation for
newsgathering as television and newspapers have? If
not, the move to the Web may lead to a general decline in the scope and
quality of American journalism, not because the medium isn't suited for
news, but because it isn't suited to the kind of profits that
underwrite newsgathering.
I won't try to paraphrase any more when there's a convenient one-page list of the report's "eight major trends"
already online. However, I will point to some early looks at the
report by other readers, adding to this list as I run across more of
them...
You have to be registered with the International Newspaper Marketing Association
to get at the full text of an essay in which its executive director,
Earl Wilkerson, takes issue with some of the report's conclusions, so
I'll quote instead of just pointing. He summarizes some of the
report's conclusions this way: "We
need more journalists, we need more editors to counter-balance all
of that unfiltered blogging on the Internet, and media owners need to
sacrifice earnings to do that."
Not so, he says, at least not for
newspapers. He thinks they have a
bigger need for niche products, things like quick-read tabloids for the youth market. He goes on
(highlighting added):
"I would respectfully argue that
publishing companies don[base ']t need more journalists. We need more editors,
re-packagers, researchers, and consumer marketers. It's easy to say we
need 'all of the above.' Yet the abdication of news gathering by other
traditional media, notably television, leaves newspapers in the unique
competitive position of having by far the most 'boots on the
ground' gathering news."
If that sounds like a marketing guy seeing only marketing
solutions,
Wilkinson sees the report as self-serving for another group, "i.e., a
journalism
project advocating more journalists and more of the type of journalism
taught by journalism schools that support the journalism project."
Even if he's right that "publishing companies don't need more
journalists," I don't think the report is just an attempt to market
journalism schools or their standards. Perhaps "the public" needs
more idealistic journalists more than publishing companies need their
profit margins? Perhaps "more journalists" is a good idea anyway,
whether they draw their paychecks from publishing companies,
broadcasters, universities or pay the rent with income from writing
software or selling soap?
Full disclosure: I am looking for a job teaching about journalism,
"online journalism" and related issues, so I'm not being particularly
"objective" here.
I do believe the curiosity and healthy skepticism, fact-finding and storytelling skills, and the values and ethics
of "the type of journalism taught by journalism schools" apply quite
well to the online world as well as print and broadcast news. Those
skills and values could be very useful to "citizen journalists" and "participatory journalists" -- the folks reading and writing weblogs, for instance.
I'll be thinking about this some more, as well as reading this growing pile of journalism reports, between now and the journalism discussions at Bloggercon II... and my next round of job interviews.
Other comments on the report...
5:19:01 PM
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© Copyright
2008
Bob Stepno.
Last update:
7/19/08; 12:54:56 PM.
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