|
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
|
|
|
"America's newspapers are narrowing their reach and their ambitions and becoming niche reads," says the Project for Excellence in Journalism's study called "The Changing Newsroom: What is Being Gained and What is Being Lost in America's Daily Newspapers."
Among the things being lost are many of the newsroom jobs at both papers I've worked for, The Hartford Courant and the Raleigh News & Observer. Here's a fascinating scary site that maps the losses nationwide: Papercuts.
PEJ says managers need to "find a way to monetize the rapid growth of Web readership before newsroom staff cuts so weaken newspapers that their competitive advantage disappears." That's hardly "stop the presses" news!
As papers narrow their focus to local and community news and try co co-opt local bloggers into supporting local newspaper brands, who watches the wonderful people and big crooks in the worlds of business and politics? Are we moving to an era of very few reporters covering big national stories? Foundation-funded investigative journalists? Trusting all coverage of national and world news to The New York Times, Washington Post, Wall St. Journal, USA Today, TVnews departments, BBC and NPR? (And I don't mean celebrity a la mode stuff, sports and fake reality entertainment news.)
Meanwhile, the Newspaper Division of the Association for Education in Journalism & Mass Communication is struggling with its own self-definition. More than 50 professors have joined in the on-line discussion creating 10 times more traffic on the group's e-mail list this month than ever before. The question: Should the division's name be changed to "News Division" or Newspaper/Online News Division" or will that just start a turf battle with the AEJMC divisions formerly concerned with radio, television, magazines and technology?
I vote for having a "Journalism" division to deal with the online multimedia common ground and continuing the industry-specific divisions with clarified mission statements.
For now, the Newspaper Division's definition at national headquarters says:
The Newspaper Division examines key concerns facing journalism
education, the newspaper industry and society; topics include ethics,
new technology, readership, minority recruitment and the media's role
in society. Publishes Newspaper Research Journal and a newsletter. Visit the Newspaper Research Journal Website: http://www.newspaperresearchjournal.org. See Newspaper Research Journal - Research You Can Use. For evidence of the work division members do, here are recent articles from its journal:
- "Official Sources Dominate Domestic Violence Reporting,"
by Cathy Ferrand Bullock
- "How Online Journalists Rank Importance of News Skills,"
by Shahira Fahmy
- "Survey Measures Burnout In Newspaper Sports Editors,"
by Scott Reindary
- "Suicide Story Frames Contribute to Stigma,"
by Valica Boudry
- "Tribune-Review Revives Competition in Pittsburgh,"
by Linda Steiner and Nora Bird
- "Comparison of Demographics For Media in 1995, 2006,"
by Guido H. Stempel III and Thomas Hargrove
- "Study Asks If Reporters' Gender or Audience Predict for Paper's Cancer Coverage,"
by Maria E. Len-Rios, Sun-A Park, Glen T. Cameron, Douglas L. Duke and Matt Kreuter
I'll settle for everyone agreeing that "newspaper" means "all the things newspapers have done, all the things newspaper companies do now, and all the newspaper-like things that other organizations do online." Everything is "online," so slashes and hyphens plus that word are redundant.
Traditional media and "alternative media" of all kinds do the same things "online" -- text, audio, pictures, video, interactivity -- it's just the way digital convergence works. That's why I've added "the new TAO" to this blog's subhead. Watch for "newsTAO.com"!
1:34:48 PM
|
|
|
|
© Copyright
2008
Bob Stepno.
Last update:
8/16/08; 8:26:36 PM.
|
|
July 2008 |
Sun |
Mon |
Tue |
Wed |
Thu |
Fri |
Sat |
|
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
10 |
11 |
12 |
13 |
14 |
15 |
16 |
17 |
18 |
19 |
20 |
21 |
22 |
23 |
24 |
25 |
26 |
27 |
28 |
29 |
30 |
31 |
|
|
Jun Aug |
|