Thursday, February 05, 2009

"How to Save Your Newspaper:" Another Journalism Biggy Misses the Bias Part of the Story

Yet another media biggie has written an article about the crisis in newspapers--which is all too real--and missed a huge reason for the problem. There must be a template circulating for these kind of articles, because it reflects the media's notorious "group-think" by focusing solely on technology as the cause of the problem. From the column by Time's Walter Isaacson:

There is, however, a striking and somewhat odd fact about this crisis. Newspapers have more readers than ever. Their content, as well as that of news magazines and other producers of traditional journalism, is more popular than ever--even (in fact, especially) among young people.

The problem is that fewer of these consumers are paying. Instead, news organizations are merrily giving away their news. According to a Pew Research Center study, a tipping point occurred last year: more people in the U.S. got their news online for free than paid for it by buying newspapers and magazines. Who can blame them? Even an old print junkie like me has quit subscribing to the New York Times, because if it doesn't see fit to charge for its content, I'd feel like a fool paying for it.
That last statement reminds me of the politicians who tub thump about the patriotism of taxpaying--and then avoid every dime they can, and even some they legally can't. But I digress:
Newspapers and magazines traditionally have had three revenue sources: newsstand sales, subscriptions and advertising. The new business model relies only on the last of these. That makes for a wobbly stool even when the one leg is strong. When it weakens--as countless publishers have seen happen as a result of the recession — the stool can't possibly stand.
Those first two tools wouldn't be so short if journalists would get a clue! As I wrote here in "We Need Newspapers," it isn't just the technology. That alone would be a big problem, but the MSM have also alienated about 1/3 of their potential reader base by repeatedly insulting their intelligence with a highly biased and condescending attitude--even viciousness--toward people with a more conservative or less cosmopolitan bent. Often stories on crucial social controversies only give one side and are clearly trying to drive the way people think. Pertinent facts are ignored. Stories that matter go unreported. Blatant falsehoods spread. And people know they are being spun.

Isaacson concludes:
I say this, too, because I love journalism. I think it is valuable and should be valued by its consumers. Charging for content forces discipline on journalists: they must produce things that people actually value. I suspect we will find that this necessity is actually liberating. The need to be valued by readers--serving them first and foremost rather than relying solely on advertising revenue--will allow the media once again to set their compass true to what journalism should always be about.
Exactly. But that is good, even-handed reportage--not advocacy for the liberal political and cultural POV. Perhaps if newspapers and news magazines quit spitting figuratively in the face of tens of millions potential customers they wouldn't have to worry about shuttering their doors.

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4 Comments:

At February 05, 2009 , Blogger holyterror said...

And they might see this if they thought more of their readers.
But they don't.
I firmly believe that most journalists think of "readers" as an abstraction that has very little basis in reality.

It makes it easier for them to not have to do much legwork.

 
At February 06, 2009 , Blogger Jan said...

I am NOT holding my breath that they will change!

They all seem to have one agenda and that does not neccessarily mean reporting the truth!

 
At February 06, 2009 , Blogger Jan said...

I am NOT holding my breath that they will change!

They all seem to have one agenda and that does not neccessarily mean reporting the truth!

 
At February 06, 2009 , Blogger Unknown said...

If they haven't got a clue and are already spitting in readers' faces, I don't see how they are ever going to get a clue.

My mother was a reporter and later taught what by then was beginning to be called journalism, and from what I've heard was a great journalism professor. But she didn't go to journalism school, and the stories she told me about newspapering back in the 1940s reflect a world and an ethos that no longer exist. It's when "reporting," the instinct and talent for which can't be taught, began to be called "journalism" that the trouble started, in my opinion. When I was in graduate school at Columbia, those I knew who were at the journalism school there were, from what I could tell, being taught a certain style that one sees over and over in news stories, which disrupts the essential immediacy of the relationship between the reporter and what is being reported, and the obligation to tell the unbiased truth.

"Journalism," like "journalling" (something everyone is always being advised to do and that has never made any sense to me; doesn't one know what one already thinks, and can't one remember what has happened in one's own life? and didn't it used to be called "keeping a diary"? but no, "journal" sounds like something more, and isn't), is subjective, and legitimizes subjectivity. Reporting is and does not, and when reporters started having had to go to journalism school, things changed.

Hey, wait a minute, that was around the same time period as Watergate, the thing that decided me against a career in "journalism, which I'd considered entering up to then. No wonder. I know many reporters, and reporters, like cops, are, to me, the smartest, quickest, and sharpest people around; yet it's impossible for the "journalism" culture not to have gotten in the way of most of them being what they would have been if they were just newspapermen and newspaperwomen. I don't think there's any way to go back from that.

 

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