Yes, “It Is Our Fault”
The challenge of ‘saving journalism’ seems to be falling to us younger, tech savvy, folk.Published October 30, 2008
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Journalism, Fourth Estate, future, Journalism, media industry, newspapers, personal 1 responseWritten by Joey
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The reason to take responsibility for the fall of journalism is to take responsibility for the fate of journalism. Who’s going to try to save it if not for journalists? We are indeed responsible for the future of journalism and we have about one minute to grab that bull by its horns.
-BuzzMachine » Blog Archive » It is our fault
Realization strikes: Andy and I aren’t that philosophically far apart. We’re both trying to ‘save journalism’ – through different routes. Though I firmly believe that newspapers are the only medium that is doing true journalism nowadays (broadcast TV sure isn’t), I think that the future lies in the ability of newspapers to adapt to the internet age. They’ve got to realize that blogging, the link, multimedia, commenting, and an unlimited newshole have forever changed the business. Andy would rather focus on the basics – good reporting. He argues that the bar is constantly being lowered (an example) and saving journalism means raising it back up through better sourcing, good writing, etc. I’m still think that reporting is the most important service a newspaper provides (sounds obvious, but tell that to the bean counters), and Andy is one of my premiere video podcasters. We’re willing to recognize the strength of the other’s arguement-–we just have different approaches to journalism. Saving journalism is not just about moving a newspaper online, it’s not about figuring out a new revenue model, it’s not about multimedia, it’s about finding the balance of all three to ensure the future of the media information industry. And that future is… us. The current generation of college graduates who are aware of the what the internet can do, who aren’t biased by the way things used to be (Andy possibly excluded). There is a gap of understanding between generation X & Y on the use of the web. With a younger, more tech savvy generation coming into the industry it’s up to us to figure out how to meld the nutty world that the interweb has become into the the sphere of journalism. The problems that the newspaper industry face right now can largely be overcome by realizing that we’re not in the newspaper business, we’re in the media information business. Those of us young’ins who are just starting in this industry have an idea of how to reinvent journalism to survive in the internet age. If you’ve got a computer problem, who do you look to for a fix? You’re nearest 15 year old who has already forgotten more about computers than you ever cared to know? Journalism has a computer-problem right now. Take a look at us young folks for a fix.* My ‘office’ is more of a conference room.
† The Daily Orange ‘newsroom’ is a converted house. So there is no real newsroom floor, there are no real offices, we mostly consider ourselves lucky to have a desk and a roof.