Tuesday 27 April 2010

future of news and journalism crisis

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UPDATE

What Is Happening to News: The Information Explosion and the ...
By admin
What Is Happening to News: The Information Explosion and the Crisis in Journalism. Product Description Across America, newspapers that have defined their cities for over a century are rapidly failing, their circulations plummeting even ...
Journalism Education - http://journalismeducation.geming.org/

New Media and the Future of Journalism – Topics in Digital Media ...
In addressing potential solutions to the journalism crisis, McChesney and Nichols argue that in order to have an educated and informed public, ...
cultureandcommunication.org/.../new-media-and-the-future-of...
World Press Freedom Day 2010 | Facebook
Where were the journalists? And why are so many still denying world journalism in crisis? Editiorial: JICC: strange denials over journalism crisis ...
zh-tw.facebook.com/pages/World-Press.../255915862171
Future of Journalism: Unpacking the Rhetoric | Mag-Net
(3) Can we learn anything about the current crisis in journalism by looking at the history of the American press? Panelists: Phil Bronstein, San Francisco ...
mag-net.org/events/.../4/.../future-journalism-unpacking-rhetor...
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Thursday 22 April 2010

investigative journalism in crisis

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NEWS

Reports of journalism in crisis in recent years first started with discussion among science reporters.

One of the least discussed fields - investigative journalism.

Today sees the issue go under the microscope at a global conference in Geneva.

That, and other headlines:

euro|topics - Investigative journalism in crisis
The Global Investigative Journalism Conference begins today, Thursday, in Geneva . The daily Le Temps upholds the importance of the genre, ...
www.eurotopics.net/.../ARTICLE68886-Investigative-journalis...
NY Times, Washington Post win reporting awards - Worldnews.com
There is a crisis in journalism. There is a continuing decrease in the quality and quantity of international news as large media groups cut their ...
article.wn.com/.../NY_Times_Washington_Post_win_reportin...
The Aspen Institute | Facebook
Angelica Holiday The Aspen Institute's President Walter Isaacson is featured in "The Media: Journalism In Crisis." Premiers Sunday, April 4, 2010, ...
eo-eo.facebook.com/AspenInstitute

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strange denials over journalism crisis

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EDITORIAL


A strong culture of denial running through mainstream media ignores how bad the journalism crisis really is.


Mainstream media coverage over the last month - as informally defined by Google news searches - still sees dozens more references to "the future of ..." journalism, news, media and so forth.


Viewpoints range from flat out denial to vaguely hopeful, a few even sound excited.


Not even half a dozen stories refer directly to a journalism crisis.


Conservative commentators acknowledge the journalism crisis but refute any role for public funding despite wealthy Republicans accepting billions in bailout dollars for "too big to fail" institutions like banks and car companies.


One US study finding that a loss of more than a billion dollars from journalism spending has been answered  with barely US$140 million for frontline reporting from news trusts and non-profits.


This would be like expecting General Motors to make a full recovery - which it has - on roughly 10 per cent of what it got from American tax-payers.


Strangest aspect of crisis denials is the impression that journalism, alone, somehow, has escaped the global economic crisis and neither needs nor deserves assistance making it through to the next golden age of journalism - defying a newly established global logic.


As previously noted here and in other comment pieces, the last golden age began fading soon after the Watergate expose back in the 1970s.


An increasingly less free market of ideas has suffered similar shrinkage over the last few decades, to the point where trillions can be wiped off share markets because the attack dogs of journalism are long gone, or too few to make a difference. 


Most of the watch dogs slept through the global financial crisis, shouldered out of the way by muscular lap dogs licking at the same conflicts of interest as banks, brokers and board directors that saw the housing bubble pop, taking the rest of the world with it.


Compared to costs of global financial crisis, arguably collapsing from journalism's failure to fulfill its watchdog role, a bailout of independent, investigative journalism has got to be cheap as chips.


More vital than banks, far more essential than cars, strong, independent and investigative journalism is central to planetary futures at a time of looming climate driven crisis from food to water, shelter and, an emerging term, "social cohesion."


Lack of social cohesion suggests disastrous potential for not millions but billions of lives.


Imperative that corruption, conflicts of interest and fraud is exposed on a massive scale, now, lest such events become an immediate reality, not distant possibility.


MORE:


France-Soir facing challenges in re-establishing itself

Martin Langeveld may be crowning print king too soon 

Internet news threatens traditional news channels, but what about print?

The Huffington Post examines a small publication that recently won a Pulitzer

Spot.Us brings community funded journalism site to Seattle

Does the Financial Times have a perfect business model?

Campaign for Press and Broadcasting Freedom

iPad may not be the answer print was hoping for

Poynter Receives $750000 Ford Foundation Grant To Expand Journalism Sense 

Journalism Remembers its Past and Meets its Future


Four Questions for ProPublica Pulitzer Winner Sheri Fink
FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski delivers tough love to broadcasters

Bad News! A Prognosis On The Health And Well Being Of Print Journalism

Franklin Center's Take on ProPublica's Pulitzer


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Monday 5 April 2010

latest on journalism in crisis

2009 techcrunch says AOL has 1500 writers

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NEWS HEADLINES

The Media: Journalism in Crisis - AOL Television

Strangely, the links show … absolutely nothing. Click here for more on how AOL is hiring journalists.

If anything, it's not "Journalism in Crisis". It... - Bruce Wagner ...

Future of Journalism - C-SPAN Video Library

Current.org | Local journalism centers, 2010

The Times, they are a-changing | WXXI

NEWS QUOTES

The Media: Journalism in Crisis - AOL Television
The Media: Journalism in Crisis episodes, cast and crew, photos, listings and more on AOL TV!
television.aol.com/show/the-media-journalism-in-crisis/11701828/main

If anything, it's not "Journalism in Crisis". It... - Bruce Wagner ...
If anything, it's not "Journalism in Crisis". It should be called, "Media Monopoly Profiteering in Crisis". Technology has Freed Information.
friendfeed.com/brucewagner/.../if-anything-it-not-journalism-in-crisis-should

Future of Journalism - C-SPAN Video Library
00:46:27, Schwartzman, Andrew JayPresident and CEO, MORE IMPORTANTLY, THEY WILL HELP SOLVE THIS PROBLEM OF THE POTENTIAL CRISIS IN JOURNALISM OF AMERICA. ...
www.c-spanvideo.org/program/id/221869

Current.org | Local journalism centers, 2010
“The crisis in journalism is more of a revenue problem than an audience problem, ” project director Tom Rosenstiel said during the panel discussion. ...
www.current.org/news/news1006localcenters.shtml

The Times, they are a-changing | WXXI
So is there a “crisis in journalism?” Is this about a “crisis in revenue?” Print circulation at the D&C may be declining, but online circulation is ...
interactive.wxxi.org/letter/times-they-are-changing

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Bruce's Journal
By Bruce
Filed under: Uncategorized — Bruce @ 11:00 pm. They call the PBS special, “Journalism in Crisis”. Pleeez. Journalism is NOT in crisis. Technology has made EVERYONE a journalist… (2/3). Leave a Comment ...
Bruce's Journal - http://brucewagner.wordpress.com/

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few see crisis in future of news

state of the news media 2010
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COMMENT
Tens of thousands of journalists and news room workers have been sacked worldwide over the last two years.
Yet most debate continues to be dominated by discussions about the “future of news” - rather than the crisis happening right now.
Ironically, the top Google result leads to a ‘proper’ website www.thefutureofnews.com - which has disappeared.
Future of news on Google returns roughly half a million hits. Future of journalism gets another million or so. Worryingly for print, variations like the future of newspapers get barely 80,000 hits.
Amongst all the blue sky mining, however, the most worrying trend is the lack of local debate surrounding journalism crisis - just 20,000 hits. The more academically inclined are more active, getting some 80,000 hits for the slightly more high brow journalism in crisis.
Slightly more encouraging are some 200,000 hits for world journalism in crisis.
A quick guesstimate suggests the future gets six times as much debate as the current crisis.
Is this realistic?
Unless the causes of the current crisis are investigated with as much effort as possible futures, there may not be much of a future for journalism.
Indeed, such concerns may already be out-of-date.
Journalism is dead”  -- an obvious eyeball grabber -- but even leading academia like the Pew Institute are using the D word.