June 2007
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Day June 4, 2007

The sky is not falling

From the Columbia Journalism Review comes a short note taking “A Long View on Layoffs.”

For those looking for some comfort in numbers, rest assured that there appear to be plenty of working journalists left around here somewhere. The CJR piece runs down some long-term employment statistics and then turns loose some of Wilson Lowrey’s ideas.

I quote Prof. Lowrey in the lit review to my thesis-in-progress, and I had the pleasure of meeting him last year when he moderated an AEJMC panel that gave me quite a bit of hope for the future.

But on to the blockquote from the CJR story:

“…bloggers are individual workers, while traditional journalists contribute to larger systems. Their competitive relationship, he says, “could benefit audiences and society” by pressuring professional journalists to be more accurate and, in some cases, filling the need for information that either falls outside the bounds of traditional newsgathering or simply slips through cracks caused by downsizing. Unlike the for-profit news outlets on which they depend for original reporting, bloggers are relatively unencumbered by professional media’s overarching “need to attract large audiences and advertisers.” As a result, blogs are free to be specialized, complex, and partisan. They can also stay with stories longer and quote nonelite sources often ignored by their institutional counterparts.”

That’s a great way to say that bloggers operate out in the Long Tail; a great deal of agility comes with that position.

(CJR article via my thesis adviser, appropriately enough.)

Things you need to understand about the future of college media – Innovation in College Media

Bryan puts the college spin on my 10 Obvious Things list.

Things you need to understand about the future of college media – Innovation in College Media

Rolling the Dice – American Journalism Review

“Media companies have high hopes that hyperlocal news online will bolster their newspapers’ futures. But early returns suggest the financial outlook for such ventures is not bright.” — By Paul Farhi of the WaPo.

Rolling the Dice – American Journalism Review

WP Plugin: Where did they go from here? – Weblog Tools Collection

“Readers who viewed this page also viewed…” a la Amazon for your WordPress posts.

WP Plugin: Where did they go from here? – Weblog Tools Collection

By the Numbers: How I built a Web 2.0, User-Generated Content, Citizen Journalism, Long-Tail, Social Media Site for $12,107.09 – Guy Kawasaki

Guy, his usual approachable, clear, concise, logical self, with good news for development departments at newspapers looking for low-budget solutions to social media challenges.

By the Numbers: How I built a Web 2.0, User-Generated Content, Citizen Journalism, Long-Tail, Social Media Site for $12,107.09 – Guy Kawasaki

The best 7 articles you need to read before you redesign your news site » SeanBlanda.com

A short list of great sources on online news design. via Howard O.

The best 7 articles you need to read before you redesign your news site » SeanBlanda.com

PressThink: Twilight of the Curmudgeon Class

Jay Rosen on my 10 Obvious Things post: “It’s a grad student lecturing a J-professor about doing his reporting.” No, no, that was last year. ;)

PressThink: Twilight of the Curmudgeon Class

MICHAEL ROSENBERG: Journalism rules: Here are the secrets – Detroit Free Press

Nine rules: “5. Internet, Schminternet. It will be gone in five years. People will always love reading a newspaper — and so will you, our intrepid reporter, once you accept our buyout offer.”

MICHAEL ROSENBERG: Journalism rules: Here are the secrets – Detroit Free Press