DUST-UP

Bad for newspapers, good for readers?

Marc Cooper says new media and old couldn't exist without each other. Patrick Frey says readers are increasingly turning to blogs to escape mainstream journalism's arrogance.
July 9, 2008

» Discuss Article    (28 Comments)

Today's question: Assess the overall media landscape. Has it gotten better or worse for readers? For newspapers? Previously, Cooper and Frey discussed the possibility of a future without The Times and diagnosed the paper's most pressing problems.

New media and old: a marriage of convenience

Patrick,

After all my gloom and doom of the last few days regarding the state of The Times -- and of newspapers in general -- allow me a few hundred words of unfiltered glee. As a byproduct of the escalating, daily clash of Old and New Media, curious readers are reaping a historical bonanza.

At least, in the short run.

I think you'd agree that enthusiastic consumers of information are, at this very moment in time, getting the best of both worlds -- and mostly for free. The Earth-shaking emergence of new media, the stark fact that anyone can now publish globally at will, has forced the Old Media to provide us just about everything it's got, and more, for free, 24/7. For virtually zero cost, at any time of the day or night, we can log on to the site of the newspaper of our choice, from El Monte to El Salvador, and lavish ourselves with news, opinion or analysis that is likely to have been updated sometime in the last hour or two.

Meanwhile, the New Media -- blogs, aggregators, online journals and digital social networks -- further amplify, propagate, filter spin and push that same professionally reported material onto our screens, BlackBerrys and mobile phones.

That's not to say there isn't also enormous intrinsic value in the ever-expanding amount of original content produced by bloggers, writers, students, moms, truck drivers (even prosecutors!) on the Web. I mean, how would any of our days be considered complete unless we checked in with your own blog commentators to be reminded that all problems stem from the Reconquista of Aztlan, or with mine, who bemoan the structural inequities of the global market?

Yet who can deny there would be little sizzle to the blogosphere -- perhaps there might not be much of anything at all -- if its gears and cogs weren't being constantly lubed by the never-ending torrents of reporting (and punditry) spewed out by the dreaded mainstream media?

For the moment, both worlds are engaged in a marriage of convenience. I can't think of a single successful site on the right or the left that doesn't fundamentally rely on the MSM as its underlying engine of information -- or at least as its foil. Likewise, the MSM is not only forced to accelerate its own migration to the Web, but it is ever more dependent on purely Internet-based aggregators to help build its readership. As you know, in your role as commander in chief of the Patterico site, we bloggers are constantly deluged with requests from newspaper editors and publicists and by individual reporters and columnists begging for a link. For the suits at the Washington Post and the New York Times, the Drudge Report and the Huffington Post are seen not only as competitors but also as indispensable transmission belts and accelerants for Web traffic.

So, for the moment, it couldn't be a better environment for the readers. The catch, of course, is just who is going to pay to produce all this journalism in the years to come? Shut down the major newspapers or cripple and decimate their staffs, and then just who is going to provide all that nifty info that we bloggers link back and forth to?

The answer, broadly stated, resides in an ongoing and eventual fusion of old media and new. It's not something that either side is yet quite comfortable with. Nor has anyone quite figured out the devilish details -- especially at The Times.

Marc Cooper is associate director of the Institute for Justice and Journalism at the USC Annenberg School for Communication. He writes a politics column for L.A. Weekly and serves as editorial coordinator of the Huffington Post's Off the Bus. He blogs daily at marccooper.com.
The arrogance of 'serious newspapers'

The overall media landscape has unquestionably improved for readers. Capitalism is about choices. More choices mean better options and greater consumer satisfaction.

Before the rise of the Internet, The Times was a natural monopoly. And with monopoly comes complacency and arrogance.





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Discussion


Discuss round three of this week's Dust-Up.

Comments will close after one week.
 
1. Hey, here's an idea: Why doesn't someone start a right-wing newspaper? That way, all the whiners here could have a paper that doesn't challenge their astounding sense of ideological entitlement. However many readers the LA Times has lost, they still have an infinitely greater number of subscribers than the right-wing competition in L.A. which has, how many? ZERO.
Submitted by: bunkerbuster
5:45 PM PDT, Jul 10, 2008
 
2. NEW LONDON, CT: The NYTimes editorial "Tsunami Aftermath; Are We Stingy? Yes" (12/30/04) was intentionally dishonest. It ignored public information: $15 million is the legal maximum the president can pledge without Congressional authorization (Congress was in recess) and scores of US cargo planes, helicopters and ships were already on the way with relief aid (none of which counted against the $15 million). Also, James Dao 'edited' (ghoulishly hacked) a letter found posthumously by the family of Cpl. Jeffrey Starr in "2,000 Dead: As Iraq Tours Stretch On, a Grim Mark" (10/26/05). The MSMs turpitude is as plain as the nose on your face.
Submitted by: Uncle Ralph
2:28 PM PDT, Jul 10, 2008
 
3. PCD, If you can't read my comment as anything but a criticism of Wikipedia as a source, then your comprehension skills need improving.
Submitted by: KDB
1:49 PM PDT, Jul 10, 2008
 



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