LBY3
The continuing adventures of Beau Yarbrough

Investigative Reporters and Editors conference 2010

Thursday, June 10, 2010, 16:21
Section: Journalism

I’m actually out of the office (and covering the news via cellphone and modem) the second half of this week, attending the Investigative Reporters and Editors conference in Vegas this week, looking for (and getting) a lot of really practical hands-on ways of digging deeper for news stories.

In the interests of not spamming my Twitter followers and Facebook friends into oblivion, I’ve established a special Twitter feed just for the show. Follow me (or just bookmark) @Beau_at_IRE.



Pew Research Center’s State of the News Media 2010

Tuesday, March 16, 2010, 11:54
Section: Journalism

And now, a newer report. As the title suggests, this is a comprehensive look at the state of the media today, and it’s a mixed bag at best and quite grim in other areas. It also confirms a lot of stuff I’ve been seeing, both locally and more broadly.

The numbers for 2009 reveal just how urgent these questions are becoming. Newspapers, including online, saw ad revenue fall 26% during the year, which brings the total loss over the last three years to 43%.

Local television ad revenue fell 22% in 2009; triple the decline the year before. Radio also was off 22%. Magazine ad revenue dropped 17%, network TV 8% (and news alone probably more). Online ad revenue overall fell about 5%, and revenue to news sites most likely also fared much worse.

Only cable news among the commercial news sectors did not suffer declining revenue last year.

The newspaper industry, of course, is the only one that tells its audience about how much trouble it’s in all the time, which is an interesting cultural quirk.

For newspapers, which still provide the largest share of reportorial journalism in the United States, the metaphor that comes to mind is sand in an hourglass. The shrinking money left in print, which still provides 90% of the industry’s funds, is the amount of time left to invent new revenue models online. The industry must find a new model before that money runs out.

The losses are already enormous. To quantify the impact, with colleague Rick Edmonds of the Poynter Institute, we estimate that the newspaper industry has lost $1.6 billion in annual reporting and editing capacity since 2000, or roughly 30%. That leaves an estimated $4.4 billion remaining. Even if the economy improves we predict more cuts in 2010.

Network news division resources are likely down from their peak in the late 1980s by more than half — which amounts to hundreds of millions of dollars — and new rounds of cuts came in the last 12 months. Local television is harder to gauge, but one estimate puts the losses in the last two years at over 1,600 jobs, or roughly 6%. Staffing at the news magazines Time and Newsweek since 1983 is down by 47%.2

It’s ironic, but not getting into Columbia’s grad school program might have been a good thing, since the places it could have taken me are slashing jobs and some of them will be out of business before the student loans would have been paid off. See, kids? Good grades are a trap!

And as we enter 2010 there is little evidence that journalism online has found a sustaining revenue model. A new survey on online economics, released in this report for the first time, finds that 79% of online news consumers say they rarely if ever have clicked on an online ad.

There was certainly more talk of alternative approaches to advertising in the last year. Entrepreneur Steve Brill and others launched JournalismOnline.com, which offers news sites a mechanism for charging, but at this point it is more a possibility than a business reality. Rupert Murdoch announced discussions with Microsoft about higher payments for searching his content and insisted that everything his company produces would go behind pay walls. Columbia University produced a report that explored nonprofit and public funding sourcing and assessed the state of start up new media. The New York Times announced it was giving itself a year to figure out a way to charge for content to “get it really really right.” And more new media startups were planned, a growing sign that as old media continues to shrink, the ecosystem is changing and some things are growing.

But if a new model is to be found it is hardly clear what it will be. Our survey, produced with the Pew Internet & American Life Project, finds that only about a third of Americans (35%) have a news destination online they would call a “favorite,” and even among these users only 19% said they would continue to visit if that site put up a pay-wall.

In the meantime, perhaps one concept identifies most clearly what is going on in journalism: Most news organizations — new or old — are becoming niche operations, more specific in focus, brand and appeal and narrower, necessarily, in ambition.

All of this rings true. And the Star, which has as its focus events happening in the boundaries of Hesperia and/or the Hesperia Unified School District, is certainly a niche publication — and is actually doing quite well, and is going in the opposite direction from newspapers around the country that are still trying to be all things to all consumers. (It turns out that consumers now prefer this big newspaper called the Internet for that.)

The notion that the news media are shrinking is mistaken. Reportorial journalism is getting smaller, but the commentary and discussion aspect of media, which adds analysis, passion and agenda shaping, is growing — in cable, radio, social media, blogs and elsewhere. For all the robust activity there, however, the numbers still suggest that these new media are largely filled with debate dependent on the shrinking base of reporting that began in the old media. Our ongoing analysis of more than a million blogs and social media sites, for instance, finds that 80% of the links are to U.S. legacy media. The only old media sector with growing audience numbers is cable, a place where the lion’s share of resources are spent on opinionated hosts. One result may be the rising numbers in polling data that show 71% of Americans now feel most news sources are biased in their coverage and 70% feel overwhelmed rather than informed by the amount of news and information they see. Quantitatively, argument rather than expanding information makes up the growing share of media people are exposed to today.

I know that I was depressed when I realized that CNN now gives up three hours at prime time of Headline News to opinion and entertainment news coverage.
When it comes to audience numbers online, traditional media content still prevails, which means the cutbacks in old media heavily impact what the public is learning through the new. An analysis in this year’s report of online audience behavior, extrapolated from Nielsen Net Ratings data, finds that 80% of the traffic to news and information sites is concentrated at the top 7% of sites. The vast majority of the top news sites (67%), moreover, are still tied to legacy media financed largely by their shrinking end of the business.3 New media are growing, but their ranks among the most trafficked sites are still small. Another 13% of these news sites are aggregators, whose content is derived from legacy media. Only 14% of these sites are online-only operations that produce mostly original reportorial content rather than commentary. In short, the cutbacks in old media are not only drastically affecting traditional media but significantly impact online content as well.
And finally, newspapers won’t disappear, but many of them will continue to get thinner:

Newspapers are not disappearing in droves. Only half a dozen of any size went out of business or cut back print publication last year and most of those were second papers in their market. But newspapers have seen ad revenues fall by nearly half in three years, staff cutbacks are dramatic, if not quite as large, and a coming issue now is that papers are at risk of becoming insubstantial, lacking the heft to be tossed up on the front porch or to satisfy those readers still willing to pay for a good print newspaper.

If anyone’s got any new ideas on how to pay for the creation of news, please don’t keep it to yourself.



Pew Research Center: Newspapers generate nearly all online news consumed

Tuesday, March 16, 2010, 11:31
Section: Journalism

At least, that’s one of the findings in a new(ish) study: 95 percent of all Baltimore news (the subject for the study) reported originated with traditional media, most of it from newspapers. Most of the other venues, including online, were mostly just regurgitating and discussing what the Baltimore Sun had turned up to begin with. Even in a market with now 53 (!) different entities covering local news, only 17 percent of their coverage had anything new, and most of that was generated by “old” media online.

Of course, it’s not all good news: The Sun is posting more government press releases verbatim in an apparent attempt to having news break as fast as possible.

Still, this (limited) study confirms what I’ve believed for a while: While Twitter and other social media might be great for disseminating the fact that an event has happened, and then linking to news stories about said event, it’s not going to replace traditional media any time soon. It’s not like there’s a big barrier to entry to live-blogging a Baltimore city council meeting on Twitter: It’s just that unpaid amateurs are unlikely to sit through all those meetings and do the basic work of reporting, especially in the absence of some burning issue that speaks to them personally.



Wired preps an iPad edition

Tuesday, February 16, 2010, 14:56
Section: Geek,Journalism

I’m not sure if this is practical for everyone — I’m curious how much more time this adds to the layout guys’ workload — but it’ll certainly be interesting to see a rich media version of a “print” product. Hopefully I’ll be able to borrow an iPad and check it out later this year.



Michael Kinsley uses 1,800 words to praise tight writing

Monday, February 15, 2010, 17:52
Section: Journalism

Full disclosure: I met Michael Kinsley years ago, and he acted like a complete dick.

I was doing a profile of local boy Pat Buchanan for the now-defunct McLean Providence Journal and spent an evening at Crossfire, where Kinsley and Buchanan were then the partisan co-hosts. Kinsley was extremely condescending and snide — he seemed to find the notion of a local newspaper doing a profile of a resident who had run for president and hosted a cable talk show seen in multiple countries to be “cute.”

That said, I mostly agree with this piece from the January/February issue of the Atlantic, other than its basic premise, which I partially disagree with:

One reason seekers of news are abandoning print newspapers for the Internet has nothing directly to do with technology. It’s that newspaper articles are too long. On the Internet, news articles get to the point. Newspaper writing, by contrast, is encrusted with conventions that don’t add to your understanding of the news. Newspaper writers are not to blame. These conventions are traditional, even mandatory.

He then goes on to beat up on several papers, including the New York Times and Washington Post, for writing long stories full of background and reporter opinions delivered via a third party expert. He doesn’t ever cite any evidence that readers don’t like long stories or that anyone has actually ever photographed a reader in the wild tossing down a paper and screaming “TL:DR!

Like a lot of journalists his age, he also seems to be unaware that every day, readers link countless stories to their friends and colleagues and very few of them are the tiny little news nuggets that consultants keep insisting that readers prefer.

Overall, though, his insights into the journalistic process are spot-on, and might be pretty illuminating to non-journalists, especially when he lets the cat out of the bag about third party experts’ opinions in many news stories. (Which is why I mostly avoid doing it: The only opinions I think a reader cares about are the reader’s own and the involved parties’.)

The total number of words Kinsley needed to illustrate his point, including taking a shot at the NYT for a 1,456-word story? A not-particularly-tight 1,797 words. (I used 374 here, for the record.)


 








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Veritas odit moras.