Skip to main content

Diigo Home

The News Business: Out of Print: Reporting & Essays: The New Yorker - The Diigo Meta page

www.newyorker.com/...080331fa_fact_alterman - Cached - Annotated View

Andrew Nachison's personal annotations on this page

anachison
Anachison bookmarked on 2008-03-27 journalism newspapers
  • It’s an almost comically audacious ambition for an operation with only forty-six full-time employees—many of whom are barely old enough to rent a car. But, with about eleven million dollars at its disposal, the site is poised to break even on advertising revenue of somewhere between six and ten million dollars annually. What most impresses advertisers—and depresses newspaper-company executives—is the site’s growth numbers. In the past thirty days, thanks in large measure to the excitement of the Democratic primaries, the site’s “unique visitors”—that is, individual computers that clicked on one of its pages––jumped to more than eleven million, according to the company. And, according to estimates from Nielsen NetRatings and comScore, the Huffington Post is more popular than all but eight newspaper sites, rising from sixteenth place in December.
  • Only if a post is deemed by a reader to be false, defamatory, or offensive does an editor get involved.
  • the best way for Web companies to increase traffic is to let users have control, but the best way to sell advertising is a slick, pretty front page where corporate sponsors can admire their brands.”
  • Duncan Black, a former economics professor who writes a popular progressive blog under the name Atrios, explains that he, too, believed in what he calls “the myth of the liberal media.” He goes on, “But watching the press’s collective behavior during the Clinton impeachment saga, the Gore campaign, the post-9/11 era, the run-up to the Iraq war, and the Bush Administration’s absurd and dangerous claims of executive power rendered such a belief absurd. Sixty-five per cent of the American public disapproves of the Bush Administration, but that perspective, even now, has very little representation anywhere in the mainstream media.”

This link has been bookmarked by 50 people . It was first bookmarked on 25 Mar 2008, by Andrew Nachison.

  • 07 Apr 09
  • 12 Feb 09
    • ewspapers have helped to define the meaning of America to its citizens
    • Talking Points Memo also played a lead role in defeating the Bush Social Security plan and in highlighting Trent Lott’s praise for Strom Thurmond’s 1948 segregationist Presidential campaign. Lott was eventually forced to step down as Senate Majority Leader.
    • Phoenix
    • 1 more annotations...
    • Perhaps not, but trends in circulation and advertising––the rise of the Internet, which has made the daily newspaper look slow and unresponsive; the advent of Craigslist, which is wiping out classified advertising––have created a palpable sense of doom. Independent, publicly traded American newspapers have lost forty-two per cent of their market value in the past three years, according to the media entrepreneur Alan Mutter.
    • Philip Meyer, in his book “The Vanishing Newspaper” (2004), predicts that the final copy of the final newspaper will appear on somebody’s doorstep one day in 2043
    • Newspapers are dying
    • 1 more annotations...
    • Taking its place, of course, is the Internet, which is about to pass newspapers as a source of political news for American readers. For young people, and for the most politically engaged, it has already done so. As early as May, 2004, newspapers had become the least preferred source for news among younger people.
    • Philip Meyer, in his book “The Vanishing Newspaper” (2004), predicts that the final copy of the final newspaper will appear on somebody’s doorstep one day in 2043.
    • It is a point of ironic injustice, perhaps, that when a reader surfs the Web in search of political news he frequently ends up at a site that is merely aggregating journalistic work that originated in a newspaper, but that fact is not likely to save any newspaper jobs or increase papers’ stock valuation.
    • 1 more annotations...
    • refused to adhere to customary licensing arrangements and constantly attacked the ruling powers of New England, thereby achieving both editorial independence and commercial success.
    • In private conversation, reporters and editors concede that objectivity is an ideal, an unreachable horizon, but journalists belong to a remarkably thin-skinned fraternity, and few of them will publicly admit to betraying in print even a trace of bias.
    • 4 more annotations...
    • become the least preferred source for news
    • “There just isn’t enough ideology in the average reporter to fill a thimble.”
    • s a writer on topics from Greek philosophy to the life of Picasso,
    • 7 more annotations...
    • Since 1990, a quarter of all American newspaper jobs have disappeared.
    • a palpable sense of doom
    • To own the dominant, or only, newspaper in a mid-sized American city was, for many decades, a kind of license to print money
    • 3 more annotations...
    • The rise of what has come to be known as the conservative “counter-establishment” and, later, of media phenomena such as Rush Limbaugh, on talk radio, and Bill O’Reilly, on cable television, can be viewed in terms of a Deweyan community attempting to seize the reins of democratic authority and information from a Lippmann-like élite.
    • This inspired Bart’s nemesis Nelson to shout, “Haw haw! Your medium is dying!”
    • Among the most significant aspects of the transition from “dead tree” newspapers to a world of digital information lies in the nature of “news” itself. The American newspaper (and the nightly newscast) is designed to appeal to a broad audience, with conflicting values and opinions, by virtue of its commitment to the goal of objectivity. Many newspapers, in their eagerness to demonstrate a sense of balance and impartiality, do not allow reporters to voice their opinions publicly, march in demonstrations, volunteer in political campaigns, wear political buttons, or attach bumper stickers to their cars.
    • He filled his paper with crusades (on everything from pirates to the power of Cotton and Increase Mather), literary essays by Addison and Steele, character sketches, and assorted philosophical ruminations.
    • it also organized a group blog
    • 1 more annotations...
    • It really was not until 1721, when the printer James Franklin launched the New England Courant, that any of Britain’s North American colonies saw what we might recognize today as a real newspaper.
    • Craigslist, which is wiping out classified advertising
    • Benjamin Harris’s spirited Publick Occurrences, Both Forreign and Domestick managed just one issue, in 1690, before the Massachusetts authorities closed it down
    • Only nineteen per cent of Americans between the ages of eighteen and thirty-four claim even to look at a daily newspaper. The average age of the American newspaper reader is fifty-five and rising.
    • 4 more annotations...
    • Benjamin Harris’s spirited Publick Occurrences, Both Forreign and Domestick managed just one issue, in 1690, before the Massachusetts authorities closed it down.
    • Today’s consumers “want news on demand, continuously updated. They want a point of view about not just what happened but why it happened. . . . And finally, they want to be able to use the information in a larger community—to talk about, to debate, to question, and even to meet people who think about the world in similar or different ways.”
  • 10 Feb 09
    • the advent of Craigslist, which is wiping out classified advertising
    • Newspapers have created Web sites that benefit from the growth of online advertising, but the sums are not nearly enough to replace the loss in revenue from circulation and print ads.
    • 6 more annotations...
  • 27 Jan 09
    yeo_man
    Nathan Yeo

    An extremely, somewhat balanced take on the decline of the traditional media

    media

    • The McClatchy Company, which was the only company to bid on the Knight Ridder chain when, in 2005, it was put on the auction block, has surrendered more than eighty per cent of its stock value since making the $6.5-billion purchase
    • Only nineteen per cent of Americans between the ages of eighteen and thirty-four claim even to look at a daily newspaper. The average age of the American newspaper reader is fifty-five and rising.
    • 6 more annotations...
  • 25 Jan 09
  • 01 Jul 08
    • Rupert Murdoch, in a speech to the American Society of Newspaper Editors, in April, 2005—two years before his five-billion-dollar takeover of Dow Jones & Co. and the Wall Street Journal—warned the industry’s top editors and publishers that the days when “news and information were tightly controlled by a few editors, who deigned to tell us what we could and should know,” were over
  • vengeur
    Liv S

    A comparison of "old media" and "new media", using the examples of the Times and the Huffington Post, claiming that the newspaper as we know it is dying quickly.

    death of newspaper journalism

    • Newspaper companies are losing advertisers, readers, market value, and, in some cases, their sense of mission at a pace that would have been barely imaginable just four years ago.
    • the rise of the Internet, which has made the daily newspaper look slow and unresponsive; the advent of Craigslist, which is wiping out classified advertising––have created a palpable sense of doom.
    • 16 more annotations...
  • 10 May 08
    neuromancien
    Olivier Le Deuff

    vie et mot de la presse papier

    presse

  • 26 Apr 08
    stereopresence
    ross harley

    Three centuries after the appearance of Franklin’s Courant, it no longer requires a dystopic imagination to wonder who will have the dubious distinction of publishing America’s last genuine newspaper. Few believe that newspapers in their current print

    journalism media news

  • 21 Apr 08
    martinmenu
    Martin Menu

    The death and life of the American newspaper.

    citizenjournalism media newyorker

  • 11 Apr 08
    bitmason
    Gordon Haff

    "Few believe that newspapers in their current printed form will survive."

    media journalism

  • 05 Apr 08
  • 03 Apr 08
    • Few believe that newspapers in their current printed form will survive. Newspaper companies are losing advertisers, readers, market value, and, in some cases, their sense of mission at a pace that would have been barely imaginable just four years ago.
    • Bill Keller, the executive editor of the Times, said recently in a speech in London, “At places where editors and publishers gather, the mood these days is funereal. Editors ask one another, ‘How are you?,’ in that sober tone one employs with friends who have just emerged from rehab or a messy divorce.” Keller’s speech appeared on the Web site of its sponsor, the Guardian, under the headline “NOT DEAD YET.”
    • 24 more annotations...
  • 31 Mar 08
    whachoe
    jo giraerts

    kmoet em nog lezen

  • 28 Mar 08
      • nate stearns

        nate stearns on 2008-03-28

        Super liberal writer for the Nation, but that bias doesn't seem obvious in the piece.

  • 27 Mar 08
    • It’s an almost comically audacious ambition for an operation with only forty-six full-time employees—many of whom are barely old enough to rent a car. But, with about eleven million dollars at its disposal, the site is poised to break even on advertising revenue of somewhere between six and ten million dollars annually. What most impresses advertisers—and depresses newspaper-company executives—is the site’s growth numbers. In the past thirty days, thanks in large measure to the excitement of the Democratic primaries, the site’s “unique visitors”—that is, individual computers that clicked on one of its pages––jumped to more than eleven million, according to the company. And, according to estimates from Nielsen NetRatings and comScore, the Huffington Post is more popular than all but eight newspaper sites, rising from sixteenth place in December.
    • Only if a post is deemed by a reader to be false, defamatory, or offensive does an editor get involved.
    • 2 more annotations...
  • 26 Mar 08
    • The Huffington Post’s editorial processes are based on what Peretti has named the “mullet strategy.” (“Business up front, party in the back” is how his trend-spotting site BuzzFeed glosses it.) “User-generated content is all the rage, but most of it totally sucks,” Peretti says. The mullet strategy invites users to “argue and vent on the secondary pages, but professional editors keep the front page looking sharp. The mullet strategy is here to stay, because the best way for Web companies to increase traffic is to let users have control, but the best way to sell advertising is a slick, pretty front page where corporate sponsors can admire their brands.”
  • ognjen
    Ognjen Strpić

    The death and life of the American newspaper. by Eric Alterman

    news publishing history

  • 24 Mar 08
    • The death and life of the American newspaper.
  • drfeld
    David Feld

    "In the Internet age ... no one has figured out how to rescue the newspaper in the United States or abroad. Newspapers have created Web sites ... but the sums are not nearly enough to replace the loss in revenue from circulation and print ads."

    newspapers onlinenewspapers journalism work business economy media toread newyorker web internet online