Editor’s note: The following was originally posted on The Arkansas Project, a Web site offering incisive commentary and reporting on Arkansas politics, media, culture and more.
Hey, here’s a fun game: From now on, whenever you read a piece by a newspaper person about the “future of journalism” or “whither newspapers” or anything like that, try to pinpoint where that person is on the scale of the “Five Stages of Grief.”
So, for instance, if a newspaper guy writes that “We survived TV and radio; we’ll survive the web,” then you know he’s still in “denial.”
If he talks about how “micropayments” or the Amazon Kindle are going to save his bacon, he’s probably in the bargaining stage. C’mon, it’ll be fun!
OK, now let’s talk about John Brummett, a news columnist and high-end journalist here in Little Rock who today tries his hand at a little media criticism. It is very sad, because Brummett seems headed toward the “depression” stage on our graph.
Can I Get a Witness?
Brummett looks at this week’s (moronic) congressional hearings on the future of newspapers to ponder where it’s all headed. He quotes the testimony of former newspaperman and TV guy David Simon, who bemoans the passing of “high-end journalism” and fears that web operations just aren’t up to snuff. (Incidentally, Gawker took issue with Simon’s “dead-wrong” testimony earlier in the week.)
Let’s pause here to note that Brummett’s column is around 700 words, about 250 words of which is a direct quote from Simon. That is what “high-end journalism” looks like, if you have never seen it before.
Brummett agrees with Simon’s grouchy take, and to give it a little local flavor he takes a couple of shots at me and Blake Rutherford of the Blake’s Think Tank blog for not going to the Capitol to cover legislative hearings, because we are terrible terrible bloggers, and we are “brash and sullen” (”sullen”?) to boot.
Brummett is correct that I spend little (i.e., no) time at the Capitol. This blog is not my living (yet?), so I focus on my paid work and link to Capitol news as it’s distributed by others. (This is what media critic Jeff Jarvis refers to as the “link based economy,” in which publishers do what they specialize in and then link to the rest.That’s pretty much how the web works, and it’s rather efficient, and why Brummett is unable to grasp that is beyond me.)
But if Brummett thinks it so shameful that a few part-time unpaid bloggers don’t frequent legislative committee hearings, he should at least turn a critical eye on the practices of his own news organization.
Last fall, Brummett’s employer, Stephens Media, shuttered its three-man Washington D.C. bureau. That bureau now consists of one reporter who is responsible for covering the congressional delegations of multiple states (and who no longer has an office and works from home). Since the Stephens Media D.C. bureau was disbanded, the organization’s regular coverage of members of the Arkansas delegation has essentially ceased to exist. High-end journalism, indeed.
Future Shock
Of course, if Brummett really were interested in the future of journalism, he might look beyond my and Blake’s little vanity projects and examine the efforts of some Arkansas folks who, rather than whining about these changes as he does, are actually trying to create new models that work.
He might look at The City Wire site in Fort Smith, which in just a few short months has emerged as a vital site for local news, and shows promise for the future. Or the Arkansas Times, which is practicing a hybrid print/web approach, with an unapologetic dose of liberal political advocacy, that has thus far helped to reinvigorate that publication.
Will these sites manage the tricky feat of evolving into profitable going enterprises? Maybe. Or maybe they’ll fall off and some other experimenters will fill the gap. But at least the bloggers and web gurus are experimenting and trying to find some solutions.
But Brummett doesn’t wanna do all that. He throws his hands up to declare, “It will all work itself out or it won’t.” You see, it’s enough to look at the daily media lay-offs news at Romensko, shake one’s head sadly and then wax all gauzy and nostalgic and pine for all that lost investigative journalism and skeptical antagonism that we’ll no longer have when newspapers are gone.
(Except, oh, yeah, very few newspapers aside from the big nationals actually do much investigative reporting anymore, and in Arkansas, this “skeptical antagonism” toward elected officials that Brummett likes to brag about is pretty much a fantasy.)
Which is all a long way of saying, if you’re interested in the future of journalism and news media and want insight into where things might be headed, then you should know that you can safely ignore anything John Brummett may have to say on the subject. After a lifetime of working in the newspaper industry, he no longer has anything to offer any young journalist or aspiring media entrepreneur, in terms of discussing the industry’s direction, that might be helpful.
It’s little wonder he should be so depressed.
David Kinkade, the principal Arkansas Project contributor, is a freelance writer in Little Rock. A former reporter for the Northwest Arkansas Times, he served as speechwriter to U.S. Sen. Blanche Lincoln, D-Ark., and for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in the Department of Homeland Security. He also served as director of communications on Asa Hutchinson’s 2006 campaign for governor.
http://www.swtimes.com/news/article_db9b7b0a-b5d5-11df-96c2-001cc4c03286.html
The reporter forgot to mention the rude, ignorant moderator comment regarding "funerals" as well a the deliberately assigned questions from the audience.
Water has always been my weak spot....well, one of them. I admit that I have many. It's funny how the same symptoms apply for both ends of the spectrum, in regards to how we respond to certain stimuli. Natural water sources turn me rigid - my mind goes cloudy, my muscles are taut, and an uncontrollable tremble takes over.
We haven't heard much from him with regard to the verdict in his DWI trial last week. Perhaps it did not go as he planned?
I have been watching these Boards and occasionally commenting for the last year or so. Its great that everyone is free to express their opinions and for that we should thank God we live in this country. However, the expression of opinions is usually negative, which gets old sometimes. Can we make a deal? How about everyone of the regulars on this Board reply to this Blog
Kinkade and Brummett
After 42-plus years in print journalism, I hope I am not so blinded by nostalgia for the glory days of newpapers that I cannot see what is happening in communications, which include journalism in its varied forms. Yes, there are excesses on the Web, but there always have been excesses in print as well. Didn't a newspaper guy start the Spanish American War? Things change, and change always is uncomfortable for most of those most affected. but "good grief," don't things eventually balance out? Sometimes, even for the better!
Which had you rather have, today's anemic newspapers or an Internet that links people, ideas and human asperations globally to a degree that no dictator can ever feel really secure and comfortable again?
Frank Rich's column today
David, what did you think of Frank Rich's NY Times column today?
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/10/opinion/10rich.html?ref=opinion&pagewa...
Good to see.
A gravitation towards gravitas.
Bright future for journalism. Newspapers? Not so much.
Yes, blogs do a lot of linking to other sources, which is the dynamic of the link economy as I explain above. But your question of "what would I do when the ADG folds" got me to thinking. I went to the Arkansas Project home page and scanned through the posts on there, which right now go back to April 27. I counted exactly six links to stories in the ADG.
Two of those were to stories dealing with the ADG's recent lay-offs.
The thing is, by the time the ADG publishes the story and makes the link available, most of us have already linked and commented and moved on. So to answer your question, if the ADG folded tomorrow, it would actually make little to no difference to how I and others in the Arkansas blogosphere aggregate and process news.
The problem I see is that people look at what newspapers and blogs are doing at present, and they just assume that it will always look like what it looks like right now. But the thing is, newspapers are getting WORSE (do you believe the recent editorial cuts are going to make the newspaper better? They're not even cutting the right people). Meanwhile, blogs and online media are improving, bit by bit, all the time.
And the ADG and other big (formerly) monopolistic players aren't just competing with the Arkansas Times or the Arkansas Project or the City Wire etc. They are competing with the Arkansas Times AND the Arkansas Project AND the City Wire AND a bunch of other blogs AND a bunch of sports sites AND Craigslist etc. etc. etc. They're competing against the entirety of the online space that, in total, is much faster, much more dynamic and much better at providing context (through links).
I'm not at all bullish on the future of newspapers, which are doomed. But I'm bullish as all hell on the future of journalism, and yes, there will always be a place for quality professionalized news-gathering, which I think is set to improve, even if we go through a little bit of a "wild west" period in the interim.
D.
Y'all need to get together and...
realize that two wrongs do not make a right, but three rights do make a left.
Anonymous Chicken is a chicken! Also, anonymous!
AC,
I don't think it's really a question of whether we should be dancing on the graves of newspapers or not. That's irrelevant. What's clear is that the channels of distribution and consumption have been changing for some time, newspapers have been slow to adapt to that, and their traditional industrial-age model of packaging and delivering information in a once daily bundle is increasingly inefficient and untenable. If pointing that out is tantamount to grave dancing, then let's dance.
You're quite right that, as they are currently configured, blogs and new media sites like the City Wire are not quite there as full-fledged news-gathering operations. But they're improving and they're getting there, while newspapers are cutting back on reporting and editorial all the time. And yes, the future will include some kind of professionalized news-gathering and distribution. But it won't look exactly like what the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette and other newspapers are doing now, with hundreds and hundreds of employees (many redundant or largely unnecessary) dedicated to putting out a once daily product.
How one chooses to react to those changes, whether dancing on graves or not, is largely a matter of personal preference. But some responses are more constructive than others. Brummett and others have decided to wring their hands and say "you'll miss us when we're gone," and you're deciding to do whatever it is that you're doing there. But neither of those approaches are probably very constructive exercises.
D.
Apologies, David
My goal wasn't to insult you. For that, I'm sorry.
However, I still believe the Websites and blogs can co-exist with the dead-tree media. Sites such as yours are filled with links to newspaper sites. What do you do when the ADG folds? Where will you get those links so you can provide context and analysis?
Bloggers need newspapers.
On the dead-tree side, newspapers need to quit viewing independent blogs as the source of their problems. Newspapers have a broken business model. Where else do you have to pay for a product in one format, but can get it for free in a different one?
Did you read his last paragraph?
Do you disagree with that too, David?
Kinkade is an idiot
So is anybody else dancing on the graves of newspapers.
Sites like his, and this one, are great. I love them. They serve a wonderful purpose by giving readers deeper insight, more commentary, different viewpoints. But newspapers are still needed to do the day-to-day grind of reporting.
I read dozens of blogs and alt-news sites per day. I have yet to find one that doesn't link to stories on traditional newspaper sites or at least rewrite and offer commentary on what was in the morning paper.
Ink-stained wretches need to realize these sites are actually compliments to what they're doing. Bloggers need to realize they're standing on the shoulders of the newspapermen.