Is journalism dying?

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if you're considering career moves, as a high school teacher i mean this 100% sincerely, please consider teaching! media literacy is absolutely kicking our collective asses and we don't have enough people who understand it to teach kids about it.

polyamerie "it's more than this 1 thing" (m bison), Saturday, 10 February 2024 21:34 (three months ago) link

The essay's right about the forces at work, but what's amazing to me — and The Messenger is obviously the most ridiculous example of this — is how many people with lots of money at big media companies have just totally failed to understand the realities. Advertising is gone as a primary revenue stream for news/media companies. But these guys still think they're gonna get rich selling ads.

Subscription and/or nonprofit models are the obvious ways to go. They both have their challenges, but there are a lot of people doing good work with both of them right now. Will just have to see how well they can sustain themselves. I'm less pessimistic about journalism than I was five years ago, because I think there's a lot of interesting stuff going on. But for sure it's unstable, and I'm happy not to be working for legacy media companies still trying to retrofit their old models.

a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Sunday, 11 February 2024 05:25 (three months ago) link

More and more, I feel like a medieval peasant. The rulers are gonna do what they're gonna do, and the people in charge of telling us about that are mostly cheering them on (in a "can't argue with success!" sort of way), so fuck "the news." I'd rather spend my money on music, books and movies, and if I'm "uninformed," so be it. I don't feel like I'm missing much.

― Tahuti Watches L&O:SVU Reruns Without His Ape (unperson), Saturday, 10 February 2024 bookmarkflaglink

Most people in the medieval era couldn't read or write. Which is what I get from your posts

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 11 February 2024 14:00 (three months ago) link

The essay's right about the forces at work, but what's amazing to me — and The Messenger is obviously the most ridiculous example of this — is how many people with lots of money at big media companies have just totally failed to understand the realities. Advertising is gone as a primary revenue stream for news/media companies.

And when a much-ballyhooed site like The Messenger collapses the crash sounds louder -- it becomes another warning sign, another "there, you see? Media IS collapsing!"

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 11 February 2024 14:31 (three months ago) link

xp I suspect that primary and secondary school teaching is going to mostly be a volunteer force in 20 years and work on an equivalent of the original Sunday School system in 30.

Christine Green Leafy Dragon Indigo, Sunday, 11 February 2024 15:05 (three months ago) link

please consider teaching! media literacy is absolutely kicking our collective asses and we don't have enough people who understand it to teach kids about it

Teaching media literacy would have to be a stealth operation, because with the enshrinement of standard tests driving the entire curriculum these days there's not much space for anything else in a school day.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Sunday, 11 February 2024 19:54 (three months ago) link

I disagree. It’s pretty easy to align lessons on media literacy with the common core. You are assessing their ability to make inferences and comprehend nonfiction texts.

treeship., Sunday, 11 February 2024 20:02 (three months ago) link

treesh, I know you're a smart and experienced enough teacher to control your own lessons in depth and make your teaching materials work for you rather than the other way around, but that is a high level and a difficult attainment. For a less experienced or committed teacher, the fact that most contemporary media are not consumed as nonfiction texts places a large constraint on their effectively teaching media literacy. Even more so, if the classroom materials are imposed rather than discretionary.

Anyway, I acknowledge your greater expertise on this, so if you think my perspective is insufficiently grounded, I'll accept your conclusions.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Sunday, 11 February 2024 20:20 (three months ago) link

two months pass...

Nice to see that Chicago's longtime alt-weekly is now an actual weekly again:
https://chicagoreader.com/columns-opinion/staff-notes/weekly-newspaper/

jaymc, Saturday, 4 May 2024 15:19 (one week ago) link

Good editorial.

bae (sic), Saturday, 4 May 2024 18:39 (one week ago) link

yeah. stirring stuff!

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Saturday, 4 May 2024 20:55 (one week ago) link


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