Posted on 08/08/2005 6:07:27 PM PDT by Crackingham
So is this guy saying that the future of the New York Times is in reporting on zoning board hearings or construction projects? Let them have it, as long as the web handles foreign and domestic policy.
Of course blogs are dangerous to MSM. Blogs are only half the equation. They require the reader to meet them halfway and form an opinion as the veracity and substance of what has been read on blog.
That makes the message more dependable...it increases competition. And it requires the blogger and the reader of the blog to seek the self-evident truth...the truth that stands on its own two feet.
The real truth.
Translation: We suck - but we're getting paid to suck. So there!
If you cut off the droning TVs in countless nursing homes, hospitals, and airports, you have a vastly diminished audience for the MSM. And those who do watch are dying off, as witness the ads for drugs and denture cream on the three nightly news shows. I really don't think the evening news shows will be around in 10 years.
If I want local news I watch my local newscast or read my local paper.
They are not the old media,in fact from a conversation I had with a local cBS affiliate,during memogate,they want the old media to go away,it's hurting their bottom line.
"don't think the evening news shows will be around in 10 years."
I can't wait - the MSM is responsible for so much leftist atrocity
The flow of information from the main stream media has for most of its history been one way. It was difficult, if not impossible to get an opposing word in edgewise from the flow of "conventional wisdom" that the main stream media provided.
That is what is coming to an end. The MSM will continue to gather the news, but they will need to be more careful on how they spin it, because the internet has become their fact checkers.
In time, a balance will be found, but I don't think it will occur until the current crop of reporters (who were all raised on the glory days of Watergate, are gone.
Newspapers and newsmagazines will become profitable again when they go back to thier roots of reporting the news (who, what, when, where, and how) and not trying to shape the opinion of the American people.
The downside of MSM (beside their left leaning anti- US or perhaps anti- Bush bias) is that they don't have persons on their staff that can write informative articles on a subject which presents both sides and the facts of the situation. Once one reads what is written (if you have not upchucked) you don't know anymore than when you began. I lay it to present day state of the educational system.
"Journalists" are over-rated. Watergate elevated them to a position they do not deserve. Most are hacks who give English deapartments a bad name.
"The fact is, journalism's most critical responsibilities in a democratic society - seeking, reporting, and analyzing news and holding people accountable - aren't easy to fulfill."
The "fact" is that reporters aren't fulfilling that role. They are partisan snipes who seel to inluence events, not report on them. Thats why so many American's are turning away from the MSM monopoly - to talk radio and the net - to get information without leftist socialist spin.
Was this sentence done "tongue in cheek"? As the description of either man,whether one agrees with any given viewpoint,as hate filled seems to be a talking point of the left.
As to the topic posted what the MSM hates is logical,rational people reflecting on issues that differs from the lib propaganda script that all lemmings are supposed to accept as fact without question.
The danger blogs pose to the "mainstream media" lies less in terms of competition, and more in terms of how they will force changes on an industry that despises change.
Bloggers have nailed their list of grievances to the door of the journalistic cathedral.
What remains to be seen is how the cardinals of the Church of Journalism will respond to the Protestant Reformation growing on the Internet.
So far, they seem to be sticking to the traditional script which dictates that they must adamantly defend the myth of their own infallibility in sanctimonious tones.
We'll see how well that strategy plays out.
Based on what I've seen, the "faithful" don't appear to be very impressed with it.
> Most [journalists] are hacks who give English departments a bad name.
No. They are active propagandists, and taught to be so:
http://www.journalism.ku.edu/school/msnvalues.shtml
"In other words, if you live in, say, Grand Rapids, Mich. and are looking for the latest developments on the construction on the nearby highway, or the city council budget, or a millage dispute - things that impact people in very real ways - you're not going to have much luck in the blogosphere."
I can't ever remember worrying too much about those issues. Local radio pretty much covers it and The Daily Shopper (delivered free to my house) has all kinds un-employed reporters, all to willing to tell me what they think, scrambling to peddle their screed. So it goes. Get a job like everybody else. You aren't as important as you think you are.
There's some truth in that, but who edits the editor? The problem with most of the dailies I've worked on (aside from the fact I was pretty much the only conservative on staff) were that the editors were 10 times more biased than the reporters. The only one with more of an agenda than the editor was the publisher or owner. And of course, nothing appears if it offends his/her political sensibilities. The beauty of blogs is that pure BS will eventuall be revealed, usually sooner than later. You can fool some of the people all of the time (Californians mainly) but there are always a few expert readers who will know the facts. Granted, the writing can be horrendous, but if I want literature I'll read Shakespeare.
The UN is fighting like the devil to get control of the internet. The MSM supports them, we and sites like us don't. It's their way of shutting up the opposition.
The simple fact that there are no heir apparents at any of the networks shows that they already know that they are dead.
Hey, they shouldn't worry: We still need them to write the articles that we tear apart!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.