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More News Outlets, Fewer Stories: New Media ‘Paradox’
Implicit in the following LA Times story is a lament from the industry (yet more evidence that all media do is report on themselves) that the era of an informed citizenry is a thing of the past because there will be no infrastructure for information gathering. Corporate media love to think of themselves as the saviors of civilization, but I challenge the assumptions that a) information makes us better citizens, and b) information makes us more knowledgeable.
Media are in the business of self-defining their own reality and defining the “public.” They want us to buy into their self-importance. Of course they will be pissed that people stop reading the spun-out nonsense that fills space between ads. It takes me exactly five minutes to read a newspaper, and another five minutes to grieve for the loss of tree pulp that created it.
PS One of the fringe benefits of a declining print press:
Six Jobs That Won’t Exist In 2016, such as advertising creatives.
More News Outlets, Fewer Stories: New Media ‘Paradox’ – Los Angeles Times:
Tags: Commentary, Media, News
This entry was posted on Thursday, March 16th, 2006 at 8:20 am and is filed under New Media, News, Newspaper. You can follow any comments to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a comment, or trackback from your own site.