I think that steady transformation from desert to jungle may be the single most important trend we should be looking at when we talk about the future of news. Not the future of the news industry, or the print newspaper business: the future of news itself. Because there are really two worst case scenarios that we’re concerned about right now, and it's important to distinguish between them. There is panic that newspapers are going to disappear as businesses. And then there’s panic that crucial information is going to disappear with them, that we’re going to suffer as culture because newspapers will no long be able to afford to generate the information we’ve relied on for so many years.Read Steve Johnson's entire speech here.
I am bullish on the future of news, as you can tell. But I am not bullish on what is happening right now in the newspaper industry. It is ugly, and it is going to get uglier. Great journalists and editors are going to lose their jobs, and cities are going to lose their papers... The old growth forest won’t just magically grow on its own, of course, and no doubt there will be false starts and complications along the way.
Sunday, March 15, 2009
Survival Of The Fittest News
As newspapers around the country struggle to stay in business, one journalist believes the future of news is getting better, not worse. Steve Johnson on the evolving news ecosystem.
Labels:
blogs,
journalism,
newspaper industry
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