Custom Search

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Down in flames...

One of the first - among many - to go was Resonance, a highly-esteemed quarterly print music magazine I interned for. Then No Depression, another well-respected Seattle rag went from print to online to - as of February - a user forum only, signaling no real journalism or paid writers. Now, say good bye to Blender. This news comes in the wake of the passing of the Seattle Post Intelligencer, a daily that had been a Northwest publishing establishment since 1864.

Kyla Fairchild, co-publisher of No Depression (who I was seated two rows behind on the plane back from Austin) posted a very thorough explanation of what's happening in the print world right now called "The Cold Hard Facts." It's worth reading if any of this snowballing and troubling news is of interest to you.

February 9th's episode of Jon Stewart's Daily Show touches on these issues also. Walter Issacson wrote an article for Time Magazine called, "How to Save Your Newspaper," and in his interview with Stewart he says, "[We] have to get away from the notion that good reporting has to be given away for free on the internet...we have to get to some system where some journalists are getting paid."

Something like this needs to happen, and happen soon if we are to be become informed exclusively through the internet. The old business model - provide a service, then get paid for it - has changed entirely because of the internet, and we've gotten used to getting everything free. But there's truly a hidden cost to "free" online stuff, and we have to restructure the way we think about online content. Free equals free. As it has been for ages, you have to pay for quality. As newspapers dwindle and magazines go under, this will undoubtedly only become more and more obvious.

To see the interview with Walter Issacson, go here.

1 comment:

  1. What's truly alarming in all of this is journalists being added to the endangered species list.

    With most folks apathetically resigning themselves to mainlining their news/media from either the internet or teevee, hard core investigative journalism (and all the associated print peripheries) will go the way of the Dodo.

    U.S. TV News is so tabloid (FEAR! FEAR! FEAR!) and devoid of a nutsac (witness the Bush years) that as we lose our print journalists we lose the necessary check of the 4th Estate.

    I think the Print Powers need to adapt and adapt soon.
    Go guerrilla!
    With this quickly bored apathetic society we've fostered, you kind of have to make news as you report news. Or no one pays attention.
    Mainstream print media has to abandon their staid and stoic foundation, but do it without the screaming.
    Get cerebral. Kick some ass. Do work.
    Or it dies... I guess.
    Which scares the crap outta me.

    ReplyDelete