kEEP POSTING

Good discussion beginning here–with slow slowness on the part of blogs.com which we are addressing. Keep posting! We’ll be discussing the blog comments and posts as we move toward the second half of this session.

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Event Multi-Tasking

Howard Reingold points out that discussion is part of news consumption – particularly around major events. Some thoughts: Major events are no longer dominated by TV on the day and print the day after. The extent to which media multi-tasking takes place is underestimated by the media industries. blogs and other online sources are already […]

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Trust – of all things

Echoed by Horwitz (Earning the right to filter your news), Rheingold (certain amount of trust capital) and Klein (the urge to controll the dialogue): Trust is build over a long time – and lost in no time. Hence the urge to control the dialogue, a very sound branding decision for a newspaper brand. Filter we […]

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Assertions, evidence and ethics

A quick riff on Esther’s point about journalistic ethics: The problems of the world are too complex to be solved by ideologues and oversimplifications. The problem, of course, is that big media is perfectly suited – and actively organizing – for “the big story,” which becoming the simple story. At the same time, standards for […]

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Can Blogs be Controlled?

Wilkinson mentioned “controlling the dialogue”. Right there, he taps into the most consequential split between blogs and traditional media. For the politician, blogs are absolutely uncontrollable; they are an intrinsically chaotic medium with a penchant to move towards all out conflict. The informal, almost personalized feeling of blogs creates a different reaction in the viewer […]

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Is blogging dangerous?

Bohrman: Blogging is a potential cesspool of information. Sandy Close: It’s not just bloggers–how about the ethnic media? Howard Rheingold: While we’re debating, real journalists are out there–they might be bloggers or professional journalists. What matters is finding out what’s true. Greenfield: That’s a traditional media notion. Mernit comment: Being accurate is traditional? I think […]

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The challenge of authenticity

As George Burns once said about authenticity, “if you can fake that, you’ve got it made.” Current big media thinking seems uneasy with authenticy. This is dangerous because people are becoming more sensitive to it. They are seeking a proliferation of perspectives from different sources. Soccer moms looking for things to do with their kids, […]

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Serving shareholders or a democracy?

To riff on Howard Rheingold and Jay Harris’ point: This is the question news organizations need to ask first. Can the industry really expect ROI that’s 6x the average Fortune 500 company? Especially when everyone has the opportunity to become a global media entity on their own – and their doing it.

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More discussion…

Jeff Greenfield: Why does TV matter to blog readers? Jake Tapper: I see wired readers as an opportunity–I wish we could broadcast my reports 1:20 and send them straight to phones..I find the paper boring. I read it every day, but I don’t think the newspaper business is adapting–but I think broadcast can-that’s why I […]

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Earning the Right to Filter Your News?

Ed Horowitz wants to know if he can earn the right to be the place people go to filter all our news, cause it’s a lot of work to go to all those sites. Ed, meet NewsGator. Or any of the other RSS feed aggregators. Cause it’s not about going to a million sites. It’s […]

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