joshuago’s journalism Bookmarks
09 APR 2010
Apple has every right to push around its customers and media “partners” in pursuit of its business goals. What should bother us is the media companies’ willingness to cede so much of their authority to a company that has demonstrated its willingness to abuse it.
08 APR 2010
An inspiring and believable account of how hyper-local news became profitable for one Texas company.
01 APR 2010
When the ecosystem stops rewarding complexity, it is the people who figure out how to work simply in the present, rather than the people who mastered the complexities of the past, who get to say what happens in the future.
26 MAR 2010
Both movement conservatism and political journalism are in crisis. The intellectual coherence and public credibility of each has been breaking down for a generation.
20 MAR 2010
A fascinating comparison between journalism and religion. Likens j-school to a school of theology, cites "The Journalist's Creed" as a declaration of journalistic faith, points out the "no orthodoxy" orthodoxy, highlights existence of practitioners who don't fully understand the significance of what they're doing, looks at the First Amendment as the press religion, isolates "the public" as journalism's god, likens emergence of public journalism to breakaway churches/schisms.
19 MAR 2010
Lame excuses by old media. Trends are irreversible, so save what's important: investigative journalism. But it needs to be subsidized, so we need to experiment on ways to fund it. Success not guaranteed if we experiment, but failure guaranteed if we don't.
19 MAR 2010
An excellent and entertaining backgrounder that should be required reading for anyone trying to solve the problem of funding journalism in the Internet age. Historical review of how newspapers came to be, how they started off brazenly partisan, moved to being produced by a professional elite, and split out again on the Internet. Touches on a fascinating reference to Walter Lippmann and John Dewey's competing visions for journalism.
18 MAR 2010
What we discovered, of course, was that innovation survived the death of its institutions. High tech companies didn't own innovation; the innovators did. News organizations don't own journalism: journalists do.
18 MAR 2010
Rich and powerful people will always get their news. When trying to save investigative journalism, one challenge is to fight the fatalistic notion that the masses -- or public opinion, depending on who you ask -- do not deserve to be informed. Public opinion cannot be avoided, but in a democracy we're better off if public opinion is informed. The press will be necessary and can continue as long as it can still serve the public.
18 MAR 2010
The idea is Deal Brokering. You use your knowledge of the local scene, your brand and your contacts to negotiate group deals with local businesses from bars to restaurants to dry cleaners. The businesses offer big one-time discounts to attract new customers, your audience gets access to great deals, and you broker the deal on your site and get a substantial cut of the money. It’s already happening around the country.