Tag Archives: Newspapers

Ray Bradbury in Conversation with Steve Wasserman (part 2)

Author: truthdig Added: Sun, 27 Jul 2008 20:34:03 -0800 Duration: 545 Iconic author Ray Bradbury speaks with Truthdig literary editor Steve Wasserman about books and ideas. Part 2: The Book Review

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Ray Bradbury in Conversation with Steve Wasserman (part 2)

Ray Bradbury in Conversation with Steve Wasserman (part 1)

Author: truthdig Added: Sun, 27 Jul 2008 20:34:03 -0800 Duration: 328 Iconic author Ray Bradbury speaks with Truthdig literary editor Steve Wasserman about books and ideas. Part 1: The Bookstore

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Ray Bradbury in Conversation with Steve Wasserman (part 1)

Ray Bradbury in Conversation with Steve Wasserman (part 4)

Author: truthdig Added: Mon, 28 Jul 2008 00:33:29 -0800 Duration: 471 Iconic author Ray Bradbury speaks with Truthdig literary editor Steve Wasserman about books and ideas. Part 4: Love

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Ray Bradbury in Conversation with Steve Wasserman (part 4)

Ray Bradbury in Conversation with Steve Wasserman (part 3)

Author: truthdig Added: Mon, 28 Jul 2008 00:33:29 -0800 Duration: 529 Iconic author Ray Bradbury speaks with Truthdig literary editor Steve Wasserman about books and ideas. Part 3: The News

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Poll: Americans Overwhelmingly Reject Government’s Plan to ‘Save Journalism’

An overwhelming majority of Americans prefer freedom of the press to outdated models of journalism, according to a new Rasmussen poll. The survey comes in the midst of discussions in the Federal Trade Commission and the Federal Communications Commission to intervene on behalf of Old Media. Eighty-five percent of respondents in the Rasmussen poll said they believe maintaining press freedom is more important than financially supporting the newspaper industry. Only six percent said the latter is more important. Just 14 percent said they would favor a bailout of the newspaper industry. Respondents worried that government involvement in the industry would compromise press neutrality. Indeed, this sentiment reflects the findings of a number of studies over the past few years. As with any bailout, a bailout of a newspaper would inevitably mean at least some say in that newspaper’s content. In the words of a report released last year by the Business and Media Institute: As soon as Obama bailed out Detroit, he forced out GM Chairman and CEO Rick Wagoner. The White House also gave majority ownership in Chrysler (55 percent) to the UAW. Wall Street bailouts resulted in overnight government regulation – even salary controls. Government intervention in media gives Obama the same opportunity to control the news. Seven major newspaper chains have gone into bankruptcy. If he uses the same strategies he used for Detroit, that would let Obama control major media outlets across the nation and he could dictate the news. A Harvard/Northwestern study observed just such trends in the newspaper industry of Argentina after that nation’s government instituted subsidies for its own failing newspapers. According to one blogger who reported on the study, Their analysis found a “huge correlation” between, in any given month, how much money went to a newspaper and how much corruption coverage appeared on its front page. For example, if the government ad revenue in a month increased by one standard deviation — around $70,000 U.S. — corruption coverage would decrease by roughly half of a front page. …in periods where newspapers were getting more money from the government, they produced fewer corruption scoops of their own and covered fewer of the scoops produced by other newspapers. (It should be noted here that the study only looked at the front pages of newspapers — so it’s possible rival papers were writing about the scandals uncovered by their peers. But if so, they were doing it on inside pages.) The Washington Examiner’s Mark Tapscott brilliantly captured the inevitability of a stilted journalism once public funding is introduced. He noted that the not-too-subtle goal of the campaign to “save journalism” is to transform the news industry from an information product collected by private individuals and entrepreneurs as a service to private buyers, to a government-regulated public utility providing a “public good,” as defined and regulated by government. The inevitable result of the campaign, Tapscott writes, is more government control over the news, since “government always expands its control over any activity it either funds or regulates.” The poll’s respondents presciently observed this attempt at a power grab–and resoundingly rejected it. According to Rasmussen, Sixty-nine percent (69%) think it at least somewhat likely that a newspaper that receives government funding to hire journalists will avoid criticizing government officials and policies, with 45% who say it is Very Likely. Twenty-three percent (23%) say it’s not very or not at all likely that newspapers will avoid such criticism if they get government funding. Seventy-one percent (71%) oppose a government bailout of the newspaper industry like the ones for the financial sector and the automobile industry, up from 65% in March of last year. Only 14% say a government bailout of the newspaper business is a good idea. Of course the federal government is considering a number of options beyond the gifting of taxpayer funds to ailing newspapers. Still many of its options could leave the door open to cronyism and compromising conflicts of interest between journalists and their federal benefactors. One such option is the creation of an “Americorps-type program that would hire and pay journalists to work for newspapers around the country,” in Rasmussen’s phrasing. First of all, as Reason’s Peter Suderman notes , the last thing American journalism needs is a crop of reporters on the public dole. But more to the point of this study, AmeriCorps itself has served as a prime example of cronyism in the distribution of public money. It is certainly not a model to be emulated. And besides, the combined price tag of these programs to save journalism could cost as much as $35 billion, according to Suderman. That’s almost 100 times the FCC’s annual budget. Any federal program doling out that kind of money will attract sycophantic would-be recipients, ready to do what it takes to get their hands on a slice of that pie. Americans, apparently, have a firm grasp of these facts. 

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Poll: Americans Overwhelmingly Reject Government’s Plan to ‘Save Journalism’

list of Pulitzer Prize winners 2010

Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing winners Colleen McCain Nelson, left, back to camera, Tod Robberson, second from left, facing camera, hug each other next to colleagues Sharon Grigsby, deputy editorial page editor,second from right, and Jim C. Mitchell Jr. at the newspapers office in Dallas. William McKenzie, not pictured, also was part of the Pulitzer Prize winning team. The award was given for their editorials showing the stark social and economic disparity between the city#39;s wealthier n

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list of Pulitzer Prize winners 2010

The iPad is Not Your Savior [Apple]

Some people really think you should buy an iPad . Others really think you shouldn’t . Some people think it will save magazines . Others think it will not . We would like to point out that it’s just a computer. More

How Blogs Are Becoming More Like Newspapers [Media]

The LA Times today examines how the Seattle Post-Intelligencer segued from print to exclusively online journalism . But blogging — how and why we cover the stories we cover — is going the other way and coming to resemble… newspapers. A year ago online journalism was the ‘online journalism’ that old-school reporters and J-school professors still ponder. It was measured in hours, not the daily news cycle of a paper. It was a different beast where corrections were fluid, where whimsy and opinion mattered as much as content. People visited a homepage, scrolled down and clicked on whatever caught their eye. Now blogs compete aggressively for audience. Politico , Deadline Hollywood and everyone else seeks to break news to differentiate them from their competition. To do so they, and we, must also now write tight, concise headlines, choose decent pictures or art, and provide readers with more evidence of their journalism (pics, or documents, or it didn’t happen). Opinion pieces and rants cannot rely on raw snark — the ones that get read will hold together, under immediate comment scrutiny, like a traditional op-ed. In short, blogs must now compete for readers’ attention like a newspaper on a stand does (or did). The reason why is a cliche — the kind of cliche that gets articles like this one thrown on the scrapheap, read by dozens not thousands, or millions: Twitter and Facebook. Because more people now pluck most of their news from their social networks, blog time is measured in minutes not hours — you’re either first or definitive or funniest or most provocative or someone else will have the link that gets tweeted and posted on walls. If you are first (and it doesn’t have to be Watergate) a vague headline will not work as it once might have. Because whimsy does not retweet well. So if, to Gawker-promote, you find out that Wyclef Jean paid his mistress $105,000 through his Haiti charity, the headline should probably be Wyclef Jean Paid His Mistress $105,000 Through His Haiti Charity . Like a newspaper headline. John Cook, who wrote that story, also uncovered Nikki Finke’s habit of changing her stories to suit emerging facts . But now if a story, with its headline and probably the first few lines, is immediately spread around, secret corrections will be exposed anyway. Correcting like a newspaper — explaining clearly precisely the fuck-up, and how it was amended — is not just good practice online. It’s about to become the only option. Blogs, like this one, used to get away with quickly repackaging content and adding a penis joke. But, as our proprietor Nick Denton explained in an internal email, “any treatment [of a story] can work, really, except for the old-school blog item, that rehashed news story with a dash of puerile snark. Nobody links to that.” Nobody links to stories with dull pictures, or lots of typos, or tenuous premises either. In the same way people skip over them in their newspapers. It’s a quick change, and nobody is perfect (before you seek examples on this site). Which is probably why Cynthia Shannon, of San Francisco, tweeted at 11.02 on Friday, that “there’s something seriously wrong when DRUDGE and GAWKER are my primary sources of news.” If we want Cynthia to move from grudging appreciation to something more fulsome, we’ll have to become more like the institutions we seek to replace. (Also: please link to this. Thanks.)

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How Blogs Are Becoming More Like Newspapers [Media]

What Steve Jobs Said During His Wall Street Journal iPad Demo

We know that Apple’s CEO is no fan of Flash, the Web animation software. But it sounds like Steve Jobs really unleashed on the Adobe system to try and convince the Wall Street Journal to ditch it for the iPad. Welcome to the nasty side of Jobs’s famous Reality Distortion Field. The fun side had its turn when Jobs unveiled the iPad tablet computer in San Francisco last month. The dark side came several days later, when Jobs sat down with select Journal staff on the third floor of the News Corporation building in New York as part of a broader media tour . Like other newspapers, the Journal is heavily invested in Flash as a way to deploy not only video but also slide shows and other interactive infographics and news applications. So when Jobs showed off his iPad, editors were sure to ask him about the device’s lack of Flash, at least when they weren’t pissing him off by posting to Twitter from the device . Jobs was brazen in his dismissal of Flash, people familiar with the meeting tell us. He repeated what he said at an Apple Town Hall recently, that Flash crashes Macs and is buggy. But he also called Flash a “CPU hog,” a source of “security holes” and, in perhaps the most grevious insult an famous innovator can utter, a dying technology. Jobs said of Flash, “We don’t spend a lot of energy on old technology.” He then compared Flash to other obsolete systems Apple got people to ditch…. … like the floppy drive, famously absent in iMac, …. old data ports, including even Apple’s own FireWire 400, gone from iPods and now all Macbooks , …. CCFL backlit LCD screens, now entirely replaced in Apple’s lineup by LED-powered screens ( except for this ). (Correction: We originally said Apple replaced LCDs with LEDs; LEDs are a type of LCD backlighting.) …and even the CD, with Jobs apparently crediting Apple’s iPod, iTunes Store, CD-ripping software and ” Rip, Mix, Burn ” campaign with doing in the old music medium (sort of: though CD sales are in free fall, around 300 million were sold last year in the U.S. alone, 80 percent of all albums). Jobs even claimed the iPad’s battery performance would be degraded from 10 hours to 1.5 hours if it had to spend its CPU cycles decoding Flash, we’re told. That sounds like an unfair comparison; the iPad would unlikely achieve its advertised 10 hours of maximum battery life while continuously playing video of any sort, iPad optimized or not. And Adobe has argued that its software would be more efficient if it had the same access to Apple graphics processors as Apple’s own software. But Jobs offered more than a thorough evisceration of Flash; he also used his Reality Distortion Field to sell the Journal on alternatives to the technology. Ditching Flash would be “trivial,” he suggested For one, he suggested the newspaper use the H.264 video compression system (“codec” in geek), which is compatible with both the iPad and the Flash Player installed on most Web browsers. Jobs reportedly said the Journal would find “It’s trivial to create video in H.264” instead of Flash.We assume he didn’t mention that H. 264 is patented, privately licensed and could get expensive fast . Even setting that aside, H. 264 does not fully replace Flash. While it can handle video, it does not comprise a system for the rapid development of interactive graphics, as Flash does. Yet Jobs also reportedly said Flash would be “trivial” in this sense, as well — that it would be “trivial” to make an entire copy of the Journal website with the non-video Flash content also redone. That’s just not right; even assuming the Journal could duplicate its Flash slideshows, infographics and other news apps using iPad-friendly technologies like Javascript, it would take a decidedly nontrivial amount of time and effort to create or acquire such a system, hire staff who understand it as well as Flash, train staff on how to use it, and integrate it into the Journal ‘s editorial workflow. It’s not clear to us how assembled Journal honchos collectively reacted to these statements, but its worth noting that shortly after the meeting, on Feb. 10, editorial board member Holman Jenkins issued a WSJ op-ed comparing Apple to Microsoft and saying the company “is in danger of becoming preoccupied with zero-sum maneuvering versus hated rivals.” His primary and lead example of this sort of “maneuvering” was Jobs’ decision to keep Flash off the iPad. Jobs’ Reality Distortion Field may need a bit of fine tuning, then. But we have a feeling the Journal will swallow its objections and hop on the iPad gravy train. The Wall Street Journal editorial page has had its impressive moments of influence in the history of American conservatism, but these days that’s little match for the power of Steve Jobs when he puts on a black turtleneck and strides onto a stage. (Power aside, if you’ve got any informed opinions on how difficult it would be to replace Flash in the editorial workflow of a large newspaper or magazine, we’d love to hear them .) (Pic: Jobs speaking at Yerba Buna Center in San Francisco, Jan. 27. Getty Images.)

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UPDATED: The New York Times David Paterson Story Is Out… Or is it?

So, this is it ? This is THE New York Times David Paterson ‘bombshell’? The whole thing? There’s not a second part that’s good? Jesus, New York Times , why didn’t you say it was going to be so boring. Wed. Update: : Let’s do the time warp again! A knowledgeable source tells us this is not in fact the Paterson bombshell, and that the real story is substantially more… substantial. Our tipster says: I don’t believe this is the Paterson story. The reporters actually did uncover some dirt on him, though nothing of the sexual sort. Mostly stuff about his heavy drinking and loveless marriage. So: Still no drug-fueled orgies… but perhaps fodder for a more substantial scandal than the fact that Paterson has a sketchy confidant? Our tipster says that “there’s an actual profile of Paterson that could run as soon as tomorrow.” We await with bated breath… As for today’s Times article: If you were hoping for the big Paterson-annihilating bombshell that we, in part, led you to expect , prepare to be sorely disappointed. The Times story isn’t even about Paterson, per se: It’s about his driver and closest confidant, David W. Johnson. Granted, Johnson, who started as Paterson’s intern in 1999, has a sketchy past: The Times reports that as a teenager he was twice arrested for felony drug charges. Also, he beats women—Which the Times points out is sort of a paradox, given Paterson’s crusade against domestic violence. The article details a slew of “incidents” including: In 2001, when Mr. Paterson was a state senator, Mr. Johnson, according to a person who was present, punched a girlfriend outside the senator’s Harlem office. But there were no sexy Paterson revelations. No drug-fueled orgies spilling into the halls of the Governor’s mansion. Tell all your friends: Paterson’s closest adviser is sort of a thug. The great phantom David Paterson scandal of 2010 ends with a whimper. (Until we read a tweet about another one.)

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UPDATED: The New York Times David Paterson Story Is Out… Or is it?