He was talking about the Future of News to an audience that seemed to be a mixture of BBC journalists, a load of City University journalism students and some other (presumably) interested types.
Richard warned us that he didn't have a crystal news ball which he looked into occasionally in order to plot the BBC's advance into the future. I was disappointed - surely the licence fee could stretch to...But took his advice and stayed for the rest of the talk anyway.
(Updated: Richard's own post - always best to go to the original source)
Journalism in crisis?
- Crisis is hardly a new phenomenon but what's changing?
- Globalisation
- Proliferation of channels
- Closure of foreign news bureaux by media organisations
- Technological changes undermining the economic model
- Used the analogy of the music industry where the digital age has massively complicated the marketing of an individual song.
- Investment in the Web 'in hope'. Eg Guardian, NYTimes.com running Web operation at a loss.
- Smaller news organisations going out of business
- News sites repackaging agency material - contraction of new content behind the explosion of new sites.
- Old model of limited access and limited resource undercut by the Internet
- Taking the lead from Castells/Beckett, the new model is networked - interactive and interconnecting.
- Citizen journalism - what does this mean for standards of accuracy, rigour and accountability? CNN's I-report fails over Steve Jobs.
- Identified as one of the new keys to journalism
- Pointed to the differences between the production values of Web video and TV. Thought this would feed back into TV at some point
- Crisis of trust and authenticity in the mass media
- Gave example of a new type of foreign correspondent - Hamed Mottaghi - 29 year old freelance journalist in Iran. Somebody who is embedded in their culture. There is an authenticity about reports from somebody who lives and breathes in the country
- Used Technorati survey 2008
- 133 million+ blogs
- 81+ languages
- 6 Continents
- new model of emerging journalism - low cost mobile journalism
- Examples Witness (NGO), Global Post, Global Voices (Richard might have pointed out that Global Voices is run almost entirely by volunteers)
- 45 International Bureaux
- Network of 650 regular voices/stringers around the world
- Suffering the same cost pressures and vulnerabilities as other media organisations. (Presumably here talking about the BBC's World offering which is commercial)
- Use of Twitter to cover the Bangladesh Boat Trip - pointed out that the audience here was measured in the dozens compared to the radio audience of millions
- How do we use UGC so it doesn't sound crass? Need a new model for this.
- "Future is local and global"
- Local and highly personalised and the big picture
- Social video - Seesmic, Phreadz - but expressed disappointment that as yet there isn't much newsgathering going on using them
- Processing power of the Web will outstrip the human brain
- Linking out
- Where is the value we can add as journalists
- Last.fm - community style journalism in the social music model
- Data-driven journalism - Spectra @ MSNBC
- BBC: My Democracy Now
- Need to make interconnections between different disciplines: "Not enough now to just be a journalist"
- A mash up, remix model
Major issues?
- Personalisation and privacy
- Adjustments - economic and technological
- Standards
- Storytelling
- Power of pictures
- Analysis
- Mediation - strength of brands still important
- Debate
2 comments:
Great post!
thanks!
No worries. Glad you found it useful :)
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