Media Matters

April 25th, 2008

Having been, in a relatively small way, in both the broadcast and print media, I’m fascinated by the blurring effects the Internet has had between these industries. Newspapers have been hit the hardest, and they’re doing what they can to adapt, mostly by taking advantage of the Web.

One innovation is to use blogging software, so letters to the editor can now be comment threads. Another approach is to add video. The suburban paper here, The Metrowest Daily News, posts videos on YouTube that are relatively rough, but servicable. Some are interviews, while others capture events, such as this suspicious truck fire at a Bose (the Wave Music System) Corporation parking lot.

Larger newspapers, such as The Boston Globe, are now posting slickly-produced videos to complement their feature stories. The video below goes with the story at this link, and I think it does a good job of helping to get the writer’s point across.
Note to Globe: Get the Flash player fixed, so the dimensions can be properly resized, instead of cropped.

By the way, as I’ve pointed out before, the newspaper business had decades of warning that changes were coming. The very thing that was a great burden and expense, the printing and distribution of paper, was also a primary reason (along with literacy) for the success of newspapers, because it gave them control over access.

Papers liked to promote the idea that a single copy would be read by more than one person, but of course they preferred that not too much of that went on. Readership is only a guess, while circulation is a known number, and it’s always better to sell more copies.

Filed under: All Posts, Politics, Religion & Money, Tech

Leave a Comment

hidden

Some HTML allowed:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Trackback this post  |  Subscribe to the comments via RSS Feed


Recent Comments

  • Joan Stringer: Someone should do a study of people who have used computers from 1996 to the present, the time when...
  • Joan Stringer: Amen Sister Jeanie Beanie! This buyout would likely turn out to be like others-a windfall for the CEOs...
  • jeaniebeanie: How frustrating! We will be patiently waiting until you get that rhymes with “other” -...
  • Julian Higgins: Somewhere there is a warehouse with a bunch of Allison parts - m,dranges - tweeters. There are lots...
  • jeaniebeanie: I caught the part when the CEOs were at the hearing and were asked, “How many of you flew in here...
  • Mark A. Worden: Hi Doug! It was wonderful to finally be able to hear these for the very first time–I never had...
  • jeaniebeanie: I meant “Mein Gott!” I call him Barry, because it’s what he was actually called well...
  • Dave: Hey Doug, get well soon man.
  • Joan Stringer: My favorite cartoons have always been of Bugs Bunny. I like the fact there are adult references to...
  • Joan Stringer: Hi Doug! I hope you are feeling better this evening! If not, then I think I would do as Jean said and...

Blogs

Categories

Calendar

April 2008
S M T W T F S
« Mar   May »
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930  

Archives

Feeds