The last couple of weeks haven't been good ones in the newspaper world. And it doesn't look like it is going to get any better. Just today it is reported that home-deliveries of newspapers in Detroit are to be discontinued.
OJB [Online Journalism Blog] in a piece by William Baam ventures a few suggestions on how getting our news will pan out in the years to come:
"The financial crisis speeds up the newspapershift. Media diverges. Newspapers become television, television becomes a press agency. And everything becomes the web. Probably not a single news websites makes enough revenue to employ the same amount of journalists traditional media like newspapers and television employ. The result is a shift. Not in demand, in distribution. What will happen, and how will this shift change organizations?
Here are some ideas and thoughts that I think make sense. Please help me sharpen this concept, or point me at my fallacies. It would be interesting to have a discussion about this."
Continue reading here.
OJB [Online Journalism Blog] in a piece by William Baam ventures a few suggestions on how getting our news will pan out in the years to come:
"The financial crisis speeds up the newspapershift. Media diverges. Newspapers become television, television becomes a press agency. And everything becomes the web. Probably not a single news websites makes enough revenue to employ the same amount of journalists traditional media like newspapers and television employ. The result is a shift. Not in demand, in distribution. What will happen, and how will this shift change organizations?
Here are some ideas and thoughts that I think make sense. Please help me sharpen this concept, or point me at my fallacies. It would be interesting to have a discussion about this."
Continue reading here.
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