The Project for Excellence in Journalism issued its annual State of the Media report Sunday. It is typically massive and comprehensive and, not surprisingly, even a cursory reading reveals a very sour note.
The message: Even with everything new in media, what has been lost cannot be replaced.
Some of the initial points in the report:
1. Consumer behaviour has changed. Media business models are affected. Journalism will be influenced as a result. 2. New and old media are more tethered than they think. The former needs the latter to reach an audience. 3. News media are not shrinking, but reportorial work is. 4. Technology is shifting control to newsmakers, who are using it to influence early perceptions of events. 5. The rise of special interests online is going to force journalism to forge new relationships. 6. Traditional media continue to hold sway with audiences online, so cuts in their newsrooms have an impact on online content, too.
On newspapers, the report notes they aren't disappearing, but their ad declines are threatening to make them insubstantial. On online journalism, there is no business model and it difficult to see where one will emerge. On network television news, an erosion --- not a collapse --- in evening newscasts is occurring. On cable news, ideology is responsible for growth. On local TV news, all signs point downward. On magazines, it was a tough year. On ethnic media, it was a year of holding one's own.
In its early report on the volume, The New York Times focuses on the relative monogamy of news users. They tend to have a narrow selection of preferred sites to surf.
The report usually takes a few days to absorb. More to come.
thanks Kirk for summing this up in a tidy precis so far.
As a communications person I will look at the report with hungry eyes, as of course my world has been changing in congruence with the media changes.
I recall when you spoke of this media landscape evolution at Convergence last year and these changes had a question mark over them; it seems as if that has not yet changed.
Who are the innovators that will construct the new business models? It is such an interesting and challenging time, to say nothing else.
These are only early days. The business model took a long time to take hold in other platforms, too. Like other platforms, we are bound to be surprised along the way as models emerge.