Ryan Sholin produces an extremely worthwhile blog on media change, Invisible Inkling, and his latest post provides five fearless predictions for 2009. In the days ahead I'll carry others' diagnoses/prescriptions/hunches about media direction.
in short, Sholin suggests mobile video will go mainstream, there will be more local startups (and larger local shutdowns), newspapers will be of the Web not merely on it, alternative business models will emerge and crowdsourcing tools will surface on the back of existing platforms.
He encourages others to join in the prediction game and to keep it positive.
Twitter now occupies a sliver of my day and gathers a healthy piece of pie of my network. A lawsuit to watch: Gatehouse Media, which owns nearly 125 newspapers in the U.S., has sued the New York Times Co. (owner of Boston.com) for linking to articles on its Web sites. John Robinson, the editor of the Greenboro News & Record, writes a year-end-feeling column on why he perserveres as an editor in challenging circumstances. New York University's Clay Shirky is one of the original voices on digital media. Columbia Journalism Review has an extensive interview in two parts (part one here, part two here) which he discusses the direction of media. it ought to be required reading (if a little rambling) for any year-end reflection on the craft. David Carr writes this week in Media Equation in the New York Times about a small New Jersey paper that shuns the Web. He uses the example to explore the age-old dilemma of fueling the decline of the print edition by releasing content online. Joel Brinkley, a former New York Times correspondent now teaching journalism at Stanford, proposes a measure to help the newspaper industry: Get an anti-trust exemption so they can collaboratively charge for their content online. I've been reading many takes on the decision by the Detroit Free Press and Detroit News to curtail home-delivery to Thursday, Friday and Sunday, to produce single-section newsstand editions other days, and to pitch heavily the digital editions. Mark Glaser's MediaShift site has produced a very intuitively strong and instructive look at alternative business models emerging for newspapers in the digital age --- arguably the cutting edge of the most significant media issues today. The editor of the Los Angeles Times mused this week that online revenue exceeded the payroll costs of his newsroom. |