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Dead Tree Journalism – is the end nigh?

Dead Tree Journalism – is the end nigh?. A tour around the UK Press. … and reflections on its’ prospects in the digital age. Broadsheets and Tabloids. The Financial Times. Style or Substance ?. Who owns the UK Press?. The Daily Telegraph is owned by property developer millionaires

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Dead Tree Journalism – is the end nigh?

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  1. Dead Tree Journalism – is the end nigh?

  2. A tour around the UK Press

  3. … and reflections on its’ prospects in the digital age

  4. Broadsheets and Tabloids The Financial Times

  5. Style or Substance?

  6. Who owns the UK Press? The Daily Telegraph is owned by property developer millionaires the Barclay brothers. £1.8billion 117th Richest in the World $6.2billion News Corporation – owned by Rupert Murdoch – The Times, The Sun, plus News of the World and The Sunday Times £931M The Daily Mail is owned by DMGT – a conglomerate with a network of media holdings. Owned by Viscount Rothermere.

  7. Who owns the UK Press? The Independent Tony O’Reilly Irish billionaire The Daily Express Richard Desmond £950m Trinity Mirror - Pearson PLC

  8. Who works for the UK Press? Elite and Tabloids Top end of the market - a high proportion of Oxbridge graduates Rest of the market – everyone else Many different opportunities depending on what level you are looking at and which particular publications

  9. …and a few more faces

  10. Where does the news come from? Contacts Press Releases Press Conferences FOI/Investigative/’undercover’ News agenda – R4 Today programme Who you know, not what you know

  11. How well do newspapers sell? 358,844 215,504 842,912 617,483 Average daily circulated, January 2008

  12. How does the newspaper industry made money? Cover price only part of the revenue Most revenue comes from advertising

  13. Death of the old bargain? “ The old bargain of the newspaper – world news lumped in with horoscopes and ads from the pizza parlour has now ended. The future presented by the Internet Is the mass amateurization of publishing and a switch from “Why publish this?” to “Why not?”. Clay Shirky, Here Comes Everybody, 2008.

  14. Citizen Journalism? Citizen journalism = the concept of members of the public "playing an active role in the process of collecting, reporting, analysing and disseminating news and information.”

  15. A Sea Change?

  16. The Blogosphere

  17. A source of pressure?

  18. How things used to be… The Media s

  19. The Internet makes communication two-way.. The Media

  20. And then it makes it into a network.. The Media

  21. So, in digital times • Consumers are also producers • The means of media production is: • Global • Social • Cheap • Ubiquitous

  22. Consumers turn into producers

  23. What are the implications for the ‘old media’? Digital journalism is quicker Digital journalism is cheaper Digital journalism can be more expansive Digital journalism is interactive Consumers may also be producers There is more choice Old media are losing not just sales but, crucially, advertising revenue

  24. But does it really matter…? There are millions of blogs…. but very few have a high readership “ One of the good things about the Internet is that you can put up anything you like, but that also means that you can put up any kind of nonsense. There’s a kind of assumption that if somebody wrote it on the Internet, it’s true.” Noam Chomsky, Professor of Linguistics, MIT.

  25. Is the end nigh for dead tree journalism? • No one can be sure • Traditional media are certainly likely to be squeezed • They will lose advertising and other revenue

  26. Maybe not? • Some of the old media have competitive advantage and human capital e.g. FT, Times – and the ‘paywall’, ‘the commentariat’. • They can diversify and adapt – have a digital presence – like The Guardian • It may be that they come to occupy a niche – and we will all use a wider variety of media in the future

  27. Further Research Clay Shirky, (2008) Comes Everybody, Penguin Andrew Marr, (2005) My Trade: A Short History of British Journalism, Macmillan. [It is not short in fact, but just dip in – later chapters most relevant] The Pew Research Centre – find at http://pewresearch.org [ and see following two links to specific articles] http://pewresearch.org/pubs/590/digg-reddit-delicious http://pewresearch.org/pubs/444/cruising-for-news-the-state-of-digital-journalism Clay Shirky on Ted: http://www.ted.com/talks/clay_shirky_how_cellphones_twitter_facebook_can_make_history.html

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