MSM — Mainstream Media’s on the Move

I was thinkin’ about the swirl.  Then I saw a comment by SiliconValleyWatcher’sTom Foremski, something I’ve read several times before but it hit me anew.  He wrote:

Ken: That’s exactly it, it is about MSM and citizen journalism …and… what I call “smart machine media” in a holy trinity of sorts 🙂

I’m down with that!  These are three engines being driven by people, but people from different positions, perches and allegiance.  Differencesare likely to remain, but they’re all coming together on a level playing field where discussion, sharing and open, honest communication keeps lots of light on the truth.  Sure there is a need for anonymity, but maybe only in the face of true fear, oppression and when it comes to protecting the live(s) of others/many. 

Back to the holy trinity of sorts.  I visited the eBiquity blog, run by the UMBC eBiquity Research Group consisting of faculty and students from the Department of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering (CSEE) of University of Maryland, Baltimore County(UMBC), located in Baltimore MD.  This is where I found this good explorationof MSM, or the mainstream media, and how mainstream politicians view and use them along with the blogosphere.   Their conclusion:

MSM is influential and there are selective preferences of each community towards different sources. Some of the sources that are categorized under MSM in the dataset almost have a blog like quality. As people rely on blogs for information and opinions, the indirect influence that MSM sources (and perhaps, its biases) can not be ignored. While blogs and MSM seem to almost have a symbiotic relation, (IMHO) this election season might see a fierce competition between the two.

Many will be watching, and more people than ever will be participating!

News 2.0 — My First Comment Left on HuffingtonPost

I enjoyed Ariana Huffington’s News 2.0  first-hand take on how newspapers are going away, but not so soon.   Here are some of my favorite parts, and a comment I left on her blog.

Those papers that wake up in time will become a journalistic hybrid combining the best aspects of traditional print newspapers with the best of what the Web brings to the table. We’re getting a glimpse into this hybrid future in so-called Old Media places like the Washington Post and the New York Times, and from New Media players like Josh Marshall’s Talking Points Memo sites. And, of course, that’s exactly what we’re trying to do with the Huffington Post.

Another old school behemoth that is embracing the digital future is the New York Times, despite its dunderheaded decision to hide Maureen Dowd, Nicholas Kristof, Bob Herbert, and co., behind TimesSelect (more on this in a moment). Drawing over 13 million unique users a month, the venerable Gray Lady is actually on the cutting edge of digital innovation, including Times Reader, which presents stories online in a format that approximates the experience of reading the paper’s print edition (combined with the search and flexibility bells-and-whistles of the web), and MyTimes (currently in beta), which allows readers to aggregate their favorite news sources and blend them with content produced by the Times, creating a single, custom-made digital super-paper. How serious is the Times about pushing the innovation envelope? It’s hired Michael Zimbalist, a former Disney imagineer, to oversee the company’s online research and development. That’s serious.

Chomping down on a story and refusing to let go is what bloggers do best. And while the vast majority of material that ends up being blogged about still originates with a mainstream news source, more and more stories are being broken by online news sources — a trend that will only continue with the growth of sites like TPM, Politico, TMZ (hey, the Mel Gibson and Michael Richards stories were big news), and HuffPost, where we are ratcheting up our commitment to original reporting, investigative reporting, and citizen journalism, in which our readers act as adjunct reporters — additional eyes, ears, and boots, or stiletto heels, on the ground, ferreting out news and underreported stories all across the country.

So stop writing teary-eyed eulogies for newspapers. The only thing dead is the either/or nature of the musty print vs online debate. The shifting dynamic between those two forces is exactly like the relationship between Sarah Conner and the T-101 in the Terminator movies. At first, the visitor from the future (digital) seemed intent on killing Sarah (print). But as the relationship progressed and the sequels unspooled, the Terminator became Sarah and her son’s one hope for salvation. Today, you can almost hear digital media (which for some reason has a thick Austrian accent) saying to print: “Come with me if you want to live!”

The hybrid future is kicking down the door. It’s time to let it in and fully embrace it.

 Blow is my first comment ever left on the Huffington Post, or see it here.

The blending of new and old. That’s like four generations all living together under one roof. While we’re all reading a lot more stuff, the old and new media are both fighting and crying over why they’re not making a lot more money. Moral of the story/sign of the times = Maybe we’re all doing more stuff and not making more money from it. Bottom line is we gotta help divided sides team up and move ahead swiftly with an open mind’s eye on efficiency, economy, magical power of people and potential for things to come.

By: kenekaplan on March 29, 2007 at 08:00pm

Wall Street Journal’s Embedded Player

 I first learned about this on BeetTV.  The Wall Street Journal is working with online video site Brightcove to offer it’s content to people through an embedded player — see story here.  This is a wonderful step in the right direction for major media companies. 

I shave ubscribed to the WSJ print edition for about 10 years, but this may be my last.  Maybe now I can find some of their video stories online, since my WSJ online subscription just ran out.   Back to the embedded player…

YouTube is popular for many reasons, but one of its magic bullets was the early use of an embedded media player that people could copy and paste into their blog or Website.  This proliferates a video story and turns blogs and other Websites into distributers…at no cost.  Everytime someone clicks play — no matter where they found the video — the source hosted on YouTube’s site logs another view.  This is what’s allowing people to become “we the media.”

More video sites offering this, and even companies are offering their videos through  media players that can be lifted and shared.  This shows a willingness to try new ways of reaching more people and possibly making more money by sharing content — or giving it away.

There’s a lot of arguing and fighting about old and new media, and what’s the best way to move forward.  But what’s rising to the top these days — people and companies trying new things.  Exciting to see and I’m curious if “power of the people” might actually give companies, countries even, a competitive edge.  I strongly think so!  Magic and possibilities are sparked when a variety of people are involved in the process, as long as clear goals and good intentions are spelled out.

I have been embedding PodTech’s elegant player ever since I started blogging here a few months ago.  In fact, being able to embed a video & audio player right into my blog posts was a major reason I finally started blogging publically.  It allows me to really participate more.  Rather than just posting my rants and deep thoughts, I could actually show examples of what’s influencing me and others. 

While checking out Brightcove today, I watched a video of musician Regina Spektor — what a great voice, what a great song!  Here’s Brighcove’s embedded player:

<embed src=’http://admin.brightcove.com/destination/player/player.swf&#8217; bgcolor=’#FFFFFF’ flashVars=’allowFullScreen=true&initVideoId=361418447&servicesURL=http://www.brightcove.com&viewerSecureGatewayURL=https://www.brightcove.com&cdnURL=http://admin.brightcove.com&autoStart=false’ base=’http://admin.brightcove.com&#8217; name=’bcPlayer’ width=’486′ height=’412′ allowFullScreen=’true’ allowScriptAccess=’always’ seamlesstabbing=’false’ type=’application/x-shockwave-flash’ swLiveConnect=’true’ pluginspage=’http://www.macromedia.com/shockwave/download/index.cgi?P1_Prod_Version=ShockwaveFlash’></embed&gt;

It’s Personal, but Behavior May Define our Media Future

This is a follow up to an earlier post from today about SF Chronicle David Lazarus’ story “So who will get the story?” Here are some things Lazarus wrote that I think are worth looking at more closely with an open mind.

“The blogosphere – a silly term coined by bloggers to legitimize their posturing — is comprised by and large of the people whose work consists of commenting on the work of others.”

Commenting on the work of others sounds like a worthless, meaningless endeavor.  Instead, this is a heathy thing.  This is what we’re trained to do in college.  This is the foundamental act of classical education, especially in Western Europe.  And we might say the same about religions.  If we could clear the frustration clouding Lazarus’  point of view, we might see better .  Blogging is different than professional journalism.  But just after the printing press was invented, politicians and businessmen probably blurted out the same venomous despise for writers before journalism was legitimized as a vocation or profession.  This is not to say that someday people will get a degree in blogging.  But companies are developing blogging curiculums to help employees feel comfortable and empowered to join online conversations.  Journalists can see blogging as competition, but it is only a threat if the businesses that pay journalists are not efficient, effective businesses.  And keep in mind, we have the respected, publically funded PBS and NPR — hallmarks for great journalism. 

Professional journalists who blog or who have become full-time bloggers attest to the potential wonders of blogging.  People like SiliconValleyWatcher’s Tom Foremski, who is chronicling the development of new rules of communication.  Bottom line, stay on top of your game by constantly learning and keeping your mind open.  Protect what you value by making it more valuable to others, not by building walls.

“The harsh reality, though, is that most newspaper Web sties account for only about 5 percent of total revenue (of combined print and online editions).  That means a news organization that relies primarily on teh Internet couldn’t possible support a newsroom as large or resoucful as that the parid-for print product allows.”

And that means this glorious new paradign of content that’s not worth paying for would allow news organizations to be capable of doing only a fraction of the investivative and watchdog work they currently perform.”

The stakes couldn’t be higher — htat is, unless bloggers and cyberreaders are satisfied to accept the words of Washington politicans, or companies like Halliburton and Enron, as face value.”

Here’s a point that can be traced back to something I’ve heard from Tom Foremski — recent story on the topic here.  The traditional media economy will have to change.  It is changing.  It has been changing ever since I can remember.  I worked at San Francisco’s KRON-TV through the 1990s, when digital edit suites first entered the building, a local cable station was born and died and the well-respected, family-owned maveric station was sold.  I suspect that might have been the height and early decline into the ever tightening state it seems most local TV stations have been living in.  Heck KRON-TV now has v-journalists shooting video, editing and electronically submitting stories live or pre-taped over the Internet whenever possible.

The name calling is divisive — “glorious new paradigm” “bloggers and cyberreaders.”  Not everyone is using news aggregators and still many aren’t turning to the Internet for news and information, but it’s way beyond a growing trend.  Momentum is strong and growing rapidly thanks to search engines and social sites that let people embed media players, making anyone/everyone a point of distribution. 

TV didn’t kill the radio star.  In fact, I see radio stars making it big on TV all the time.  This can be true when looking at professional journalists and bloggers.  In fact, many people see professional print journalists on TV, hear them on Radio and read their blogs.  People seek comfort and when change is afoot, the perception of comfort can feel threatened.  Again, this is an opportunity to put skin in the game and passionately encourage co-workers and the powers-that-be to try new things.  Along the way, we can all live, learn and and share new examples that incorpate the old and new ways.

I can’t let this one pass by:  In a world where traditional media economics are downsized, “bloggers and cyberreaders” would have to take at face value the words of companies, employees, politicians, government workers, neighbors and family members.  That’s what we do when we face the world bravely, openly and head on.  But there is a state of reflection that blends in one’s own reason, values and experiences.  We never want to deny or diminish this right.  So the need to feed and encourage this reflection will be provided by great journalism skills from people and professionals.  Journalists get paid for devoting themselves and their skills to this endeavour.  Bloggers blog out of passion and interest.  Seems we’re better off with both!

A coment in the Lazarus story by SF Chronicle reader “dasmb” — “‘Get if first, but get it right'” is a credo for journalists…but blogging ain’t journalism and the same rules don’t apply.”

This is not such a bad thing.  In fact it’s humanizing.  Who in the world doesn’t make mistakes?  It’s said that each person’s reality is soley based on what they believe to be true.  When new information comes in, or a revelation occurs or a leap in logic lands someone on a new level of heightened awareness…we can acknoledge our mistakes or misunderstand and embrace the new understanding.  This is how we move ahead!  Newspapers and TV news play this out, too, but only in a tiny “corrections” section or in a few seconds during a newscast.  These mistakes are the best fodder for exploring and finding better understanding for everyone.

Lazarus brings his article to a close by advocating that the newspaper industry ought “to safeguard its output until a more suitable means of electronic distribution comes to light.”

OK, so we shut down access like the record industry did to Naptster and wait for another Steve Jobs to come in on a white horse to save the day.  Possible, sure!  Workable models exist.  But this feels like backwards thinking, light on details and facts.  The record company is still struggling.  We’re seeing the video wars spark up with billion dollar lawsuits.  This is all still being defined, just like the movie industry, medical field and many other industries. 

The Internet is changing so many things.  Can’t we put our collective minds and spirits together and focus on the advancing the best possbilities?  Along the way we can hold wide open our eyes, blinking oly to share our opinions and to breathe as we stay committed to moving ahead and making things better for people and economies.

Link to the San Francisco Chronicle story for March 23, 2007

SF Chronicle’s David Lazarus Advances, Denigrates Discussion on Journalists vs. Bloggers

SF Chronicle columnist David Lazarus is at it again, moving ahead the conversations about newspapers — journalists that create valuable, reporting based,  fact-checked content — and their fight for survival.  His March 13 column, “So who will get the story?” is both provocative and defensive. 

This is great!  This makes it real.  If he was “so right” about everything, then the discussion might be over. 

To be fair, this discussion is really about journalists vs. bloggers.  It’s about finding a sustanable business model for traditional media — the forefathers of content creation — in a new world running on new technology that empowering people to get information and entertainment in new ways.

Anyone who has been reading Lazarus’ spirited stories on this topic can tell it won’t be over for a while.  By exploring this further and engaging readers, he is really helping to deepen the discussion and quicken the pace for finding some helpful solutions.  Most will agree that free rides are paid by someone, somewhere and once they go away…all of us who’ve become dependent on what’s being given away will suffer somehow.  In a capitalistic economy, we’ll suffer and move to the next best deal or free ride. But in the end, people help push the best to the top.  This is a right worth fighting for whenever we’re exploring new models and understanding new paradigms.

Like most great discussions at the dinner table, this one comes down to values and how they improve or impair an economy.  And now this is exactly what Lazarus points out: 

&quot;Newspapers to the digging that most bloggers do not.  The blogosphere — a silly term coined by bloggers to legitimize their posturing — is comprised by an large of people whose work constists of commenting on the work of others.”

I can’t really argue with that, but it’s plain to me that Lazarus has fallen into a trap and is feeling attached and frustrated and even despises blogging.  The blogosphere is &quot;silly&quot; and later he says that bysuspending antitrust laws and allowing newspaper owners to unite in charging for online content:

“…would be to collectively demonstrate to online news agreegators, bloggers and various freeloaders that this industry intends to safeguard its output until a more suitable means of electronic distribution comes to light.”

Wow:  freeloaders, safequard.  Sounds like hate and fear.  Sure you want to fight for what you have and fight for what you believe is right.  The reality is we live in a civilized society…at least we aspire to.  Waging war,  spreading hostility, name calling and safeguarding seems so defensive.  It feels stuck in the mode we’re all trying to escape after our country’s reaction to 9/11.  It’s tough to heal and move ahead to a better way of living while perceiving things as threats rather than opportunities. 

Cut the name calling and real talk and understanding is allowed to happen.  I like nothing more than getting into a heated Italian dinner discussion.  It can get vulgar and radical, but hateful and name calling is not furtulizer for negotiation.  Not one, but both sides have to win…or there’s less chance for advancing together.

What I like about Lazarus’ approach is that he criticizes AND offers ideas to fix the problem.  It’d be great if the reporter could investigate the ideas and undercover new ideas rather than stay trapped in the cheap thrill of name calling.  Let the bloggers do that if they want.  As a blogger, even I am trapped by the cheap thrill of “commenting” rather than “reporting.”  Blogging has bad or worthless value but it’s open, accessible, sharable nature is something that can tremendously improve understanding — of each other and of ourselves. 

A reporter has an opportunity and platform to rise these cheap thrills  and bring people together.  That’s the power of great journalism.  And that skill and service will always be in demand in a society that to continuously improve.

In my next post, I will dig into some of the paragraphs from Lazarus’ story.  Parts that make me pause.  Parts that could be looked at in other ways to actually help rather than divide.  The full column by Dvid Lasarus here.

CNBC’s Kramer Under Fire — YouTube LongTail: Out of Context, Still in Sight

Like CNN’s Anderson Cooper says — annoyingly — every night on CNN, “we’re keepin’ ’em honest.”  That’s what we can do now over time, thanks to open and free access to digital content.  Even if Kramer didn’t do anything wrong, we can still go back in time and see what he said, check his tone and body language, and make our own decision.

This is from the broadcast industry newsletter, Shoptalk.

…from New York and Dane Hamilton at Reuters…Jim Cramer draws fire:

Stock market commentator and CNBC television host Jim Cramer has raised eyebrows after describing illegal activities used by hedge fund managers to manipulate stock prices.

In a December video interview on TheStreet.com (TSCM.O: Quote, Profile, Research) Web site, a financial news company he co-founded, Cramer described how he could push stocks higher or lower, depending on if he was long or short, at his previous job running a hedge fund.

The interview, which has only now got widespread attention after being posted to online video site YouTube, may be studied by U.S. government and stock market regulators, hedge fund experts and legal sources said.

The interview, which can be seen at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=708wDFX28lc, described methods including tactical buying, shorting or using options to create an impression in the market that could prompt other traders and investors to buy or sell a stock.

“A lot of times when I was short at my hedge fund … meaning I needed (a stock) down, I would create a level of activity beforehand that could drive the futures,” said Cramer. “It’s a fun game and it’s a lucrative game.” (more)

KK’s Media Consumption Diet

I’m just thrill riding the Your Media Consumption Diet conversations spurred by Jeremiah Owyang back in February.

Several of us at Intel have spent the past few months encouraging people to get more social media savvy by testing out some cooltools like newsfeed, readers, bookmarkers, trackers and measurement tools.  Everyone’s super busy, so the key is to show how people can actually do more of what they love and find new ways to love it even more then easily find new and more things to love!

Below is my Media Consumption Diet, but first here is a great observation that requires a law…Jeremiah’s Law, maybe?  Like Moore’s Law, Jeremiah’s Law might say that the number of people jumping to the Internet will double every month!!  Eventually the the money will catch up with the eyeballs.  But the Internet is the great wide open!

“What’s notable is the fact that these early adopters are engaged with media channels in inverse relationship to the amount of advertising money being spent therein. In other words, they’re spending the most time where the least amount of advertising dollars are focused….

* TV: $47 billion
* Magazines: $21 billion
* Newspapers: $20 billion
* Radio: $8 billion
* Internet: $7 billion

Technorati link to see other Media Consumption Diets.

I come from the world of broadcast and began podcasting in 2005.  I see it all coming together thanks to people getting video over the Internet.  My Media Consumption Diet:

Web:  I mostly use Google Personal Home Pageand Reader.  My Personal Home aggregator has three tabs: 

  1. Home for News — Sections from the NYT, CBS news, BBC, BusinessWeek, AP World, Business and Health.
  2. Social Media for blogs and sites helping define vision and steps for moving ahead with communications — PodTech, Robert Scoble, Jeremiah Owyang, Steve Rubel’s Micro Persuasion, Rohit Bhargava’s Influencial Interactive Marketing, Techmeme, Endgadget, Valleywag, Buzzmachine, YouTube, GoogleVideo, Beet.TV.
  3. K4Karma for things I love about life  — Being a parent, awareness, Italy, wine, music.

My Google Reader has about about 25 blogs and feeds, many of the same items found in the Social Media Tab of the Google Personal Homepage. 

I also have a My Yahoo! account loaded with mostly news sites like CBS, BBC, CNETMy three-year subscription to WSJ Online expired and I didn’t renew (pinching pennies for the wife and kids!).

But I often type www.news.com and www.siliconvalleywatcher.com and see what grabs me. 

Music:  Got a video iPod in 2006 to carry all of my favorite PodTech podcasts, but now it’s loaded with Bob Marley, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Audio Slave, KanyeWest, Sisters of Mercy, The Cult, Ben Harper, CCR, Madonna, Beyonce, more.  In my car, it’s CDs past and present, including Italy pop from the ’70s and Fado music from Portugal and Brazil.

TV: I cut my teeth at a local TV station in San Francisco, KRON-TV when it was an NBC affiliate owned by the SF Royal Family who owned the SF Chronicle.  My role at Intel is a broadcast media relations manager.  I gotta watch TV, and I enjoy it…especially because the cheese factor hits my funny bone.  I always tune to CNN and local news, and enjoy seeing the networks redefine themselves every season.  But my young kids are more fun and entertaining, and the TV is not on for too long on any given day.

Communication:  Love my Blackberry.  That’s a game changer for me.  And I love Skype because it allows me to work from Italy and make every necessary meeting back in the U.S. for free!  I started with Twitter in February, but I’m learning.

Movies:  I was a movie festival goer for many years in San Francisco.  I love movies.  I can go by myself, with a group of people or watch on the plane.  Love movies!  But I regret that my passion has been starved more and more each year.  I gotta get back to what I love!  Documentaries, bio-pics, visually poetic stories and intensely scripted stories that leave you wondering for days after the movie ends.

Magazines:  Subscribe to Esquire.  Victoria Secret brings joy whenever it arrives.  At the airport I pick up BusinessWeek and Fortune.

Books:  I love philosophy past and present.  I also like books about learning and better understanding self and others living in the world together.  I typically have three books going at once, but I’m a slow reader who get’s interrupted often so I finish about three a year.

Newspapers:  Wall Street Journal, but my hard copy subscription is coming to an end soon…and that’s it!  San Francisco Chronicle, and I’ll won’t renew my subscription this summer.  I love the writing in the Christian Science Monitor.  And the NYT is something I grab at the airport.  When it’s there, I pick up USA Today eat it up like junk food.  When in NY, I must get my hands on the NY Post and Village Voice.  I’m a newspaper junky to rips pages and stuffs them in my man purse until I can still a few moments to consume them uninterrupted.

This excersize shows that I’m weening off of what I’ve always loved, newspapers.  My love won’t end, but my daily consumption will come from the Web and any scraps from sections people leave behind.

Old, New Media — Together on to the Next

San Francisco Chronicle’s Joe Garofoli wrote a story based on the 4th edition of “The State of the News Media.”  These types of research reports are nobel because they get the attention of business, political and leaders of other establishments.  But this discussion and every item below has been bouncing around for years.  And during that time, social media has had time and space to grown and become important in people’s lives.  Why not synergize, or have both generations work together.  Maybe we don’t have to pass a torch from old generation to the new generations.  Maybe the best of both is what will dfine all of the the next generations to come.

For me, here’s the core of the report:  There is no vision yet…sounds like an opportunity.  There are lots of great voices out there — maybe no clear leaders but some pretty good influencers — and now’s the time to listen and reply to help the best rise to the top.

In nearly every sector except ethnic news, audiences are splintering off to many other media options. Even Fox News, which has come to dominate cable news in recent years, is showing a viewership decline, according to the report.

The report says, “No clear models of how to do journalism online really exist yet, and some qualities are still only marginally explored.”

Media outlets and advertisers often disagree on how to measure the amount of news the audience is consuming and where it is flitting to online.

Electronic media are in transition from the “Argument Culture,” epitomized by the canceled CNN shoutfest “Crossfire,” to the “Answer Culture,” exemplified by the branded persona of CNN anchor Anderson Cooper and the exposure of child predators by NBC’s “Dateline.”

The blogosphere is evolving, too, “splintering into elites and nonelites over standards and ethics,” the report said. Some bloggers are joining mainstream media outlets and political campaigns, and corporations are beginning to covertly use blogs to market their products.  “The paradox of professionalizing the medium to preserve its integrity is the start of a complicated new era in the evolution of the blogosphere,” the report says.

A danger lurks behind journalism‘s “shrinking ambitions.” Basic monitoring of local and regional government is suffering, it says.

Print outlets realize where their readers are going — online, mostly, and occasionally to their own news Web sites. And judging by the people joining the public news conversation on blogs and elsewhere, they have seen that there remains a thirst for news.

Traditional and new media have to figure out how to turn all those eyeballs into money.

Full article here: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/03/12/MNGV1OJHEA1.DTL&hw=study+finds+journalism&sn=004&sc=504

Against the Tide of Free, Open Access

San Francisco Chronicle columnist David Lazarus had me going.  Until the end of his 3/14/07 article, “Pay-to-play is one way to help save newspapers.”  I’m a slow reader — that brain of mine wonders at it’s pace, fits and starts — and was soaking up the possibilities and challenges.  But when I read the last two paragrpahs, that’s when I woke up!

“The students I teach really do believe that everything on the Internet is theirs for the taking,” Kirtley said. “Young people have been conditioned to believe that they’re entitled to this content.”

It’s time for newspapers to condition them otherwise.

This is the discussion to explore.  “Condition”-ing can be a good even heathly thing, no doubt, especially if you have compulsive or habitual behavior that is damaging to you and others.  But conditioning also has negative meanings, like ethnic cleansing, irradicating,  rooting out, or getting rid of something for good.  For good.  Is that how we all live together in the world?  Seems evil, when the more challenging way is to collaboriate, accept that there is no good without bad and find ways to better understand.  Not just through talking or planning, but by doing things together.  That’s what will happen in our next phase. 

These days we’re seeing a lot of “fighting back” or “drawing the line.”  Why not collaborate without limiting the frontiers of possibilities and collective imagination. 

If we have to pay for something we never paid for before, that is elitist and limiting.  I will pay to feed my kids and stave myself of news and information because I can’t afford it.

David Lasarus is doing the right thing by defining, strengthening and sharing some vision for the struggling traditional media.  This will make us all better, but switching to a full pay-to-play model is not the solution in my opinion.  Newspapers and broadcasters already do pay-for-play techniques.  I’d venture to say that if traditional media put more resources and mindpower behind existing pay-for-play parts of their business, they’d get the payers coming back for more…and offering to pay more to improve things.  And this would spur great ideas for new pay-for-play opportunities as large and small companies and individuals collaborate with traditional media. 

Traditional media needs investors, business partners and subscribers.  And we need the media.  But it might be wise if traditional media stepped back and took pride in seeing that “we are the media” thanks to them and new technology.  A threat, or opportunity?

In refernce to David’s ding on bloggers who post whole stories copied from traditional media Websites, I won’t past the complete story here.  BI love booking cool things I find, I like to Dig good stories on occassion.  But tell me this:  Why would SF Gate offer social bookmarking on thier site if they didn’t want their stories to be “portable”?

Full story here: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/03/14/BUG4COKGDU1.DTL&hw=pay+to+play&sn=006&sc=724

Vatican “We Are the Media,” Too

The Vatican has been worldwide media savvy with print, radio and is now starting it’s own broadcast network.  Sure those are “traditional” media, but all media — old, new, social — is media.  And this is the age when we can all participate like media, maybe just not like some of the world’s wealthy media giants.

I found this story in the broadcast daily newsletter, ShopTalk.  It struck me for what it says and doen’t say.  The Vatican is making a big investment to create ways to share their voices, passions and stories past, present and future.  But like an earlier post in this blog, Robert Scoble interviewed a Catholic Sisiter who is a top ranking IT guru for the Vatican.  That interview showed that the Vatican — like companies, individuals, families…good and bad — have strong desires to show and tell stories.

This is the age of expression!  It’s best to invest so that you can show and tell your stories clearly, intelligently, with passion and insight.  If you have the insider’s view, you get to present it first hand to the world.  Doing it with full disclosure, consideration for audiences and good storytelling skills will allow everyone to get information from “the source” and make their own decisions about what they believe.

Here’s the story:

Eric J. Lyman at Reuters/Hollywood Reporter, the Vatican plans new TV network:

Days after Pope Benedict XVI criticised the media for its “destructive” influence, the Vatican on Monday announced plans to launch its first television network by the end of the year.


Pope Benedict XVI greets the crowd at the start of his weekly Angelus address over St Peter’s square at the Vatican REUTERS/Tony Gentile
H2O will broadcast news and original entertainment programming worldwide in seven languages, according to a statement. Additional details were sketchy.Over the years, the Vatican has been quick to adopt new technologies in its efforts to communicate with the world’s more than 1 billion Catholics. In 1996, the Vatican introduced its Web portal nearly three years before the Italian state unveiled its own Web site. And it has embraced digital and satellite technology. (more)