From 15 minutes to 15 micrometers

Kurt Anderson has an interesting article on the Post-Russert Era at New York Magazine today. Some of the most salient paragraphs:

Until the mid-nineties, the pages and airtime available for reporting and explaining the news were scarce and precious, and middle-of-the-road high sobriety was the default mode for American journalism; to devote more than a tiny fraction of one’s mass-media platform to explicit opinion-mongering or mischief-making was literally unthinkable. But after cable TV and the Internet mooted that scarcity, attitude-laden takes on the news were permitted to propagate madly. The blithe post–Cold War unseriousness of the nineties helped as well. By the time of the 9/11 attacks, as The Daily Show had just started to achieve serious cultural traction and Fox News was about to overtake CNN in the ratings, the new paradigm had become unstoppable. Today, the strictly humorless big-time pundits—Paul Krugman, Charles Krauthammer—are the outliers. And so, perversely, thanks to modern technology, America has returned to its nineteenth-century roots: political discourse as entertainment, and almost everybody, from know-it-alls to wiseacres, mouthing off around the cracker barrel.

The commentariat has never been larger. But for all the new pundits, my hunch is that it possesses no more aggregate power than it did in the past. Instead, the same pie has been cut into smaller slices, with many more people scrambling to claim their little piece of visibility and influence. It’s a version of Warhol’s twisted insight, twisted a little more: In today’s commentariat, everyone is famous not for fifteen minutes but across fifteen micrometers of the bit of the celebrity bandwidth reserved for journalists.

What does this mean for the progressive media? Well, clearly we’re up against not only the dog-fight among the “mainstream” media to get attention, we’re up against each other as we seek to find a foothold in this new media world–from our celebrity journalists (that can be placed, linked to, talked about in the progressive, “mainstream” and conservative media world, to actually producing media that’s going to get placed, linked to, talked about–you get my picture. It’s also not just about what’s the click-through rates on our articles, how high the traffic is on our web sites (although it doesn’t hurt)–it’s about WHO is reading, watching and listening to our media. Who are we trying to mobilize/inform? Who are we trying to influence? Targeting our audience (or intended audiences) becomes harder and harder as the landscape becomes more and more saturated with more media and more systems to deliver media.

I’m just going to say it. The individual efforts of the progressive media are crucial. Everyone (well, mostly everyone) is hitting a particular sweet spot for their audience. Everyone can claim they are producing media that no one else is doing. For the most part, that’s true. But that’s not enough. The audiences are too small. The long-lasting impact is too disparate. It’s hard (I know from experience) to look beyond the daily survival of your media organization. But it’s time to get more collaborative and creative with our thinking in terms of partnerships and organized strategies.

We are not going to do this with the same old mentalities. I think we need to start applying some of the principles of grassroots organizing (ongoing campaigns, targets, strategic communiciations, alliance building, getting our hands dirty) to the media system. I think this will have have an impact on how we’re structuring and distributing the media as well as how we engage with our audiences (who now in my mind, are fellow media makers.) I think the basic tenets and principles of journalism will and should survive. In other words, while the internal organs will remain the same, the face needs some major plastic surgery. (Does that analogy make sense? I’ll keep working on it.)

My NCMR Interview: The blurring of journalism

During all the rushing around at NCMR, I was able to sit down for a couple minutes with Bennet Gordon of the Utne Reader about the shift in journalism over the last few years. He attended the panel I moderated, “How the Independent Media Creates Change.” We talked about the different range of the panelists, from advocacy journalism to “straight journalism.”

The question is: Where’s the line? I spoke with Tracy Van Slyke, director of the Media Consortium, and she said that the blurring of advocacy and journalism could be a good thing. She said the mix hearkens back to the original intent of journalism, which is to “inform and to activate” people. At the same time, she stressed that journalists should be transparent about their biases and affiliations.

Read the whole interview here. Thoughts?

Coming soon: more NCMR posts

Too many interesting people here to hole up and blog! Twittering at http://twitter.com/beyondbroadcast and will worry about longer-form reporting later

Technical Difficulties

In case you were wondering where all my del.icio.us links are (and I know you have been) we’re having some technical difficulties.  For some reason they are popping up only in the side bar under “What We’re Reading.”  So you can always go there..  But if you want to read my pithy comments on the articles (cause you know you do) you can always subscribe to http://del.icio.us/tag/buildtheecho.  You will get relevant posts from both Jessica and myself. 

Thanks!

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Tim Robbins somewhat censored speach to the National Association of Broadcasters

Actor and activist Tim Robbins was the keynote speaker at the National Association of Broadcasters conference in Vegas this week.  But if the NAB had gotten their way, none of us would have heard his speech.  (Ironic, eh?) From Advertising Age:

The Academy Award-winning actor and critically acclaimed screenwriter, director and producer first indicated to the audience that he would not be giving his speech. Then, floor agents of the NAB organizers ordered journalists’ video cameras turned off.

Funny thing is, they forgot to tell the reporters to turn their audio recorders off.  Robbins reversed course and gave his speech.  And the last six minutes are a doozy.

Here are some snippets. (Rushed Transcript)

“We are at an abyss as an industry and as a country…

You, the broadcasters of this great nation has a tremendous amount of power, and a tremendous amount of potential to effect change…  You can lift us up into a more enlightened age.  Or you can hide behind that old adage, ‘I’m just a businessman.  I provide what the audience wants.’  Well, I’m here to tell you that we don’t need to look at the car crash.  We don’t need to live off the pain and humiliation of the unfortunate. We don’t need to celebrate our pornographic obsession with celebrity culture.  We are better than that.  (Claps from audience.)

Some of you are trying… But I know you do so against the odds of ratings and job security.  It is really up to the leaders in this room.  It us up to you, the zions of this industry to leave behind formulas and focus groups and your own fears of job security.  Only with your courage and your vision can we begin to imagine a world of broadcasting where the broad consensus of those with real power say, ‘Enough is Enough.’

You should really listen to the whole six minutes.  He’s using soft language (as in non-political), but really drives home the point of how the broadcasting industry can inform and lead this country to a better place, if they only had the courage.  Of course they don’t and they won’t, but it’s still a pretty cool speech.

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Some background: all of those random mapping links

Anyone perusing this site will notice a bit of a disconnect in my del.icio.us links–namely, what seems to be a compulsive focus on maps amidst all of the progressive media strategy. That’s because I’ve spent the last year researching the rise of participatory maps and charts as a tool for advocacy, political communication and orientation in our ever-more-intensely networked, digital world

The research will be informing the format of our book, but is also paying other dividends. A piece I wrote on the uses and abuses of online maps will be appearing in the next issue of In These Times (Don’t wait for it to go online; pay for it on the newsstand!). I’m also thrilled to be working with the Center for Social Media to coordinate this year’s Beyond Broadcast conference with planning partners from The Berkman Center for Internet and Society, MIT’s Comparative Media Studies program, and others. The theme will be Remapping Public Media. CSM is also organizing a preconference at the International Communication Association conference with the same theme.

I could go on, but I fear my obsession is showing! Suffice it to say that you may see more maps here, and that it all ties back to developing a better understanding of the overall media landscape. Hope you find them as interesting as I do!