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Media 2.0 – what’s off the table

In ‘saving’ journalism, there’s a tendency to bet the house. It’s time to start thinking about just what we’re trading away. Much has been written about what needs to change to secure journalism business models in the future. But what of the things that shouldn’t? What about a list of non-negotiables, the deal-breakers, the aspects of reporting that should be OFF the table in dealing in a new way of reporting? Let’s start a list…

Cyberstumped: Big Media offline

Video never did kill the radio star, and nor will the internet and digital news kill newspapers. Similarly, despite what the sales department and bean counters will tell you, the recession we almost had is not responsible for the precarious balance sheets at many traditional media organisations. News companies are slicing costs and dicing journalists almost entirely for one reason: vision – or a Blind Pew-like absence of it.

Incompetence, not net, kills media

The recession is not killing Big Media in this country, as the sales department will tell you. Nor is the internet and digital media to blame, as the prevailing theory goes. Media companies in Australia are struggling to make a buck through a lack of imagination. Through short-sightedness. Through commercial timidity, certainly. Ultimately, though sheer management incompetence.

Frontline of TV still pale imitation

There is nothing more to say on commercial so-called current affairs television. It is like shooting fish in a barrel, as easy a target as the petty crooks pursued by these programs. But debate over the worth of these programs, and the model in a cutthroat commercial environment, is redundant.

Plumber’s crack out of line for elite

I’m coming out. Loud and proud. My people have been hiding in the shadows for too long, silent, anonymous, cowering from decades of persecution and biggotry. Well I will not hide anymore. I will not stay silent. My name is Jason Whittaker, and I am an elite.

A great interviewer, or human

About 45 million Americans tuned in for the first of a series of interviews between British TV personality David Frost and disgraced former president Richard Nixon. Watching Ron Howard’s thrilling film Frost/Nixon, an adaption of Peter Morgan’s play, it’s not hard to see why. Frost/Nixon is a great piece of journalistic drama, built as an intellectual battle to the death, yet ironically focused on the fact the prosecutor was not a journalist. I found some interesting parallels and morals.