Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2008/04/10
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I just read that two big-time bloggers actually died at their computers in the last couple of years. Another had a heart attack, but survived. Blogging is a 24/7 business where getting your piece out a second later than the other person may mean you don't get read. And we thought newspaper deadlines stifled quality. The article was in The New York Times. I read it in print. I think that journalism and the arts are in the same boat. The digital revolution has turned everything upside down. The economic models have been broken. New ones are taking their place, but everything is up for grabs. The owners of the outlets used to leave the creative people a few crumbs. But now they are unashamedly claiming the whole pie, in perpetuity. Plus, now everybody can do horribly what it took training and practice to do badly (or well) before. Craft is dead, drowned in a sea of garbage. And the speed and noise of the age makes considered and complex thought more difficult to exercise and less likely to be appreciated. I remember when the Kaypro and the Osbourne (CP/M personal computers) first came out. I thought, "Oh, good, now I can write more efficiently, maybe get more done." Yes, I could. But eventually, so could every other jerk in the world. It used to be that everybody thought they could write. Now everybody and their uncle and their illegitimate sister-in-law thinks they can write. So the volume of junk out there has increased exponentially. The same goes for photography, as Tina and Ted and others have chronicled. I think it's much harder for good work to be recognized. If an editor has a couple dozen photographs in front of him or her, it's possible to look at them all and pick the best. If there are several hundred, overload sets in, the temptation is to pick one, any one that will do, and go home. And if you have "citizen journalists" who will glady give up all rights in return for getting their picture in the paper, and the public tolerates it, then why bother having real photographers? The New Yorker article does talk about some positives: The possibilities for democratization of the media, for alternative voices being heard via the Web, that in the blogosphere, fact-checking can be done after the article is published. It also acknowledges that falsehoods can spread forever even if they're corrected within a few minutes. Still, I'm concerned that the speed at which everything moves makes it almost impossible for quality to exist or be appreciated. And as W.S. Gilbert observed over a century ago, "when everybody's somebody, then no one's anybody." --Peter At 02:03 PM 4/10/2008 -0700, Tina wrote: >Who is going to do >the investigative journalism that makes a difference in the >world? True, there ares some web-blogs by journalists but how can >anybody make a living doing web-blogs? Bah-humbug! > >Tina