 |
Unofficial Voice of the Utah Senate Majority |
 |
|
HomeProfilesArchiveLinksOfficial SiteAboutContactGovernment 2.0
|
Welcome to The Senate Site
Bloggy Commentary
Today the Deseret Morning News editorialized about political blogs. It's a decent little piece that features Michael Leavitt's new blog. What really captured my attention, however, are comments posted by someone within the hallowed halls of the journalism industry. Interesting stuff. Here it is: Reporters Fear Blogs | 9:14 a.m. Oct. 24, 2007
It has been fascinating to listen to fellow journalists anytime someone dares bring up newspaper "blogs" such as this one. You can see them physically stiffen, and then they speak with anger.
"I NEVER read the blogs!" says one Morning News reporter. "That's the stupidest thing the paper has ever done."
A few blocks away, in a conversation with a Tribune reporter regarding a controversial current topic, I asked, "But have your read what your readers are saying about that?"
"No!" she blurts. "No reporter pays any attention to those."
Why the emotional reactions? The answer goes back 500 years. Ever since the first printing press was put to work, the publishers owned a true mass medium. According to Marshall McLuhan, a mass medium is one which produces the maximum message and the minimum feedback.
So it was with Guttenberg; so it used to be with newspapers and TV stations.
In the past, only occasional letters to the editor have been published that rebutted a journalist’s view of reality. Now, newspapers and broadcasters alike have virtually given the public access to the largest press in the world – the Internet. And, it’s on the publisher’s own website, no less.
And that’s what is leaving my journalistic friends so uneasy. Now readers and viewers can publicly question, criticize, debate, correct, and castigate journalists. What’s more, the critiques appear attached directly to the reporter’s work.
That’s a very uncomfortable experience for someone who has made a living sheltered by the man who buys his ink by the barrel.
But are the news blogs of any use? In their early days in Utah there was a great deal of abuse of the space given to news consumers. Bloggers love their anonymity, and they abused it to name-call and falsify. I think, however, there is a sea change in the morass of opinions flowing out of the hot topics of the day. The differences of opinion seem to be more on point, and though diametrically opposed, arguments have become more logical and less vitriolic.
So what do reporters have to fear? Only the points of view that they were not aware of or opinions that contradict their own biases.
After all, doesn’t this new public discussion forum provide what the Supreme Court called a “free and robust debate?”
|
|
|
Home | Profiles | Archive | Links | Official Information | About | Contact | Government 2.0 Lab | Back to Top
© 2008. All rights reserved. Designed by Jeremy Wright & His Brother-In-Law |
3 Comments:
My $.02: I am one reporter who truly enjoys blogs. I read them, I write them, I subscribe to them and probably couldn't live without them. I welcome the community debate the comments/blogs allow and hope that it makes our work even better. So to your post, I say, bring it on!
Hi Ric, this isn't related to your post.
I would like to set up a live blogging event with the Legislative Fiscal Analyst about his analysis of vouchers.
Let me know how I could contact him, or if we could set it up on the Senate Site that would be great.
Thanks for the 2 cents, TB. I don't think this refers to any of the Out of Context journalists, or most of the crew that cover the Capitol. Or even Bobby Calvan. But I can think of a few old-school curmudgeons out there for whom the blog world holds no love. (If you're reading this, it ain't you.)
Pramahaphil - thanks for the invite. It's a good idea. Could we do a live blog event with legislators instead of our non-partisan staff? Call me: 801-538-1035 (or E-mail).
RC
Post a Comment
<< Home