The media crisis

December 14, 2008

The Eco­nom­ist

Don’t put your daugh­ter on the stage, Mrs Wor­thing­ton,” was Noël Cow­ard’s advise. Nowadays young Miss Wor­thing­ton would be wise to avoid news­rooms, pub­lish­ing offices, film sets and tele­vi­sion stu­dios as well.

The Anglo-American world has sel­dom heard so many com­plaints about the qual­ity of books, tele­vi­sion pro­grammes and films. As a busi­ness, too, the media industry is in wretched shape, its lead­ing com­pan­ies crippled by debt, rapa­city or fraud; some­times — as with those run the late Robert Max­well — a com­bin­a­tion of all three.

Each day it seems another news­pa­per or magazine is closed, a tele­vi­sion sched­ule trimmed, the bank­ruptcy law­yers summoned…

Feb­ru­ary, 1992

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