Unrequired Reading {10.12.08 to 11.12.08}

December 11, 2008

These are some of the things that have caught my atten­tion lately. It’s a more eclectic mix than just the news busi­ness, but then so’s life:

  • Who will mourn local news­pa­pers? | FT.com — There used to be a logic to the Chicago Tribune or the Miami Her­ald hav­ing large Wash­ing­ton bur­eaux and even for­eign cor­res­pond­ents. People who lived in those places could not access The New York Times or The Wash­ing­ton Post online and relied instead on the local paper.

    These days, they can do so free, which elim­in­ates the need for a lot of cov­er­age to be duplic­ated. Aggreg­a­tion sites such as Google News have shone a harsh spot­light on the over­lap and repe­ti­tion in national cov­er­age in hun­dreds of newspapers.

    I am sure US cit­izens would lose some­thing if fewer papers or wire ser­vices covered national affairs. But would it really be insuf­fi­cient for soci­ety if five or six organ­isa­tions (includ­ing Reu­ters and Bloomberg) com­peted to cover, for example, the Fed­eral Reserve? I doubt it.

    The ques­tion for national and inter­na­tional report­ing is not whether city papers sur­vive but whether news organ­isa­tions such as The New York Times do. Clearly, if they did not, and blogs were left alone t

  • Gran­ted, Gov. Blago­jevich is a sleaze, but how solid is the government’s case? | Jack Shafer — Before we turn down the sheets on Blagojevich’s prison cot, let’s see tran­scripts of him actu­ally mak­ing a money deal or power deal with some­body for the Sen­ate seat. Even U.S. Attor­ney Fitzger­ald says his office isn’t “try­ing to crim­in­al­ize people mak­ing polit­ical horse trades on policies or that sort of thing.“

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    As for other pos­sibly crim­inal con­duct by Blagojevich—such as attempt­ing to shake down cor­por­a­tions for cam­paign con­tri­bu­tions in return for state funding—he appears obli­vi­ous to how easy it is to leg­ally swap polit­ical favors for pos­i­tion, power, and money. And for that ignor­ance the gov­ernor has my com­plete sympathy.

  • World’s Richest Journ­al­ism Prize Offered for Envir­on­mental Report­ing — “Entries are now invited for the largest journ­al­ism cash award in the world — $75,000 from the Grantham Found­a­tion for the Pro­tec­tion of the Envir­on­ment.
    Reports entered to win the Grantham Prize for Excel­lence in Report­ing on the Envir­on­ment must cover envir­on­ment and/or nat­ural resources top­ics and be ori­gin­ally pub­lished or broad­cast in the United States or Canada between Janu­ary 1 and Decem­ber 31, 2008, in print, broad­cast, online, or book formats.”
  • Writ­ing on the wall for news­pa­pers | FT.com — “[P]ublishers need to look closely at how their print and online cus­tom­ers vary. If “online only” can­not be made to work fin­an­cially, a newspaper’s online pres­ence may need to be reduced sig­ni­fic­antly to encour­age people back to the phys­ical product.

    Japan’s news­pa­pers have restric­ted their web pres­ence and titles have suffered a smal­ler decline in read­er­ship and advert­ising than North Amer­ican and European peers, says the report.”

  • Into the dark night that is very, very long… | Adam Mac­queen — For all of us chil­dren: “Then, one day, the king rose from his seat as if to go down to his castle. The people watch­ing him saw him shake and stag­ger and fall to the ground. The king was dead. Great was the sad­ness and loud the wail­ing. The flags on the houses were pulled to half mast and the great bell rang.”
  • MapRe­duce: Google’s Secret Weapon | HBS — MapRe­duce is open­ing the door to the ana­lysis of vast amounts of information–from tera­bytes of data on the vot­ing habits of Amer­ic­ans, to the fluc­tu­ations of bil­lions of indi­vidual air­line fares, to scores of tera­bytes of health data. This will change the land­scape of vir­tu­ally everything we do. “The biggest chal­lenge of the Pet­ra­byte Age won’t be stor­ing all the data,” Wired magazine noted recently, “but fig­ur­ing out how to make sense of it.” Mak­ing sense of it: That is where the brain behind the Inter­net is now heading.

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