Unrequired Reading {27.1.09 to 29.1.09}

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:

  • For Iraqi Journ­al­ists, Free Press vs. Free Land | NYTimes.com — More than just free elec­tions, policy ana­lysts often say, demo­cracy requires demo­cratic civil insti­tu­tions like a free press. But the pop­ular­ity of the land-for-journalists pro­gram illus­trates the chal­lenges new­found demo­cratic prin­ciples face when they clash with enti­tle­ments and cozy rela­tion­ships that no one ever ques­tioned before.
  • Luke John­son: Why I fear the west’s luck has run out | Ft.com — A REAL jeremiad.
  • Mobile FT.com is a River of News | Adam Tin­worth — Mobile news: “The design, to me, demon­strates the value of that blog-style design in the mobile envir­on­ment. What do you want to know? The latest news. Not what a gate­keeper has deemed the most import­ant, just the newest.”
  • News You Can Endow | NYTimes.com — “[T]here is an option that might not only save news­pa­pers but also make them stronger: Turn them into non­profit, endowed insti­tu­tions — like col­leges and uni­ver­sit­ies. Endow­ments would enhance news­pa­pers’ autonomy while shield­ing them from the eco­nomic forces that are now tear­ing them down.”
  • Rebekah Wade’s first pub­lic speech in full | Journalism.co.uk — “Last year, we gave away over 163 mil­lion cop­ies in bulks to main­tain these levels.
    We lis­ted 270 mil­lion for­eign sales.
    We gave away 120 mil­lion free CD’s and DVDs — of ques­tion­able qual­ity and at enorm­ous cost — just to rent read­ers.
    We paid our retail­ers and whole­salers over 800 mil­lion pounds in mar­gins that have out­stripped RPI.
    And while 1,400 corner shops closed, it’s been years since we developed altern­at­ive new routes to mar­ket.
    We saw another increase in the num­ber of free news­pa­pers. In 2008 we dis­trib­uted 639 mil­lion cop­ies.
    The huge growth in digital still doesn’t pay for high qual­ity journ­al­ism.
    We give away our expens­ive edit­or­ial con­tent free online without an eco­nomic model that com­pensates for the loss in tra­di­tional rev­en­ues.
    The rising cost of news and magazine print is in double fig­ures and there is the small mat­ter of the recession.”
  • How the New York Times Can Thrive Without Profits | Seek­ing Alpha — [I]t seems to me that in media gen­er­ally, and in news­pa­pers in par­tic­u­lar, cap­ital really is more patient than in many other businesses.

    When did you ever hear of any­body flip­ping news­pa­pers for a quick profit, even in the good years? News­pa­per own­ers like profits, of course, but they also like the power and influ­ence they get from own­ing a paper, and are there­fore gen­er­ally extremely reluct­ant to ever sell.

  • Obama tells Arabic net­work US is ‘not your enemy’ | The Asso­ci­ated Press — “The U.S. sees Al-Arabiya as a friendly Arab chan­nel, whereas they see Al-Jazeera as con­front­a­tional,” said Lawrence Pin­tak, dir­ector of the journ­al­ism train­ing cen­ter at the Amer­ican Uni­ver­sity in Cairo.
  • Trans­par­ency in Sport | Andrew Jen­nings — Vet­eran reporter Andrew Jen­nings’ site uncov­er­ing mis­chief in inter­na­tional sport.

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