Study ranks blogs’ use of traditional media as sources in 2006 election

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At the 2011 White House Correspondents’ Dinner, Seth Meyers poked fun at the notion that bloggers take stories from traditional news media sources. He was giving the audience a mock rundown of the after-parties when he hit on something that research has confirmed.

Meyers joked, “The New York Times party used to be free, but tonight there’s a cover, so like everyone else I’ll probably just go to the Huffington Post party. And the Huffington Post party is asking people to go to other parties first and just steal food and drinks and bring it from there.”

The truth in Meyers’ joke is that blogs do tend to use stories from other traditional media outlets, like The New York Times. And the newspaper used most, according to a study published recently in Newspaper Research Journal is The Washington Post.

Marcus Messner, an assistant professor at Virginia Commonwealth University, and Bruce Garrison, a professor at the University of Miami, studied the relationship between political bloggers and elite traditional news media and found both bloggers and elite media rely on each other to some degree rather than on original reporting. While traditional news media are the dominant sources for bloggers, blogs compete with many other sources in shaping traditional news media agendas.

The top-ten rankings for most cited media by blogs in the findings included:

  1. 1. The Washington Post
  2. 2. CNN
  3. 3. NBC News
  4. 4. The New York Times
  5. 5. ABC News
  6. 6. Fox News
  7. 7. Los Angeles Times
  8. 8. USA Today
  9. 9. CBS News
  10. 10. Christian Science Monitor

The findings are limited to the popular blogs used in the study. The liberal filter blogs were DailyKos, Talking Points Memo, Eschanton, Crooks and Liars, and Think Progress. The conservative filter blogs were Instapundit, Michelle Malkin, Little Green Footballs, Powerline, and Quarters.

The study was published in the summer 2011 issue of Newspaper Research Journal.

Contacts: Sandra H. Utt Cell: (901) 628-2553 e-mail: nrj@newspaperresearchjournal.org or Elinor Kelley Grusin e-mail: egrusin@memphis.edu

 

Book Review – Skyful of Lies and Black Swans

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Skyful of Lies and Black Swans: The New Tyranny of Shifting Information Power in Crises. Nik Gowing. Oxford, UK: Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, 2009. 84 pp. £13 pbk. Free download from http:// reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/ publications/risj.html.

Nik Gowing’s career as a media professional, pundit, and scholar gives his insights into how news works considerable credibility. In this 2009 paper for the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, the longtime BBC commentator wonders and wanders through new media’s impact on public policy, and ponders “the new fragility and brittleness” of social institutions. Are government, military, and corporate bosses powerless or ineffectual when what Gowing calls “fast proliferating and almost ubiquitous breed of ‘information doers’” can set and frame the debate before the institutions of power can in gear?

[Read more...]

Americans Spending More Time With Media

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A recent report put out by Edison Research and Arbitron says that Americans are spending 20% more time consuming radio, television and the Internet than we did a decade ago.

They said the increase can be attributed to 26% more Americans having Internet access than 10 years ago, but also because of increased smartphone usage. You can read an article about it here, or read the full report.

Here’s a video about the report:

 

What do you think? Do you spend more time consuming media than you did a decade ago?

AP, Time & Others Send Zite App Cease & Desist

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The social magazine app Zite, which compiles stories that a user may be interested in based on their browsing & searching history, Twitter account and other habits, was sent a cease and desit letter from AP, Time, Washington Post and some other major media companies.

The letter says that Zite is using their intellectual property and needs to stop immediately (you can view the letter below). Zite launched just a few weeks ago and this marks a rough beginning for the app. You can read more about this here.

 

Here’s a promo video put out by Zite:

 

Here’s the official cease and desist letter:



Cease & Desist Letter to Zite

Trying to Make Money with Newspapers

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Ken Doctor wrote this article about the economics of the newspaper industry and the discussion of what business model will work for the industry. He says that newspapers were covering a lot stories of their own demise until they realized that may not have been a smart move.

After speaking with some people in the industry, he found that although newspaper companies may not know what the next step is, they know that following the same path they’ve been on in the past is not the way to go. Venturing out into uncharted territories means trying things like paywall content, digital readers, etc.

“It has been 20 quarters since the U.S. newspaper industry experienced a quarter’s performance that was better than that same quarter a year earlier. It was way back in the second quarter of 2006 that the industry last experienced growth.”

Read the article here

 

Google Is Not the Source of Journalism’s Problems

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Peter Barron, Google executive and former BBC journalist,  said in a recent post that journalism’s woes were not due to Google and its news page. He says that the problems facing journalism would exist whether or not Google existed and says that Google isn’t stealing advertising away from journalism. You can read his blog post here.

 

TV Ad Spending Still on Top, Web Catching Up

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From Sam Gustin at Wired on March 29 - Here’s a real shocker that I know you’ll find hard to believe: television is the most popular medium in the United States.

That’s why brand advertisers continue to pour more marketing dollars into TV ad campaigns than print, radio or the internet. According to eMarketer, TV ad spending grew a robust 9.7 percent in 2010 as the economy started to rebound from the recession. Read more

FCC Cracks Down on Fake News

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The FCC is taking action against two news organization for running stories that were actually commercials for Zicam and General Motors, a fact the news orgs didn’t make clear when they ran them. The FCC will fine the the NBC and Fox affiliates in Atlantic City and Minneapolis for instances.

The fines are about $4,000 which may or may not deter other news organizations from running the same type of sponsorships. The segments were aired back in 2006, so there’s several years of possible false segments that are still to be revealed as well. You can read an article about it here.

Katie Couric Most Likely Leaving CBS News – Why Now?

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From  Bill Wyman at The Atlantic on March 28 - You can be forgiven for reading with skepticism the reports that Katie Couric may soon leave the anchor desk at the CBS Evening News. Couric was originally said to have been leaving in April 2008, in a much-talked-about story in the Wall Street Journal. Her last weeks of work were supposedly to come soon after the inauguration of Barack Obama. That story was nearly three years ago, and Couric’s still there.

Couric, who began hosting the show in 2006, had been drawing dismal ratings when the WSJ story was published. After that, viewership of the CBS Evening News dropped, and then dropped some more. Indeed, Katie Couric brought the newscast to historic lows, losing fully half the audience she had when she started. At this point, CBS has been eating those ratings for years (and paying Couric a reported $15 million annually). Why stop now? There’s a strong argument to be made that Couric will be there forever. Read More

Is Self-Publishing Just a Stepping Stone?

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Recently Amanda Hocking, the self-publisher who sold millions of copies of her books through Amazon and Barnes & Noble websites, signed a deal with St. Martins for her next series of books (you can read the short NYT article about it here). The bigger story in this though is whether or not self-publishing is just astepping stone to signing book deals with major media companies, or is self-publishing a viable alternative to the big companies?

Hocking said she’ll benefit from the deal by not having to manage herself (hiring an editor, running the business aspect of things) and be able to focus on her writing. She’s probably right, and only she knows what she can handle. But for all those out there trying to get their work published, do you think self-publishing is the way to go, are traditional publishers still necessary, or like Hocking is a mix of both the best avenue?