From the ArcaMax Publishing, Kathleen Parker Newsletter:
http://www.arcamax.com/news/kathleenparker/s-640277-676799
WASHINGTON -- Each time another report surfaces about the decline of
newspapers, I feel like a death row inmate counting the warden's
footsteps.
The latest echo of doom arrived a few days ago: U.S. newspaper
circulation dropped 10 percent from April through September, compared
to the same period last year. The largest decrease recorded thus far,
the decline was attributed to the usual -- advertising and readership
lost to the Web. Industrywide, ad revenues, which constitute
newspapers' main source of income, have dropped $20 billion from three
years ago. Even so, most newspapers remain profitable and circulation
is astoundingly good, all things considered.
That's the delightful view of Alex Jones -- fourth-generation member
of a newspaper-owning family, Pulitzer Prize-winning media critic, and
now author of "Losing the News." In his book, Jones, who also heads
Harvard University's Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and
Public Policy, manages to combine a dispassionate look at the news
business with a page-turning story of traditional journalism's highs
and lows.
For Americans concerned about the fate of news, he breathes oxygen
into the collapsing organ of the Fourth Estate. For inmates waiting
their turn at the guillotine, he is the governor's midnight call of
reprieve.
There is hope amid so much change.
Despite all we know about the damaging convergence of a devastating
recession, 24/7 news technology and shifting demographics, Jones'
coffee cup is half full. The story isn't that newspapers are dying, he
says. The story is that, even though people can get the same content
online for free, they're ponying up to buy newspapers that are more
expensive than ever.
"People in astonishing numbers are saying, 'OK, I'll do it'," he said
in a telephone interview.
The answer to why could be inertia, habit, or the sports section, in
some cases. In others, Jones suggests a citizenship decision.
Americans are becoming increasingly aware that newspapers do most of
the heavy lifting when it comes to reporting and bearing witness. When
the newsroom goes dark, who or what will light the way?
A native of Greeneville, Tenn., Jones grew up in The Ink Age. His
father is still publisher of The Greeneville Sun (circulation 15,000),
where his two brothers and brother-in-law also work. His memories of
those heady days when townspeople gathered in front of the newspaper
offices to hear election results are suffused with nostalgia.
But Jones' perspective isn't primarily that of a wistful romantic.
He's also a businessman and a citizen who believes in the profoundly
important connection between quality news and a successful democracy.
His nightmare scenario is that current trends eventually could produce
"a yawning disparity in accurate knowledge just as there is in
wealth," he wrote in the book. "We could be heading for a
well-informed class at the top and a broad populace awash in opinion,
spin, and propaganda."
Traditional news organizations, especially newspapers, provide what
Jones calls the "iron core" of information. Some new media, including
online and nonprofits, produce some news and investigative journalism,
but traditional media produce the bulk. The reason is because
journalism is expensive. Thus far, only traditional media have the
money and institutional wherewithal to withstand boycotts or to fight
First Amendment battles. Unknown is how some of the newer journalism
entities will respond when, inevitably, they are challenged.
Jones doesn't shy away from charges that the media are biased, but
insists that "the media" are not monolithic. Reporters and editors are
human and make mistakes, but they also are bound by standards.
Accountability matters. Jones, meanwhile, stakes great faith in
Americans' ability to distinguish between entertainment centered
around public issues and traditional journalism.
He predicts that newspapers will develop new business models and
survive. And though every news organization will have alternate
methods of delivery, including the Web, each entity should remain true
to its "authentic self."
Web culture -- fast, irreverent, crude and subjective -- is one kind
of creature. Traditional media are different and should stick to what
they historically have done best. Crucial to survival will be a
renewed commitment to community, to corporate citizenship and social
responsibility, and above all, to quality.
As Jones tells it, Arthur Gelb, former managing editor of The New York
Times, used to shout: "Good stories!" when he read about some new
experiment to boost newspaper circulation. "It is all about good
stories!"
The story of newspapers is a good one, compellingly told by one of its
leading characters. Reading it, you will want to buy a paper.
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Kathleen Parker's e-mail address is
kathleenparker(at)washpost.com