September 27, 2011

Page One... is turning over...




Andrew Rossi's love-letter to The New York Times played at Cinematheque this past week. Partly a behind-the-scenes look at the daily workings of The Times, mostly a battle cry in its defence, PAGE ONE: Inside The New York Times is an articulate summary of the problems facing traditional papers today - migration of advertising revenue away from traditional media, hijacking of content by aggregate sites and the unwillingness of readers to pay for information they can get somewhere else for free.

The spectre of death hangs over not just a loved paper (whose investigative reports have helped topple administrations), but also it's driven, insightful staff - blogger turned reporter Brian Stelter, former editor Bill Keller and the hilariously inspired media reporter David Carr.

The documentary answers a number of questions: are traditional papers loved (yes), do we need accountable, professional journalists to give context to an increasing flood of information (yes), do we need financially/legally backed reporters to hold the powerful accountable (yes). What PAGE ONE doesn't answer - because right now no one has an answer - is how to help journalistic outlets survive the e-revolution. As The Guardian review of the PAGE ONE puts it "good writing and good journalism don't happen naturally; they have to be nurtured."

A few ideas are floating in the air these days regarding journalism's future. Government funded models (such as CBC and NPR) exist but are consistently the targets of cutbacks (click here for David Carr's take on that model). Private fundraising is being explored by some papers. And a morphing of traditional medium from ink on dead tree to interactive apps offers traditional outlets a chance to compete with their twitter/aggregate/blogger competition.

A great comfort is taken, throughout the film, that media outlets have survived transformations and previously predicted doomsdays (to quote Emerson "Can anyone remember when the times were not hard and money was not scarce?" geddit?). And our love for trusted news sources like The New York Times hasn't gone away - it has only increased as the world wide waters get increasingly murky.

For example: in a true demonstration of impartiality, The Times movie critic panned PAGE ONE.


Yet another reason to love The Times.

2 comments:

  1. Post- Jayson Blair and Judith Miller, is the NYT still trustworthy?

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  2. That depends what you mean by trustworthy.

    If you mean "a paper that strives to be accurate, honest and accountable" then yes (actually more so, with the establishment of the Siegel Committee to prevent another similar incident http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/18/opinion/18public.html?pagewanted=all)

    If you mean "infallible," no - but they never were. Reading a paper, even a well reputed paper like the Times, requires critical thinking on the part of the reader. What evidence do they cite? Do other sources concur? It's tempting in a fast-paced world to extend our trust beyond giving "the benefit of the doubt" to "removal of doubt," and I think the question of trustworthiness gets blurred along these lines.

    And you risk moving from news reader to zealot. Then the fall.

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