Showing posts with label NYT blogs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NYT blogs. Show all posts

Wednesday, 5 November 2008

The Black Week for Print - October 27th to November 2nd, 2008




Many people are writing that last week was the worst week for Print Media since the Great Depression, as judged by layoffs, results and sea change shifts in reading habits. In many respects they're not wrong.


The front page of the IHT was dominated today by an article speaking about a similar paradigm shift in U.S elections, one that was turned upside down and 'truly became bottom up instead of top down'.

Speaking of the election, and the same can be said of media in the 21st century, the 2000 and 2004 presidential elections 'leveraged the Internet in ways never imagined. This year we went to warp speed.'

Exactly.


I've spoken of tipping points for the NYT Company and it is at one right now, because of this warp speed year.


A part of the Black Week for Print narrative was Gawker announcing rumoured sales of About.com (on Sunday 2nd November) by the NYT Company to reduce its debt and help it go private.
(BTW, all those people who took exception to my recent analysis of About.com really ought to go and read the derogatory comments about About.com posted on Gawker and elsewhere.)

I finally realised what the difference is between a blog and a non MSM news site like Gawker.

A good blog - hopefully this one - speculates on the future, using a platform of what I call 'conditional information' - things that might be true, things that might happen. Sites like HuffPo, Gawker etc rely often on reporting rumours without sources or verifiable fact checking. Nothing wrong with that, provided the reader knows what he or she is getting.

What you're getting at this blog is nothing more than informed speculation. It's what MSM calls opinion, and that the NYT hasn't an official editorial definition of what a blog is or should do tells you all you need to know about just what trouble they are in.

I had blogged several times on the dismantling of the NYT Company and the possibility of it being taken private well before actual rumours hit sites like Gawker.

I'll come back to this so-called Black Week to see if it's as black as everyone says it is.

For now, my personal point of view is that print has DEMAND side problems, not from READERS, but from ADVERTISERS who are losing faith in print as a viable option. I remain convinced that there is a demand for print from the reader, but what papers like the NYT and the IHT are SUPPLYING is not what (enough valueable) readers want.

The NYT Company Annual report of 2007 complained of audience fragementation.

OK. So what's the big effing problem?

Of course there is audience fragmentation, so having a single monolithic entity, be it on print, or online, as the NYT has, is clearly not a very smart idea as the middle ground CONSENSUS about what the intelligent mass market reader WANTS is over. Get it?

When I speak of dismantling the NYT Company, yes, I am talking about selling some assets to reduce debt, and going private wouldn't be a bad idea either.

However, what really needs to be dismantled and built from the ground up is the NYT newspaper and brands within the NYTMG stable, including the IHT.

Now naturally, with a million circulation and over two thirds of the company's revenues coming from the NYTMG, I wouldn't be doing that in a hasty or ill-considered manner.

However, I would be thinking about how the NTY Company can sit atop a framgmented audience and stop pursuing a strategy that seems to think that the NYT newspaper can somehow hold together that fragmentation.

It can't, for reasons of the audience's various, framgmented, age, income, interests, political affiliations and other things too many to get into right now.

The NYT Company needs to strip out its core brand values and apply them to other brands, new ones or existing ones, that cater to various audience splinters, some of which will be highly profitable in print as well as online.

It conspicuously failed to do this with About.com which serious Net Heads haven't looked at since they closed their AOL account about 9 years ago.

On this historic day, I'll leave you with this article from The Economist to think about.



A BIASED MARKET
Oct 30th 2008
Skewed news reporting is taken as a sign of a dysfunctional media. In fact, it may be a sign of healthy competition

BARACK OBAMA recently told a writer for the NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE that he was convinced he might be two or three percentage points better off in the polls for the American presidential election if Fox News, aright-leaning television station, did not exist. Sarah Palin, the Republican nominee for vice-president, has made hay railing against the bias of the "liberal media". Allegations of partial news reporting are common in American politics. But few stop to ask what leads to differences in the way the news is reported. Bias can be thought of as a supply-side phenomenon that arises from ideology. Owners' or employees' political views will determine how a newspaper or channel slants its coverage of a piece of news. But this does not square with the assumption that readers and viewers value accuracy. If so, then competition should hurt media outlets that systematically distort the news (in any direction). The brouhaha about bias in America, as free a media market as any, suggests something else is going on. The key to understanding why bias flourishes in a competitive market may lie in thinking more clearly about what readers actually want.

Sendhil Mullainathan and Andrei Shleifer, two Harvard economists,argued in an influential paper*[1] that it may be naive to think that people care about accuracy alone. Instead, they modelled the consequences of assuming that newspaper readers also like to have their beliefs confirmed by what they read. As long as readers have different beliefs, the Mullainathan-Shleifer model suggests that competition, far from driving biased reporting out of the market, would encourage newspapers to cater to the biases of different segments of the reading public.

A more recent paper**[2] by Matthew Gentzkow and Jesse Shapiro,two economists at the University of Chicago's business school, set out to test this proposition. To do so, they first needed a way to measure the political slant of American news coverage. Their solution was rather imaginative. The researchers ran computer programs that analysed debates in Congress and identified phrases that were disproportionately used by Republicans or Democrats. The list of frequent Democratic phrases, for example,included "estate tax". While talking about the same issue, Republicans tended to use the phrase "death tax". (This is not just coincidence. MrGentzkow and Mr Shapiro quote an anonymous Republican staffer as saying that the party machine trained members to say "death tax", because"'estate tax' sounds like it hits only the wealthy but 'death tax' sounds like it hits everyone".) Having identified partisan phrases, the academics then analysed the news coverage of more than 400 American newspapers to see how often they cropped up in reporting. This gave them a precise measure of "slant", showing the extent to which the news coverage in these papers tended to use politically charged phrases.
Mr Gentzkow and Mr Shapiro then needed to assess the political beliefs of different newspapers' readerships, which they did using data on the share of votes in each newspaper's market that went to President Bush in the 2004 presidential elections, and information on how likely people in different parts of that market were to contribute to entities allied to either Democrats or Republicans. The researchers were now able to look at the relationships between circulation, slant, and people's political views.First, they measured whether a newspaper's circulation responded to the match between its slant and its readers' views. Not surprisingly, they found that more "Republican" newspapers had relatively higher circulations in more "Republican" zip codes. But their calculations of the degree to which circulation responded to political beliefs also allowed them to do something more interesting: to calculate what degree of slant would be most profitable for each newspaper in their sample to adopt, given the political make-up of the market it covered. They compared this profit-maximising slant to their measure of the actual slant of each newspaper's coverage. They found a striking congruence between the two. Newspapers tended,on average, to locate themselves neither to the right nor to the left of the level of slant that Mr Gentzkow and Mr Shapiro reckon would maximise their profits. And for good commercial reasons: their model showed that even a minor deviation from this "ideal" level of slant would hurt profits through a sizeable loss of circulation.

HAVE I GOT SKEWS FOR YOU
Showing that newspapers have a political slant that is economically rational does not necessarily answer the question of whether ownership or demand determines bias. Here, the academics are helped by the fact that large media companies may own several newspapers, often in markets that are politically very different. This allowed them to test whether the slants of newspapers with the same owner were more strongly correlated than those of two newspapers picked at random. They found that this was not so: owners exerted a negligible influence on slant.

Readers' political views explained about a fifth of measured slant,while ownership explained virtually none.None of this is particularly helpful to seekers of the unvarnished truth. These conscientious sorts still have to find the time to readlots of newspapers to get an unbiased picture of the world. But by serving demand from a variety of political niches, competition does allow for different points of view to be represented. After all, just as Mrs Palin does not spend her time condemning Fox News, Mr Obama is unlikely to have too many complaints about the NEW YORK TIMES.
* "The Market for News", American Economic Review (September 2005).
**"What Drives Media Slant? Evidence from U.S. Daily Newspapers" (May2007)http://faculty.chicagogsb.edu/matthew.gentzkow/biasmeas081507.pdf[3]-----[1] http://www.economist.com/#footnote1
[2] http://www.economist.com/#footnote1

See this article with graphics and related items at http://www.economist.com/finance/displaystory.cfm?story_id=12510893&fsrc=rss





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Sunday, 12 October 2008

A closer look at those NYT blogs

I won't tell a lie and say that what follows is the result of a month long quantitative and qualitative survey and study of NYT's blogs - it isn't.

It's a snap shot of their blogs, taken at around 20.00 hrs CET Paris time on Sunday 12 October, 2008, the kind of time when people in Europe or in Manhattan before lunch might be taking a look at the web.

First off, the logos - I have to get this off my chest.

The design is what the Australians would call 'daggy' (a dag being a piece of shit stuck to the matted wollen rear end of a sheep). I get T magazine which is about as good as NYT design gets so I know they are capable of better, but the following reprentative example is an absolute embarrassment. If MSM wants to know why it can't connect with younger audiences, take a look at these bad boys.







Secondly, you can generally judge the health of a blog by the quality not just of its postings but also the quality and quantity of its comments. If people like your blog, they track it. If you don't get a comment in about 1 hour of a post you're not really in the game. Meislin says most (non-NYT) blogs don't moderate comments - true, but there are millions and millions of blogs so what does 'most' mean in this case. Absolutely nothing. All the ones I like and follow moderate, and have good quality comments.
Assuming comments are moderated in a timely manner - and if not, there again the NYT is missing the entire point of the immediacy of the blogosphere, then I'd say things are not looking too good for NYT blogs - single digit comments, or none at all, are frequent.
As to the postings these range from simple re-hashes of other NYT material or links to it, or (does Mr. Keller know this?!!) riffing off non-MSM i.e Internet sites and blogs. The shame of it when it's done the other way round!
I'd say only a couple of these blogs past muster and I guarantee you I can find you 10 blogs for each of the subjects covered (with the exception of the NYT's public editor whose last post was about a week ago and got just 4 comments) that have heaps more traffic, better content and a lot more reader interactivity.
So, what exactly is the NYT.com doing here apart from being able to say it has 'blogs' for which it does not even have a particular editorial policy.
In short: a mess. If Rich has got traffic data that proves me wrong, then I'm all ears.
I leave you to examine the below, explore further and draw your own conclusions.




July 24, 2008, 10:51 am
Tanglewood Contemporary Festival: Applause Beyond the Polite
10 comments
October 12, 2008, 7:35 am — Updated: 8:57 am
No comments



October 12, 2008, 3:54 am
Mike Timlin’s Long Day
By Jack Curry
1 comment

October 10, 2008, 10:23 am — Updated: 10:23 am
Recipe of the Day: Free-Form Apple or Pear Tart
4 comments




October 10, 2008, 3:55 pm — Updated: 11:39 pm
‘R.I.P. Good Times,’ Sequoia Capital Warns
By Claire Cain Miller
5 comments

February 28, 2008, 10:31 am
The Baggage Carousel Stops
20 comments




15 comments






October 12, 2008, 2:00 pm — Updated: 6:45 pm
A Phantom Bell Atlantic Phone Booth
By David W. Dunlap
No comments






October 10, 2008, 5:48am
The bottom, by any other name
10 comments






Morgan Stanley’s Tight Bind With Mitsubishi


October 11, 2008, 9:21 pm


6 comments






October 10, 2008, 1:12 pm — Updated: 1:35 pm -->
Ferran AdriĆ  on Creativity
By The New York Times


4 comments






October 10, 2008, 11:35 am — Updated: 12:08 pm -->
Green Inc. Roundup
By Andrew C. Revkin


19 comments






October 11, 2008, 9:00 am — Updated: 12:46 am -->
Which Generation Has It Worst?
By Catherine Rampell


13 comments






October 10, 2008, 7:03 pm — Updated: 12:20 am -->
The Worst Week Ever for the Dow




12 comments








1 comment








No comment






October 11, 2008, 9:36 pm
Player Ratings: U.S. vs. Cuba


4 comments






October 10, 2008 5:26pm
Art Galore in London


No comment






October 10, 2008, 1:52 pm — Updated: 7:40 am -->
Cheap Green: Laundry Time


50 comments






October 12, 2008, 9:44 am — Updated: 9:44 am -->
God Is Watching; So Are Church Consultants


No comments






October 12, 2008, 9:02 am
Video »
The Dogs of Warrior


No comments








No comments








2 comments








No comments






October 10, 2008, 2:04 pm — Updated: 2:04 pm -->
The Parenting Vote
By Lisa Belkin


16 comments






October 9, 2008, 8:52 am — Updated: 8:52 am -->
Reading the Family Narrative…Backwards
By Jane Gross


10 comments






October 12, 2008, 3:26 am — Updated: 11:22 am -->
Got Any Capital Gains Left?


8 comments






October 10, 2008, 8:05 pm
Ground Alert
By Cathy Horyn


16 comments






October 11, 2008, 5:39 pm — Updated: 5:42 pm -->
Book Review Podcast
By The New York Times








91 comments


No comments






October 10, 2008, 5:03 pm — Updated: 5:03 pm -->
“Put a Cork in It,” French Government Says


3 comments






October 3, 2008, 5:29 pm — Updated: 5:15 pm -->
Article Comparison: Obama/Biden Vs. McCain/Palin
By Clark Hoyt


4 comments






October 12, 2008, 1:14 am
Who’s No. 1? (The Sequel)
By Pete Thamel


8 comments






May 13, 2008, 5:34 pm — Updated: 5:34 pm -->
Lighting Out for the Territories
By Gregory Cowles


10 comments








No comments






October 9, 2008, 9:46 pm — Updated: 9:46 pm -->
After Losing Jobs, More Workers Sue
By Marci Alboher


No comments










No comments






October 10, 2008, 5:01 pm — Updated: 5:01 pm -->
The Drug Czar’s Report Card: F
By John Tierney


14 comments








October 12, 2008, 12:01 am — Updated: 4:54 pm -->
Monday, Oct. 12, 1908
By William S. Niederkorn


No comments








No comments






October 10, 2008, 11:04 am — Updated: 11:04 am -->
Obama Buys Half Hour on CBS and NBC
By The New York Times


1 comment








October 10, 2008, 11:03 am — Updated: 10:02 pm -->
Ginkgo Holds Promise for Stroke Patients


11 comments






October 9, 2008, 1:28 pm — Updated: 1:28 pm -->
Tax Credits for Plug-Ins Favor Big Batteries
By Jim Motavalli


16 comments








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Blogging at the New York Times: Rich gives us the word



I recently posted on New York Times blogs and indeed their own list of recommended blogs, which was, shall we say, a little Manhattan/L.A focused, somewhat behind the curve and without much (anything) for 'the foreigners' (the new term I like to use for us IHT readers).

I wrote to Rich Meislin at the NYT and am grateful for his comprehensive reply, which I received today.

I don't think it reveals a new view of the blogosphere that many members thereof would agree with and largely, if I can parse Rich, it reveals that at least at http://www.nytimes.com/, many (but by no means all) of its blogs are simply used as another platform for breaking news more quickly.

I have to say that I am also surprised - very - that there is no official NYT editorial policy on NYT blogs regarding the purpose of them.

The editor of the NYT has accused bloggers of 'riffing off MSM' so he must therefore believe that blogs are different to MSM, in which case the blogs on http://www.nytimes.com/ must presumably be different - in some way - to the MSM content of the NYT.

Anyway, enough of me - over to Mr. Meislin:


Hi, Ian, and thanks for the note.
The first thing I must do is apologize for
the Blogs 101 list, which is embarrassingly in need of a refresh. It's been at least a year since there was a serious update, and it's on my to-do list for after the U.S. election. (Your thought about international blogs is an interesting one and I'll take it into account.)
Like the original Navigator page (http://nytimes.com/navigator),
the Blogs 101 list was originally created several years back for internal use in the Times newsroom, to get our staff more familiar with what was then the relatively young and quickly growing Web form of blogs.
Since then, we've nurtured quite a large number of our own, as you can see on our blogs directory page, http://nytimes.com/blogs. While there's no official New York Times editorial policy on the purpose of them, they tend to fall into a couple of categories.
Some of our blogs, like
The Caucus, DealBook and City Room, are places where we post breaking news multiple times a day, generally in shorter form than you would expect from a fully developed New York Times article. These allow us to stay on top of developing news, in addition to getting instant reaction (and sometimes supplemental information and tips) from our readers. We have sports blogs for readers who can never get enough, some of which have offered play-by-play coverage of various events.
Other blogs allow our readers to get more of their favorite subjects or writers than we could possibly fit into the pages of the printed New York Times (which still forms the backbone of what we publish online each day). And they give our writers an opportunity to get closer to their readers, which is often useful for both.
So fans of the New York restaurant scene or of wine (or in particular fans of Frank Bruni and Eric Asimov) can enjoy more of them as they explore additional subjects on
Diner's Journal and The Pour. Brian Stelter, who made a name following the networks and cable on his TVNewser blog, now does that for us on TV Decoder. During the Hollywood awards season, we offer Carpetbagger (one of our very first blogs) with David Carr to provide detail and commentary, including video.
Tara Parker Pope has been getting enormous readership for her health blog,
Well, which has fascinating takes on a subject that affects everyone. Jane Gross's new blog, The New Old Age, has quickly developed a following among those who are caring for aging parents (and some of the aging parents themselves); it was an area that we felt wasn't being explored on blogs elsewhere in as useful a way as we could do it. Andrew Revkin has made Dot Earth the home of a dedicated community of people trying to consider the limits of and answers to global growth, and Green Inc. is looking at similar subjects from the business perspective. David Leonhardt and Catherine Rampell didn't know there was going to be a global financial meltdown when they started Economix recently, but it's good that it's there for the extra insights it provides.
As for the ethical boundaries for blogs, it's simple: they're the same as for The Times on paper. The tone of blog posts may be more casual, and the editing process is quicker, but the effort to maintain high levels of accuracy and fairness is the same. (That each blog post is looked at by an editor and that comments are scanned to avoid offensive or off-topic posts is a rarity among blogs.)
Doing blogs well takes a lot of time -- generally more time than our authors and editors of them initially expect. So in deciding whether to do a blog, we also have to consider what we can sacrifice from the authors' previous duties and where we can find the people to edit them and moderate comments. That's not easy, particularly when resources are tight. But when we get the right author and the right subject and enough time, the results can be pretty great for our readers.
Best, Rich Meislin



A word about Rich Meislin:

Rich Meislin is the technology editor of The New York Times, directing the reporters who cover technology news for all parts of the newspaper.
He served from March 1998 to January 2001 as editor in chief of New York Times Digital, where he oversaw the editorial staffs that produce The Times on the Web, New York Today, and other electronic offerings from The Times.
Before joining the electronic world, Meislin was senior editor for information and technology at The Times, responsible for the introduction and support of computers and other technology used by reporters, editors, photographers, artists and page designers in the production of newspaper. He was one of the earliest advocates for the newspaper's presence in the online world.
Meislin has been at The Times for more than 25 years, starting as a copyboy and a computer programmer for the New York Times/CBS News Poll. He served as a political reporter and bureau chief in Albany, N.Y., and as a foreign correspondent in Central America and the Caribbean before becoming bureau chief in Mexico City. Among the stories he covered were the war in El Salvador and the battle between Argentina and Britain over the Falklands, as well as the Mexico City earthquake.
He subsequently became the newspaper's Graphics Editor, a post he held for six years.
Computers and computer-aided communication have long been one of Meislin's interests. He learned programming as a teenager, working with punch cards on an IBM 1620 at his high school in Allentown, Pa., and could once program in seven computer languages, several of them now obsolete. Meislin has been online for well over a decade, starting with accounts on CompuServe and People Link in the mid-1980's, and still spends way too much time on the Net.

Rich Meislin at navigate AT nytimes.com welcomes your comments and suggestions.
Source: http://partners.nytimes.com/library/cyber/meislinbio.html?scp=1&sq=Rich%20Meislin&st=cse





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