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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2009
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 ANALYSIS 
5

Meet the New Media, Same as the Old Media

Blogging turns from amateur calling to corporate career

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(Newser) – It’s become obligatory for internet philosophers to crow about how blogs have democratized the press and allowed average joes to beat big media, but it’s just not true anymore, writes Benajamin Carlson of the Atlantic. “The free-wheeling fraternal spirit of blogging has become increasingly subject to market disciplines.” Or, as Washington Post blogger Ezra Klein put it, “The place has professionalized.”

Of the top 50 blogs, 21 are owned by big corporate entities, like CNN and the New York Times. Even independent blogs are now big, entrenched names, swiftly expanding into companies. New bloggers no longer break in from the Wordpress hinterlands, but from established brands. “Far from leveling the playing field, blogs have simply built up challenging new pathways to success,” Carlson argues, “ones that mirror old-media ways.”

In this May 6, 2005 file photo, Kirk Johnson of The Heritage Foundation instructs a class of bloggers.
In this May 6, 2005 file photo, Kirk Johnson of The Heritage Foundation instructs a class of bloggers.   (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey, File)
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The romantic notion that solitary, untamed bloggers are running the Web is nearly as apocryphal as old myths about stoic Western sheriffs killing 11 outlaws with six bullets. - Benjamin Carlson

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5 comments
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Timinator2K
Sep 14, 09 2:42 PM CDT
Perhaps the New Media will try something truly revolutionary like, unbiased reporting of facts and figures...but, THE (supposed) POWER is corrupting so, that isn't going to happen ever again. Reply
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PosterNutbag
Sep 14, 09 2:49 PM CDT
Try the pacifica radio network, which is listener sponsored, therefor not beholden to corporate money-power interests.
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maryz
Sep 14, 09 2:55 PM CDT
These kinds of patent over-generalizations breed contempt for even great in-depth news reporting. This call against all media as favoring one extreme or another has actually opened-up the market for exactly that kind of so-called "media" (so, congratulations). Frankly, to include pundits and loud-mouthed talk-show hosts (which happen to sadly run on news channels) among the sphere of journalism does a double detriment to real journalists, of which there are many out there working hard to cut through to the truth. And finally, the idolizing of those who mix politicking and [pseudo]-journalism is a blatant contradiction of professional ethics of true journalism (like Rush, who many feel is the leader of the Repubs. now). We so easily forget because we've had it so long ... our democracy could never survive without a free press. Let's get it right. Let's not demonize those practicing real journalism because our freedoms will in part always depend on their success.
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Timinator2K
Sep 14, 09 3:13 PM CDT
Even if the MSM slips and does great in-depth reporting, their overlord owners and management will still demand that their PoV be reflected in the overall reporting scheme...thus, besmirching and causing their own better efforts to become suspect. Reply
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Wills
Sep 14, 09 4:25 PM CDT
Please, this always happens with disruptive technology. I realize that's kindof part of the articles point, but it's being presented as if its surprising. A new paradigm or technology emerges. Some people pick up on it quickly, usually people who aren't tied to big organizations etc. The early adopters have all sorts of utopian visions of "their" technology. The rest of society slowly catches up, especially if the tech is marketable. The tech starts to be absorbed and integrated in society, maintaining some of its disruptive character but also softening some. Blogging only seems different because it hasn't reached a stable equilbrium. Does anyone think it odd that the most popular musical artists are signed with record labels, or that new genres are pioneered by singletons and outsiders who are often reabsorbed into the fold if society decides their new ideas are interesting? Then why should it be so troublesome for blogging? Reply
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