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Out of Print – Newspapers, Journalism and the Business of News in the Digital Age

Autor George Brock
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 2 sep 2013

Traditional newspapers are under threat. The emergence of citizen journalism, collaborative news websites and freebie news-sheets -- coupled with a catastrophic drop in ad revenue -- has pushed many to the brink. Papers around the world are cutting copy, editions and staff, moving online or closing down.

Due to the collision of technology, economics and social forces, the way we use information is constantly changing. As it's done many times before, journalism has to find its value all over again. George Brock proposes an optimistic outlook on journalism's future, taking the view that it was always unstable and likely, always will be.
Out of Print covers key issues such as: the increased competition from expansive radio and 24 hour television news channels; the emergence of free "Metro" papers; the delivery of news services on billboards, podcasts and mobile; the development of online editions, as well as the burgeoning of blogs, citizen journalists and User Generated Content.

Incisive and authoritative, Out of Print analyzes the role and influence of newspapers in the digital age and asks how they need to adapt to survive.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780749466510
ISBN-10: 0749466510
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.38 kg
Editura: Kogan Page

Cuprins


About the author
Acknowledgements
Introduction: from ink to link
01 Communicating whatever we please
Messy, unethical and opinionated origins
Select and noteworthy happenings
An explosion of opinion
Playing with fire
Bible, axe and newspapers
A brief flowering
The world’s great informer
Every species of intelligence
02 Furnishing the world with a new set of nerves
A great moral organ
The true Church of England
The Steam Intellect Society
We are all learning to move together
A vast agora
I order five virgins
The few dozen lines of drivel
A press typhoon
The waning power of the harlot
03 The gilded age
A fluid mass
The brute force of monopoly
Sorrow, sorrow, ever more
A well-conducted press
‘So will it be goodbye to Fleet Street?’
I really loathe people with power
Deregulation
Boom and decline
Owners, news and celebrity
04 The engine of opportunity
Chain reaction
Utopia or dystopia?
What the internet does to the business of news
05 Rethinking journalism again
Complexity
Frontiers fade and vanish
Ink marks on squashed trees
Comparison and choice
The downside risks of choice
Authority
Manipulation
Objectivity under strain
The advantages and drawbacks of institutions
The management of abundance
New media and change: a case study
Conclusion
06 The business model crumbles
Over a cliff
Print is not dead
Palliative care for print
Flipping to digital
Making people pay: walls and meters
The demand for news
What we don’t know about online news
07 Credibility crumbles
Newsroom culture
Operation Motorman
Phone hacking
‘Quality’ and ‘seriousness’
Trust and authority
A spell is broken
08 The Leveson judgement
Diagnosis
Prescription
A third way
Regulation’s future
Plurality
09 Throwing spaghetti at the wall
Four core tasks
We were having journalistic moments!
Error is useful
10 Clues to the future
Business models
From the ashes of dead trees

Notă biografică


George Brock is Professor at London's City University, where he heads the prestigious Graduate School of Journalism. During his career as a journalist, he worked for the Observer and The Times, where he was Foreign Editor, Managing Editor and Saturday Editor. He has served as president of the World Editors Forum, and is on the board of the International Press Institute. He is a regular commentator on news and journalism in the UK and global media and broadcasts frequently.