Tuesday, May 31, 2005

Glenn Reynolds: "we-dia" may wind up saving the media

WE THE (MEDIA) PEOPLE
[Commentary] The news business is in trouble. Readership and viewership are
declining, public trust is plummeting, and advertisers are beginning to
wonder whether they're getting their money's worth. This has led people to
think about what blogger and tech journalist Doc Searls calls business
models for "news without newspapers," an approach to reporting and
disseminating news that doesn't depend on layers of editors for
publication, and big ads from carmakers for funding. Nobody's sure just how
to do that yet. With mainstream media losing credibility through scandals
like Easongate, Rathergate, and Newsweek's latest, free-press protections
are likely to come under fire. The best defense will be a public that sees
free speech as something it participates in, not just a protection for big
corporate entities. What some are calling "we-dia" may wind up saving the
media.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Glenn Harlan Reynolds, University of
Tennessee, InstaPundit.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111749856898346629,00.html?mod=todays_us_opinion
(requires subscription)

--------------------------
Sent from my BlackBerry Wireless Handheld


Friday, May 27, 2005

Survey: US residents addicted to e-mail | InfoWorld | News | 2005-05-27 | By Juan Carlos Perez, IDG News Service

Survey: US residents addicted to e-mail | InfoWorld | News | 2005-05-27 | By Juan Carlos Perez, IDG News Service: "The average e-mail user in the U.S. has two or three e-mail accounts and spends about an hour every day reading, sending and replying to messages, according to the survey, conducted by Opinion Research.

E-mail dependency is so strong for 41 percent of survey respondents that they check their e-mail inbox right after getting out of bed in the morning. The average user checks his inbox five times per day, according to the survey, which polled 4,012 respondents at least 18 years old in the 20 largest U.S. cities.

About a fourth of respondents acknowledged being so e-mailholic that they can't go more than two or three days without checking for messages. That includes vacations, during which 60 percent of respondents admitted logging into their inbox."

videoblogging.info

videoblogging.info

Akimbo NEt/TV

Akimbo Systems: "What is Akimbo?

Akimbo is the first fully functional marriage of TV and the Internet, combining easy access to new and fresh shows with the comfort of watching them on your TV."

Freevlog: Tutorial

Freevlog: Tutorial

FireANT | Not TV: RSS video aggregator

FireANT | Not TV: "FireANT is an RSS video aggregator and media player that can automatically download media content for you to watch and listen to.

FireANT lets you subscribe to any RSS 2.0 feed that supports enclosures or Yahoo! Media RSS in one of three ways:"

MAKE: Blog: MAKE AUDIO SHOW: DIY News RocketBoom!

MAKE: Blog: MAKE AUDIO SHOW: DIY News RocketBoom!: "Here's the latest audio from MAKE Magazine In this Make audio show- we interview Andrew Baron, the fellow behind RocketBoom- a daily 3 minute news show produced each day for the web, PSPs, phones and more. Want to make your own news show? Here's how. Right click or Control click to download this MP3 to you local system or add the MAKE Audio feed to your podcasting application and get the show automatically! Show notes after the jump..."

wireless devices: nokia tablet

Nokia - Nokia 770: " Nokia 770 Internet Tablet

Easy, broadband access over Wi-Fi.
A truly portable, elegantly-sized tablet designed for effortless
surfing.
Impressive hi-resolution widescreen display and intuitive interface
are optimized for online browsing."

Thursday, May 26, 2005

Boing Boing: ClearChannel sets up fake anti-ClearChannel pirate radio stn

Boing Boing: ClearChannel sets up fake anti-ClearChannel pirate radio stn: "Clear Channel has set up a fake pirate radio station in Akron, Ohio, which it's using to hurl insults at other Clear Channel stations. Radio Free Ohio has feigned overthrowing Ohio's media monopoly by bleeding its broadcasts into local Clear Channel stations..."

Wednesday, May 25, 2005

2005_03_press_vs_public_5_24_05_pr.pdf (application/pdf Object)

2005_03_press_vs_public_5_24_05_pr.pdf (application/pdf Object)

Public and Press Differ About Partisan Bias, Accuracy and Press Freedom, New Annenberg Public Policy Center Survey Shows The American public disapproves only narrowly of partisan journalism, splits about evenly on whether news organizations usually get their facts straight, and narrowly accepts the idea that the government can limit the right of the press to report a story, according to a national survey conducted for the University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg Public Policy Center. But journalists, including reporters, editors, producers, news executives and owners, were also surveyed for the study which measured the divide between those who work in the news media and those who consume it. They heartily disagreed with the public on all those issues and many others. "This study reveals a worrisome divide between the public's view of journalism and journalists' own views of their work. If journalists do indeed believe that what they do is valuable, fair and ethically sound, it's past time they began to put that case more effectively to the public," noted Geneva Overholser, co-editor of a new Oxford University Press book, The Press. Sixteen percent of the 673 journalists who were polled and 43 percent of the 1,500 members of the public surveyed said it was “a good thing if some news organizations have a decidedly political point of view in their coverage of the news. Eighty percent of journalists and 53 percent of the public said it was a “bad thing.”

Variety.com - The Beeb striking out

Variety.com - The Beeb striking out: "BBC schedules across TV and radio were severely disrupted Monday as at least 40% of the pubcasterpubcaster's staff staged a one-day strike to protest 4,000 planned job cuts. It was the first strike since 1989.

Big-name news anchors stayed at home rather than cross picket lines at BBC studios across the U.K. in support of the action by journalists, production staff and technicians.

News shows were most heavily affected.

The action, likely to be repeated next week when a 48-hour stoppage is planned, was not restricted to the U.K.: In Afghanistan, the BBC's three staff members at its Kabul office formed their own picket line."

The Long Tail: Is the Long Tail full of crap?

The Long Tail: Is the Long Tail full of crap?: "Niches operate by different economics than the mainstream. And the reason for that helps explain why so much about Long Tail content is counterintuitive, especially when we're used to scarcity thinking.

First, let's get one thing straight: the Long Tail is indeed full of crap. But it's also full of works of refined brilliance and depth--and an awful lot in between. "

Broadcast Machine: Publish RSS / Torrent Video Channels

Broadcast Machine: Publish RSS / Torrent Video Channels: "Broadcast Machine is software for your website that can publish fullscreen video files to thousands, using torrent technology to reduce or eliminate bandwidth costs. It is free, open source, and designed for easy installation. Broadcast Machine features an intuitive interface, integrated torrent creation, and flexible channel management. It creates a browsable archive of videos on your website, but its real purpose is to be the perfect publishing tool for our video player that comes out in June. Broadcast Machine creates channels that, viewed in the player, give people a TV-like experience."

NPR : CEO Mitchell Says PBS Will Resist Political Pressure

NPR : CEO Mitchell Says PBS Will Resist Political Pressure: "'We are going to be criticized from the left for being too right, from the right for being too left,' Mitchell said in her speech, 'and that probably means we're getting it mostly right, because the demand we make of our producers is that they seek out all sides, that they tell the most accurate, compelling and richly detailed story that they can. We are going to support a range of personal perspectives as different as Bill Moyers and Paul Gigot.'"

Tuesday, May 24, 2005

Long tail: Book publishing stats: more titles, fewer sales, higher prices

Boing Boing: Book publishing stats: more titles, fewer sales, higher prices: "Book publishing stats: more titles, fewer sales, higher prices
Some interesting new stats about book publishing. Number of books sold is way down. Number of titles published is up. Cover prices are up, and so are revenues (slightly). Higher cover prices are driving students and poorer people to used books (the article doesn't say so, but I betcha that Amazon and ABE and other low-friction used-book dealers have a lot to do with this). Religious books are selling like hotcakes. There's a long tail thing visible here: lots more books to much smaller audiences. Used books are easier to get than ever, which makes new books more valuable (just like the market in used cars makes new cars more valuable). New media like DVDs and games are eating into readers' leisure time-budgets."

Kaplan on Reportin as the new Left

PressThink: In the Press Room of the White House that is Post Press: "The Media and Medievalism, by Robert D. Kaplan

Exposure is the particular terrain of the investigative journalist. It is the investigative journalist who has inherited the mantle of the old left, whatever the ideological proclivities of individual practitioners of the trade. The investigative journalist is never interested in the 90 per cent of activities that are going right, nor especially in the 10 per cent that are going wrong, but only in the 1 per cent that are morally reprehensible. Because he always seems to define even the most heroic institutions by their worst iniquities, his target is authority itself. Disclaimers notwithstanding, he is the soul of the left incarnate."

Welcome to Backfence.com

Welcome to Backfence.com: "Backfence captures community knowledge and makes it available to all—information you can’t get anywhere else. Each community site gives people the opportunity to share knowledge, openly discuss community issues and get involved in what’s going on in their communities. Here’s some of what you can do on Backfence:
Post and comment Share photos
Let others know what you know about your community—and add your comments to the ongoing local dialogue. Snap a photo of a local event? Got pictures of places and people around town? Put them on Backfence for all to see.
Stay on top of local news Place classifieds ads
What’s happening around town? Share the news with your neighbors on Backfence. If you’re buying, selling, looking or wanting, Backfence is your trusted local marketplace—and it’s free!
Publicize an event Find local businesses
Use Backfence’s calendar to let people know what’s going on—and to find out about upcoming events. Look for businesses close to home—Backfence’s Yellow Pages are focused on businesses in your local community.
Share tips with neighbors Get or make recommendation
We all have our lists of the best things in town. Now you can exchange that knowledge with others in the community. Know a great local business? Let everybody know with Backfence’s business ratings and reviews."

BuzzMachine: new media models

BuzzMachine... by Jeff Jarvis: ": Death to the masses: One-size-fits-all news was a product of the mass market and the mass market was an aberration brought on by a scarcity and thus hegemony of broadcast channels which, in turn, led to a scarcity of newspaper choices. The internet explodes the mass market and brings the press back to its natural state of choice. So does it still make sense to print those stock tables -- costing, say, $1 million a year in paper and ink -- when only a small portion of the audience still uses them? Can you afford to let those readers go -- on the off chance that they do cancel their subscriptions; can you afford not to? In the old mass-market days, you put a little of this and a little of that in your product to serve everyone, in little ways. Now maybe it makes more sense to have separate products -- news, sports, entertainment, lifestyle, business -- to serve those audiences in big ways... and serve targeted and efficient advertising as a result. The transition would be painful, in some cases fatal, but this is where the audience is now heading online.

: Anytime, anywhere, anyhow: There is no such thing as a medium anymore; it's all media, it's all multi. The public demands its news -- rather than waiting for it to be served -- anytime, anywhere, to serve any interest or need. So news organizations must do just that. Thus a newspaper needs to gather and share the news it knows anytime (which, I have learned, is far more difficult than it appears) via online and audio and video and the internet and phones (also not easy). Thus TV networks have had to hire people to write and package text online. And they need to be able attach sponsorship (or payment) to all this (and that's not easy, either: just try selling sponsorship of BitTorrent or ad on RSS).

: Charity: NPR is growing on the strength of its news and its audience contributions. I do believe the audience will pay for news in certain (limited) circumstances. And, yes, that does present a new bucket of church-v-state issues (e.g., how come we can get money only to report on why there isn't global warming vs. why there is?). But the same issues of journalistic integrity prevail (the answer is that you can pay to support reporting but not conclusions).

: Quality will out: One way or another -- with their eyeballs or their checkbooks -- the public will support quality, unique reporting. See 60 Minutes. See NPR. I have to believe that the best way to find news business models is to give people unique value and quality. Sounds obvious, doesn't it?

: Join the conversation: This is the most important one. The conversation that is news will be going on with or without you -- so better to be withit: Better to find the ways to stand in a position to gather and share news. So, for example, look at RSS feeds as a way to get your content out there and not only drive traffic back to your site and brand but also to be consumed and sponsored in a distributed manner."

Monday, May 23, 2005

citizens video ex.

fyi on citizen video
the link is here
http://www.rocketboom.com/vlog/archives/2005/05/rb_05_may_20.html

Begin forwarded message:

From: Jock Gill <jg45@mac.com>
Date: May 20, 2005 10:45:09 PM EDT
To: Farber Dave <dave@farber.net>
Cc: Jock Gill <jg45@mac.com>
Subject: Rocketboom.com

Dave,

IP readers may want to know about Rocketboom.com

So check out today's Rocketboom.com vlog on police violence in the
90th precinct of New York.

<http://www.rocketboom.com/vlog/>

Surprisingly good video.

A new way to tell the news? The people's TV stations? The cost is
so low it is free. Some folks estimate that more folks watch
Rocketboom - when, where and how they want, not by appointment --
than some broadcast TV from the incumbents.

Suppose we had Rocketboom correspondents in cities all over Iraq? Or
other global trouble spots? What would be the narrative then?

In any case, this is getting very interesting very fast.

Jock

Jock Gill
Meme Intelligence
jock.gill@memeintel.com
"Cooperative gain from collective behaviors at the edges."


Television Reloaded - Next Frontiers - MSNBC.com

Television Reloaded - Next Frontiers - MSNBC.com: "Television Reloaded
It's a transformation as significant as when we went from black-and-white to color—and it's already underway. The promise is that you'll be able to watch anything you want, anywhere—on a huge high-def screen or on your phone."

BBC to test 'iPod for TV'

Lost Remote: BBC to test 'iPod for TV': "BBC to test 'iPod for TV'
Five hundred lucky viewers in the UK will be selected for a three month test this fall, where they will be able to download current episodes of any BBC shows to their PCs and then have seven days to watch the episodes. Here's a thought: Make the content available to broadband users for free, but prevent them from being able to zip past the commercials."

Friday, May 20, 2005

google does video

https://upload.video.google.com/


bad public radio blog

this is an example of my worst fears of how Public media will approach blogs et al: brian lehrer hosts a great show; and this blog is called Brian's Blog-- i was excited to hear brian's blog voice. color me disappointed to realize that all the posts are made by the show's unnamed producer-- and there is no place for comments. yeeech. Brian's Blog: "Posted by blproducer "

Coming Soon: Mobile Couch Potatoes

Coming Soon: Mobile Couch Potatoes:
Verizon's service lets you watch CNN, ESPN, and 24 on your cell

In an age of monster plasma screens, the idea of watching television on the tiny display of a wireless phone seems odd. But cell phone video has already found an audience in some markets, notably Korea and Japan. Now, with better networks and handsets, it's coming to the U.S. -- and the surprise is that it can be fun."

Bigdigit, Inc. The Made-for-Mobile Media Resource for Independent Filmmakers

Bigdigit, Inc. The Made-for-Mobile Media Resource for Independent Filmmakers: "BigDigit is a true pioneer in mobile content marketing. Through an ingenious series of mobile marketing programs, Bigdigit has given hundreds of independent mediamaker access to the market, while building a unique and dynamic collection of mobile content that exploits the new medium itself ..."

MFlix: phone films

MFlix: "What is mFlix?

mFlix is a global distribution channel for animators and filmmakers, debuting in the U.S. on the Sprint network but now also carried on other 3g networks around the world. mFlix has relationships with hundreds of filmmakers and animators in dozens of countries and makes their short films and animations available to mobile phone viewers via advanced wireless networks.
What kinds of movies are on mFlix?

Funny, quirky, informative, colorful, creative and episodic. mFlix has comedies, dramas, music videos from unsigned acts, urban tribal, offbeat cooking shows, experimental, weird, mobile art pieces, and so much more. mFlix is definitely stuff you won't find elsewhere or on TV."

TheFeature :: Cell Phone Cinema

TheFeature :: Cell Phone Cinema: "From the talk coming out of the CTIA Wireless IT and Entertainment Expo in San Francisco last month, you'd think wireless providers were about to reap Hollywood-size revenues from new mobile TV and cinema applications. Although AT&T Wireless and Sprint are the only US operators currently offering mobile TV services, and consumer demand has yet to be determined, a number of reports are already enthusiastically hyping mobile TV as the killer app for wireless data , particularly for emerging 3G networks.

But there is a glaring blind spot in these reports: for all their focus on the technical, economic and financial aspects of streaming video technology, they are virtually ignoring the stuff that consumers are going to be exposed to - the actual content! Most cell phone video advocates seem to be assuming that content will consist of existing television programs, crunched down to fit into the inch-size screens of mobile phones. But that's hardly a way to launch an entirely new media platform. Luckily, there are a few people thinking a bit more creatively."

Thursday, May 19, 2005

Searls and Jarvis on new news

BuzzMachine... by Jeff Jarvis: "At the Syndicate conference this week, I was standing next to Doc and a fellow media executive who was saying what all us media executives say all the time: We need to find the business models that will support quality journalism.

Without missing a beat, Doc says, 'You need to come up with business models that support news without newspapers.'

Exactly. You needn't take that as a literal prediction -- though some will -- to find truth and value in that. We need to look at a world in which support from classified, retail, and national advertising will leak or pour out and in which the audience goes wherever it wants to go.

We need to rethink about newsrooms as news-gathering (not just news-creating) operations that bring together the community's news and share it wherever, however, and whenever the community wants. And, yes, we need to think of new business models to support this."

Nooked sees RSS tracking customers

Nooked sees RSS tracking customers: "CEO Fergus Burns (View image) of Nooked, an Irish RSS service company, says Web publishers will be tweaking the feeds, in growing numbers, to follow customers. His prediction: Publishers will offer customized features and richer content to RSS subscribers who provide them with profiles. Then they will be able to track customer behavior and send along targeted ads with the feeds. 'Right now, it's so anonymous,' he says. 'It's impossible even to know how many subscribers you have.'

This trend, if it takes off, is sure to cause an uproar in the RSS world."

Nisenholtz of NYT on future

Scobleizer: Microsoft Geek Blogger: "Martin Nisenholtz, senior vice president of digital operations at The New York Times Company just was on stage and explained why the NYT is charging for access to its content now.

Some things that stuck out in my mind.

1) They are preparing for the death of print. It might never come, but they know that it's possible, and are looking to find revenue so that they can continue in the business of journalism.

2) Search engines like MSN and Google today don't index content that people have to pay to see. That's an opportunity for search engines. Imagine one engine has an exclusive to search the NYT's content."

Wal-Mart teams with Netflix on DVD deal

Wal-Mart teams with Netflix on DVD deal: "Wal-Mart Stores Inc , the world's largest retailer, on Thursday said it was closing its online DVD rental business and would direct customers to Netflix Inc. , the company that pioneered online rentals."

Wednesday, May 18, 2005

Wired News: The Beeb Shall Inherit the Earth

Wired News: The Beeb Shall Inherit the Earth: "America's entertainment industry is committing slow, spectacular suicide, while one of Europe's biggest broadcasters -- the BBC -- is rushing headlong to the future, embracing innovation rather than fighting it.

Unlike Hollywood, the BBC is eager and willing to work with a burgeoning group of content providers whose interests are aligned with its own: its audience."

Tuesday, May 17, 2005

The Long Tail: USA Today, Longtailing bigtime

The Long Tail: USA Today, Longtailing bigtime: "USA Today recently held a roundtable focusing on the Long Tail and published the highlights in a two-page spread last week. It featured TiVo CEO Mike Ramsey, venture capitalist Roger McNamee, Firefox co-creator Blake Ross, and rapper Chuck D"

Jake Shapiro berkman talk

Joho the Blog: Jake Shapiro: "Chris Lydon asks if there's any point in going through the stations instead of just posting podcasts. Jake, who was a producer of Chris' previous radio show, says that it's not an either/or. 'Public radio is primed to plug in.'

Chris: Have you thought about PRX becoming a packager of podcasts, filtering the thousands of them?

Jake: That's what we're doing. PRX hopes to have many people creating playlists."

[IP] Piracy is Good? How Battlestar Galactica Killed Broadcast TV

[Note:  This item comes from reader Mike Cheponis.  Good commentary 
on some of the current aspects of the Darknet.  Well worth reading!  
DLH]

Piracy  is  Good?
How Battlestar Galactica Killed Broadcast TV
by Mark Pesce
<
http://www.mindjack.com/feature/piracy051305.html>

May 13 , 2005 | PART ONE: HYPERDISTRIBUTION

October 18th, 2004 is the day TV died. That evening, British
satellite broadcaster SkyOne - part of NEWS Corp's BSkyB satellite
broadcasting service - ran the premiere episode of the re-visioned
70s camp classic Battlestar Galactica. (That episode, "33," is one of
the best hours of drama ever written for television.) The production
costs for Battlestar Galactica were underwritten by two broadcast
partners: SkyOne in the UK, and the SciFi Channel in the USA. SciFi
Channel programers had decided to wait until January 2005 (a slow
month for American television) to begin airing the series, so three
months would elapse between the airing of "33" in the UK, and its
airing in the US. Or so it was thought.

[snip]



Weblog at: <
http://weblog.warpspeed.com>


Times goes to paid content

Poynter Online - Forums: "In September we will be launching TimesSelect, a new product that provides exclusive access to Times Op-Ed columnists and a select group of Times and IHT news columnists on NYTimes.com. This offering will also include easy and in-depth access to The Times’s archives, early access to select articles on the site, as well as other exciting features. Home-delivery subscribers will automatically receive TimesSelect as part of their benefits. For others the cost will be $50 per year.

This approach achieves two important long-term goals:

First, it will create a new online revenue stream and provide us with additional resources to further strengthen our quality journalism and grow our digital future.

Second, it will complement other investments we are making on the Web
site, including a total redesign of NYTimes.com, the introduction of new verticals and multimedia features."

Monday, May 16, 2005

tomlinson column: The Washington Times

PBS dial dynamics -- The Washington Times: "To me and many other supporters of public broadcasting the image of the left-wing bias of 'NOW' -- unchallenged by a balancing point of view on public broadcasting's Friday evening lineup -- was unhealthy. Indeed, it jeopardized essential support for public TV.
This was brought home to me in November 2003 by a phone call from an old friend complaining about Mr. Moyers' bias and the lack of balance on the Friday evening lineup. He explained the foundation he heads made a six-figure contribution to his local public television station for digital conversion. But he declared there would be no more contributions until something was done about the network's bias.
He also explained it was my responsibility as CPB chairman to preserve public support for public broadcasting by doing something about the bias. On reflection, I decided he was right. "

FW: Yahoo! News Story - Bill Moyers Fights Back - Yahoo! News


Bill Moyers Fights Back - Yahoo! News
http://story.news.yahoo.com/s/thenation/20050515/cm_thenation/12484

============================================================
Yahoo! News
http://news.yahoo.com/


Friday, May 13, 2005

IT Conversations: Podcasting Panel - South by Southwest Interactive 2005

IT Conversations: Podcasting Panel - South by Southwest Interactive 2005: "odcasting: what is it and what is in its future? These are among the topics covered by the podcasting panel at the South by Southwest 2005.

A panel of four early adopters of podcasting define podcasting and discuss its future, starting with the relationship between blogging and podcasting and the equipment and effort involved in starting a podcast and keeping it going.

After discussing the important recent developments in podcasting, the discussion moves to the audiences for podcasting and the immediate future of the technology. The next steps and penetration model for podcasting, potential in industry and for making money, and the longer term, year-ahead future are also discussed."

Thursday, May 12, 2005

Democracy Now! A 'Right-Wing Coup' at PBS & the CPB A Roundtable Discussion on

this was an interesting roundtable that amy goodman hosted, with mcchesney, chester, norm ornstein and tavis smiley.
could be a resource for later public media discussions.



 http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=05/05/12/1426203


FW: everything bad is good

 
 




BRAIN CANDY
by MALCOLM GLADWELL
Is pop culture dumbing us down or smartening us up?
Issue of 2005-05-16
Posted 2005-05-09

Twenty years ago, a political philosopher named James Flynn uncovered a curious fact. Americans-at least, as measured by I.Q. tests-were getting smarter. This fact had been obscured for years, because the people who give I.Q. tests continually recalibrate the scoring system to keep the average at 100. But if you took out the recalibration, Flynn found, I.Q. scores showed a steady upward trajectory, rising by about three points per decade, which means that a person whose I.Q. placed him in the top ten per cent of the American population in 1920 would today fall in the bottom third. Some of that effect, no doubt, is a simple by-product of economic progress: in the surge of prosperity during the middle part of the last century, people in the West became better fed, better educated, and more familiar with things like I.Q. tests. But, even as that wave of change has subsided, test scores have continued to rise-not just in America but all over the developed world. What's more, the increases have not been confined to children who go to enriched day-care centers and private schools. The middle part of the curve-the people who have supposedly been suffering from a deteriorating public-school system and a steady diet of lowest-common-denominator television and mindless pop music-has increased just as much. What on earth is happening? In the wonderfully entertaining "Everything Bad Is Good for You" (Riverhead; $23.95), Steven Johnson proposes that what is making us smarter is precisely what we thought was making us dumber: popular culture.

Johnson is the former editor of the online magazine Feed and the author of a number of books on science and technology. There is a pleasing eclecticism to his thinking. He is as happy analyzing "Finding Nemo" as he is dissecting the intricacies of a piece of software, and he's perfectly capable of using Nietzsche's notion of eternal recurrence to discuss the new creative rules of television shows. Johnson wants to understand popular culture-not in the postmodern, academic sense of wondering what "The Dukes of Hazzard" tells us about Southern male alienation but in the very practical sense of wondering what watching something like "The Dukes of Hazzard" does to the way our minds work.

As Johnson points out, television is very different now from what it was thirty years ago. It's harder. A typical episode of "Starsky and Hutch," in the nineteen-seventies, followed an essentially linear path: two characters, engaged in a single story line, moving toward a decisive conclusion. To watch an episode of "Dallas" today is to be stunned by its glacial pace-by the arduous attempts to establish social relationships, by the excruciating simplicity of the plotline, by how obvious it was. A single episode of "The Sopranos," by contrast, might follow five narrative threads, involving a dozen characters who weave in and out of the plot. Modern television also requires the viewer to do a lot of what Johnson calls "filling in," as in a "Seinfeld" episode that subtly parodies the Kennedy assassination conspiracists, or a typical "Simpsons" episode, which may contain numerous allusions to politics or cinema or pop culture. The extraordinary amount of money now being made in the television aftermarket-DVD sales and syndication-means that the creators of television shows now have an incentive to make programming that can sustain two or three or four viewings. Even reality shows like "Survivor," Johnson argues, engage the viewer in a way that television rarely has in the past:

When we watch these shows, the part of our brain that monitors the emotional lives of the people around us-the part that tracks subtle shifts in intonation and gesture and facial expression-scrutinizes the action on the screen, looking for clues. . . . The phrase "Monday-morning quarterbacking" was coined to describe the engaged feeling spectators have in relation to games as opposed to stories. We absorb stories, but we second-guess games. Reality programming has brought that second-guessing to prime time, only the game in question revolves around social dexterity rather than the physical kind.

How can the greater cognitive demands that television makes on us now, he wonders, not matter?

Johnson develops the same argument about video games. Most of the people who denounce video games, he says, haven't actually played them-at least, not recently. Twenty years ago, games like Tetris or Pac-Man were simple exercises in motor coördination and pattern recognition. Today's games belong to another realm. Johnson points out that one of the "walk-throughs" for "Grand Theft Auto III"-that is, the informal guides that break down the games and help players navigate their complexities-is fifty-three thousand words long, about the length of his book. The contemporary video game involves a fully realized imaginary world, dense with detail and levels of complexity.

Indeed, video games are not games in the sense of those pastimes-like Monopoly or gin rummy or chess-which most of us grew up with. They don't have a set of unambiguous rules that have to be learned and then followed during the course of play. This is why many of us find modern video games baffling: we're not used to being in a situation where we have to figure out what to do. We think we only have to learn how to press the buttons faster. But these games withhold critical information from the player. Players have to explore and sort through hypotheses in order to make sense of the game's environment, which is why a modern video game can take forty hours to complete. Far from being engines of instant gratification, as they are often described, video games are actually, Johnson writes, "all about delayed gratification-sometimes so long delayed that you wonder if the gratification is ever going to show."

At the same time, players are required to manage a dizzying array of information and options. The game presents the player with a series of puzzles, and you can't succeed at the game simply by solving the puzzles one at a time. You have to craft a longer-term strategy, in order to juggle and coördinate competing interests. In denigrating the video game, Johnson argues, we have confused it with other phenomena in teen-age life, like multitasking-simultaneously e-mailing and listening to music and talking on the telephone and surfing the Internet. Playing a video game is, in fact, an exercise in "constructing the proper hierarchy of tasks and moving through the tasks in the correct sequence," he writes. "It's about finding order and meaning in the world, and making decisions that help create that order."


It doesn't seem right, of course, that watching "24" or playing a video game could be as important cognitively as reading a book. Isn't the extraordinary success of the "Harry Potter" novels better news for the culture than the equivalent success of "Grand Theft Auto III"? Johnson's response is to imagine what cultural critics might have said had video games been invented hundreds of years ago, and only recently had something called the book been marketed aggressively to children:

Reading books chronically understimulates the senses. Unlike the longstanding tradition of gameplaying-which engages the child in a vivid, three-dimensional world filled with moving images and musical sound-scapes, navigated and controlled with complex muscular movements-books are simply a barren string of words on the page. . . .
Books are also tragically isolating. While games have for many years engaged the young in complex social relationships with their peers, building and exploring worlds together, books force the child to sequester him or herself in a quiet space, shut off from interaction with other children. . . .
But perhaps the most dangerous property of these books is the fact that they follow a fixed linear path. You can't control their narratives in any fashion-you simply sit back and have the story dictated to you. . . . This risks instilling a general passivity in our children, making them feel as though they're powerless to change their circumstances. Reading is not an active, participatory process; it's a submissive one.

He's joking, of course, but only in part. The point is that books and video games represent two very different kinds of learning. When you read a biology textbook, the content of what you read is what matters. Reading is a form of explicit learning. When you play a video game, the value is in how it makes you think. Video games are an example of collateral learning, which is no less important.

Being "smart" involves facility in both kinds of thinking-the kind of fluid problem solving that matters in things like video games and I.Q. tests, but also the kind of crystallized knowledge that comes from explicit learning. If Johnson's book has a flaw, it is that he sometimes speaks of our culture being "smarter" when he's really referring just to that fluid problem-solving facility. When it comes to the other kind of intelligence, it is not clear at all what kind of progress we are making, as anyone who has read, say, the Gettysburg Address alongside any Presidential speech from the past twenty years can attest. The real question is what the right balance of these two forms of intelligence might look like. "Everything Bad Is Good for You" doesn't answer that question. But Johnson does something nearly as important, which is to remind us that we shouldn't fall into the trap of thinking that explicit learning is the only kind of learning that matters.

In recent years, for example, a number of elementary schools have phased out or reduced recess and replaced it with extra math or English instruction. This is the triumph of the explicit over the collateral. After all, recess is "play" for a ten-year-old in precisely the sense that Johnson describes video games as play for an adolescent: an unstructured environment that requires the child actively to intervene, to look for the hidden logic, to find order and meaning in chaos.

One of the ongoing debates in the educational community, similarly, is over the value of homework. Meta-analysis of hundreds of studies done on the effects of homework shows that the evidence supporting the practice is, at best, modest. Homework seems to be most useful in high school and for subjects like math. At the elementary-school level, homework seems to be of marginal or no academic value. Its effect on discipline and personal responsibility is unproved. And the causal relation between high-school homework and achievement is unclear: it hasn't been firmly established whether spending more time on homework in high school makes you a better student or whether better students, finding homework more pleasurable, spend more time doing it. So why, as a society, are we so enamored of homework? Perhaps because we have so little faith in the value of the things that children would otherwise be doing with their time. They could go out for a walk, and get some exercise; they could spend time with their peers, and reap the rewards of friendship. Or, Johnson suggests, they could be playing a video game, and giving their minds a rigorous workout.




The Long Tail: Mainstream Media Meltdown

The Long Tail: Mainstream Media Meltdown: "here's a list of all the forms of major media and how they're trending. Make of it what you will.

Flat to Down to Way Down:

* Music: sales last year were down 21% from their peak in 1999
* Television: network TV's audience share has fallen by a third since 1985
* Radio: listenership is at a 27-year low
* Newspapers: circulation peaked in 1987, and the decline is accelerating
* Magazines: total circulation peaked in 2000 and is now back to 1994 levels (but a few premier titles are bucking the trend!)
* Books: sales growth is lagging the economy as whole

Up:

* Movies: 2004 was another record year, both for theaters and DVDs
* Videogames: even in the last year of this generation of consoles, sales hit a new record
* Web: online ads will grow 30% this year, breaking $10 billion (5.4% of all advertising)"

Probe of Scrutiny on PBS Is Urged

Probe of Scrutiny on PBS Is Urged: "In a letter released Wednesday evening, Reps. David Obey of Wisconsin and John D. Dingell of Michigan asked CPB Inspector General Kenneth A. Konz to investigate the contracting, hiring and policies of the corporation, which distributes federal funds to public television stations. "

Lost Remote: BBC opens up the backstage

Lost Remote: BBC opens up the backstage: "The BBC has just launched (in beta) BBC Backstage, a site for developers to access content and services to create their own BBC applications. The slogan is, 'Use our stuff. Build your stuff.'"

Monday, May 09, 2005

Internet TV Age Is Dawning, but Who Will Watch?

Internet TV Age Is Dawning, but Who Will Watch?

craigblog: Regarding recent comments re citizen journalism

craigblog: Regarding recent comments re citizen journalism: "Just to be clear on what I've been saying recently, comments that didn't make it into print:


* We really need to preserve and grow existing news structures.
* We need talented people growing into professional roles to complement existing structures.
* craigslist may or may not play a role in this."

Monday, May 02, 2005

Newspapers free to high income homes

Poynter Online - Romenesko: "SF Examiner publisher Scott McKibben tells Mark Jurkowitz: 'I think you have to go in with a premise that we are living in a time and generation of folks that really don't believe you should pay for access to news.'"

Jackson's Junction: Video: Daily Show w/ Jay Rosen

Jackson's Junction: Video: Daily Show w/ Jay Rosen

WSJ.com - Newspaper Circulation Continues Decline, Forcing Tough Decisions

WSJ.com - Newspaper Circulation Continues Decline, Forcing Tough Decisions: "The newspaper industry, already suffering from circulation problems, could be looking at its worst numbers in more than a decade.

Circulation numbers to be released today by the Audit Bureau of Circulations probably will show industrywide declines of 1% to 3%, according to people familiar with the situation -- possibly the highest for daily newspapers since the industry shed 2.6% of subscribers in 1990-91."

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