Print media does much of societys heavy journalistic lifting, from flooding the zone covering every angle of a huge story to the daily grind of attending the City Council meeting, just in case. This coverage creates benefits even for people who arent newspaper readers, because the work of print journalists is used by everyone from politicians to district attorneys to talk radio hosts to bloggers. The newspaper people often note that newspapers benefit society as a whole. This is true, but irrelevant to the problem at hand; Youre gonna miss us when were gone! has never been much of a business model. So who covers all that news if some significant fraction of the currently employed newspaper people lose their jobs?
I dont know. Nobody knows. Were collectively living through 1500, when its easier to see whats broken than what will replace it. The internet turns 40 this fall. Access by the general public is less than half that age. Web use, as a normal part of life for a majority of the developed world, is less than half that age. We just got here. Even the revolutionaries cant predict what will happen.
Imagine, in 1996, asking some net-savvy soul to expound on the potential of craigslist, then a year old and not yet incorporated. The answer youd almost certainly have gotten would be extrapolation: Mailing lists can be powerful tools, Social effects are intertwining with digital networks, blah blah blah. What no one would have told you, could have told you, was what actually happened: craiglist became a critical piece of infrastructure. Not the idea of craigslist, or the business model, or even the software driving it. Craigslist itself spread to cover hundreds of cities and has become a part of public consciousness about what is now possible. Experiments are only revealed in retrospect to be turning points.
In craigslists gradual shift from interesting if minor to essential and transformative, there is one possible answer to the question If the old model is broken, what will work in its place? The answer is: Nothing will work, but everything might. Now is the time for experiments, lots and lots of experiments, each of which will seem as minor at launch as craigslist did, as Wikipedia did, as octavo volumes did.
Journalism has always been subsidized. Sometimes its been Wal-Mart and the kid with the bike. Sometimes its been Richard Mellon Scaife. Increasingly, its you and me, donating our time. The list of models that are obviously working today, like Consumer Reports and NPR, like ProPublica and WikiLeaks, cant be expanded to cover any general case, but then nothing is going to cover the general case.
Society doesnt need newspapers. What we need is journalism. For a century, the imperatives to strengthen journalism and to strengthen newspapers have been so tightly wound as to be indistinguishable. Thats been a fine accident to have, but when that accident stops, as it is stopping before our eyes, were going to need lots of other ways to strengthen journalism instead.
When we shift our attention from save newspapers to save society, the imperative changes from preserve the current institutions to do whatever works. And what works today isnt the same as what used to work.
We dont know who the Aldus Manutius of the current age is. It could be Craig Newmark, or Caterina Fake. It could be Martin Nisenholtz, or Emily Bell. It could be some 19 year old kid few of us have heard of, working on something we wont recognize as vital until a decade hence. Any experiment, though, designed to provide new models for journalism is going to be an improvement over hiding from the real, especially in a year when, for many papers, the unthinkable future is already in the past.
For the next few decades, journalism will be made up of overlapping special cases. Many of these models will rely on amateurs as researchers and writers. Many of these models will rely on sponsorship or grants or endowments instead of revenues. Many of these models will rely on excitable 14 year olds distributing the results. Many of these models will fail. No one experiment is going to replace what we are now losing with the demise of news on paper, but over time, the collection of new experiments that do work might give us the journalism we need.
http://www.shirky.com/weblog/2009/03/newspapers-and-thinking-the-unthinkable/
-- http://cleandraws.com Wear Clean Draws ('coz there's 5 million ways to kill a CEO)