That was today’s headline for The Huffington Post at around 8:30 MST this morning. The headline changed over every 5 minutes to create, I guess, an entertainment appeal to the story. This headline linked to a web video interview with Obama that happened solely on the web as opposed to simultaneously directed to traditional newsprint/TV media. Under the headline, a collage of traditional forms of media (still shots of TV casts and newspaper front pages) frames a YouTube video screenshot. I think that was the point of that headline… A sort of virtual Harakiri directed to traditional media. In reality, this is all more about the vehicle of news rather than the Media itself and it is certainty not about the content of the news. Of course, the surrounding advertisements are the same, cars cars, cars and expensive gadgets destined to lure our CEOs from their cherished bonuses (Sorry, I digress).
Basically nothing has changed… yet! In reality, TV has been engaged in its teenager years, decades ago, denouncing newspapers as a lesser way to portray the news. Now the web journals are basically boosting (bullying) the same discourse about TV and newsprint. But when you look at the content posted with a bit of scrutiny, there is no doubt that the core news, in large, originates from journalists working for paper and TV (see the BBC, CNN, Heralds etc. links after links.) Perhaps it is too narrow to say that a web journal’s primary virtue resides as repurposing worldly news? Web-Corps provide great entertainment but we should give thanks to journalists and writers out there who bring us a take and opinion based on knowledge–beyond mere swirling headlines, hot flash videos and titillating abstracts.
Concluding on a more earthy level, I can certainty attest that this is a news-worthy world and all unequivocally agree that it pays to be out there. Getting your stories out is “in”. Media is media and what makes the “media corps” is the journalists, not the vehicle. Oops! The Huffington Post changed their headline yet again. What was that article?
Who invented the web journal? Take note
I seriously think it can be precisely sourced to the Harry Potter fantasy series as the live newspaper quaintly named “The Daily Prophet” (circa 1990) for its virtual animated viewings. What is worth noticing is how it is described in Wikipedia:
The Daily Prophet is the most widely-read daily newspaper in Britain’s wizard community. The articles include moving pictures. Unfortunately, its journalistic integrity is somewhat lacking; it has been known to be more concerned about sales than about factual accuracy and is often a mouthpiece for the Ministry of Magic, as described by Rita Skeeter “The Prophet exists to sell itself!”
My opinion is that J. K. Rowling invented the web journal (no it was not IT after all). Yes, a creative person… with a story to tell! As a medium, The Daily Prophet is conceptually what a web journal is now.
Posted by cleanpix
We have designed a new logo for our Twitter feed. It is quite chirpy! It contains its own talk bubble.
Sunshine on “cloud computing”
May 22, 2009