Damn straight. And it is pure agony to get a horse shod, too.
The headline is quoted from a luddite’s lament in The Age — in Melbourne, Australia. Technology threatens the jobs of the farriers of our age, newspaper reporters, and there is nothing for it but to weep incessantly from — literally — halfway around the globe.
Suck it in, suck it up and move it on down the road. Such horses as there are needing shoes are shod, and — to the exact extent that anyone at all is interested — school board meetings are being overseen and documented. How much education do you have to have in order to fail persistently to understand that broadcasting was a low-tech economic compromise? In the world of narrowcasting, everyone gets exactly what he wants, nothing that he doesn’t, and no one is obliged to pay for school board notes in order to see the horse-racing results.
Reporters have always been demagogues in debate, masters at deploying the logical fallacies they never learned in school. Even now, when they want to scare their vanishing audiences with the bogeymen of the internet, they pick the weakest of straw men to pick on. In the case of the article I’m citing, the designated victim is Wikipedia, which, because it lacks editors, could at any moment deceive you into believing that Wednesday is a vegetable.
Do you want to see the future of professional journalism? My pet example is John Cook of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. His “Venture Blog” is a beat blog: He covers venture-capital-funded start-ups as his beat and as the exclusive focus of his weblog. His work is also printed in the newspaper, but that’s anticlimactic — hours or even days late. Cook is a blogger who happens to work for a newspaper.
It seem unlikely to me that anyone is going to pay for weblogged coverage of school board meetings, but weblogging is the future of school board reporting. Content producers who want to get paid for their efforts will have to expend those efforts on content people are willing to pay for. Just about a century ago, a great many farriers learned how to pump gas and change tires. Blessedly, they didn’t have dying newspapers — with thriving on-line editions — in which to whine about their fate.
Technorati Tags: blogging, disintermediation, real estate, real estate marketing
TJ Bell says:
As a newcomer to the field of real estate, I’m amazed at how the real estate industry enables the print media to think they are still relevant. In my market, massive dollars are spent on the local paper that could be used to support new technologies and training.
It just seems no company wants to be the first to walk away from an outdated and ineffective form of marketing.
August 26, 2007 — 7:48 am
Dave Barnes says:
Greg,
Having just finish some Wikipedia editing before visiting Bloodhound, I was sorely tempted to return and edit http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wednesday
,dave
August 26, 2007 — 10:21 am
Linda Slocum says:
Print media staffing has been significantly downsized in our area (Santa Clarita, CA) lately, and not just with one paper. Since much of the local newspaper reporting was presented both online and offline, there’s a noticeable gap in the local news lately. This means that much more of the local reporting falls to the bloggers, realtors and otherwise, that serve the area.
August 26, 2007 — 12:45 pm
CJ, Broker in L A, CA says:
Maybe it is different in Ms. Buchanan’s hemisphere… but I can’t recall seeing much coverage of any local school board meetings in the Los Angeles Times. (Coverage of the Mayor’s bedroom, maybe ).
August 27, 2007 — 3:59 am
Jim Duncan says:
I couldn’t agree more. The level and depth of coverage available on blogs far outstrips what is available in the print media.
My area has a couple of excellent examples of this –
The Charlottesville Podcasting Network – they cover local meetings and radio shows.
Charlottesville Tomorrow
– a privately well-funded group that provides extraordinary coverage that would do well to be implemented elsewhere.
Our own blogging School Board member
– who provides insight simply not found elsewhere.
As a Realtor, I feel if I’m not involved with and knowledgeable of, these issues, I am not serving my clients adequately.
*I am not affiliated with any of these other than being friends with the respective principles and using their services daily.
August 27, 2007 — 6:22 am