The Future of Journalism |
Major newspapers are closing or laying off hundreds. Meanwhile, citizen journalism is taking off at a rate never imagined. What is the future of journalism, and what will the information distribution map look like in 20 years. Is traditional journalism a thing of the past? Read the synthesized article on this topic Recent Blooker Opinions: * Interview with Christian Science Monitor editor, John Yemma * Gerry Storch shares his views on NYT case * Prof. Paul MacArthur believes newspapers need to adapt * David Johnson, CEO of Strategic Vision, believes city papers might be history * Hubdub.com's Nigel Eccles: U.S. papers missed big chance * Sean Dougherty believes the future of newspapers is online * Andrew Degenholtz believes the future of journalism isn't all bleak * Prof. Paul Steinmetz believes online journalism has had many positive outcomes * Jonathan Stark believes the answer is more local news * Former journalist and blogger Thursday Bram shares thoughts on citizen journalism * Prof. Michael Ray Smith believes community newspapers are the future * Former St. Pete Timeser Paul Swider started his own site * PR pro Tim O'Brien: papers' demise isn't good
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![]() written by karen karbowski, October 31, 2009
It is so much fun and I spell better than most of the contract reporters that contribute to mLive these days. mLive is the on-line newspaper of MI. We stopped subscribing to the newspaper because of the bias. I wonder about the future. Will we all distract ourselves in a little bubble of people and then be blown away by something apocalyptic like full-blown communism.
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