Read
Your Newspaper
While
You Still Can
by Fred Reed
Whither the competition
between the mainstream media and the Internet? It sharpens. The big
papers still rule the roost, but they hemorrhage readers and
credibility, perhaps more than they know or understand. People move to
the web, spend more time online, hold the usual media in decreasing
regard. The bright and the young switch effortlessly.
Until recently the paper
press, in a display of self-satisfied unalert lordliness, pretty much
ignored the web. Imagination has never been newspapering’s strong
suit. Ah, but we now have competing snobberies: The established press
still looks uneasily down on the Web as mere bloggery. Meanwhile the
web, brash and assertive and seeing the brass ring within reach,
ignores the media, or perhaps more precisely fails to take them
seriously while outmaneuvering them. The trend line does not favor
newspapers.
Why are print publications in
trouble?
To start with, you can’t
delete a newspaper. Suppose that in a fit of madness I bought the
Washington Post—the daily or, worse yet, the Sunday edition. I would
begin (and frequently did begin) by throwing out the bundles of
advertising flyers. Then the sports pages. Then, probably, the
business section, not because business bores me but because it is so
badly done in the Post. Next, the Style pages would hit the trash,
being cutesy, saccharine, badly written political correctness. Then
the classifieds. Then the Metro section, since I don’t care about
car crashes in Montgomery County or heartwarming but pointless things
done by hopelessly correct welfare mothers.
I would end with the A
section, in which I would read perhaps two stories and none of the
columnists, who are tiresome, predictable, and correct. That’s a
buck fifty (I think) for two stories, and then I have to carry the
refuse to the dumpster. How much sense does that make?
And newspapers wonder why they
lose circulation.
Now, it is important to
distinguish between the paper-and-ink version and the online version.
The Washington City Paper recently reported that the Post was losing
4,000 subscribers a month--subscribers, not readers: they were
switching to the online version. The young, accustomed to the web,
decreasingly subscribe at all. What are the economics of a readership
tipping more and more to the web? We are about to find out.
Crucially, newspapers have
lost control of the means of distribution. Before the web, you pretty
much had to use the classified ads in the paper to sell your broken
lawnmower, the personal ads to find someone to divorce, and the
real-estate section to look for a burdensome mortgage. Now eBay is the
national classifieds. Online dating services offer unlimited space for
photos, text; online reality sites can carry far more information than
a paper. These are important revenue streams. No revenue, no
newspaper.
Nowadays papers face a new
kind of competition. Before, you read your local paper or, at best,
one of a very few. You had no choice. Today people bookmark papers
across the globe. What does this do to ad revenue? I’m not going to
buy lettuce on special as advertised in The Jerusalem Post.
But the greatest weakness of
the American press is moral. Our media are relentlessly, grindingly,
hermetically controlled or, as we say, politically correct. Everyone
with the brains of an aspirin tablet is aware of it. Newspaper do not
so much report the news as avoid it. The taboos are endless and rigid.
What reporters know, they do not write; what they write, they do not
believe. We all understand exactly what the media can say, can’t
say, and will say. Sheer dishonesty rubs shoulders with poor content.
For example, the coverage of the war in Iraq amounts to crafted
acquiescence in lying. Why bother?
The media can’t change. They
are too close to being part of the government they purport to cover,
too steeped in the artificial egalitarianism of the newsroom, too
afraid of each other, of advertisers, of being racist or sexist, too
big and smug and ossified. They cannot report anything that might
disturb blacks, women, homosexuals, Jews, Latinos, or mental
defectives. Although the rosy-fingered dawn may now be penetrating the
hitherto intractable darkness, too many journalists live in the past.
Like IBM when it thought that the personal computer was a funny little
typewriter, they stare into the tiger’s maw and think that it’s a
closet. They would probably invest in slide rules.
How are these hobbled organs
going to compete with the wild west of the web, with its limitless
well-argued sites espousing or denouncing every imaginable point of
view? Compete with people who document things that the majors can’t
even talk about? A conceit of the usual media is that the web consists
of inaccurate vanity sites run by teenage bloggers in garages. These
exist. So do very researched sites by people who know their fields and
are not afraid to talk about them. The difference is stark. The
intelligent know it.
Moreover, newspapers cannot specialize. The web can. This isn’t
critical, but it is another of the countless nibbles of the web at the
sagging flesh of newspapers. If you care about planetary exploration,
for example, why read a newspaper when you can go to the sites of
NASA, the European Space Agency, and Astrobiology magazine? Newspapers
by deliberate policy provide dimwitted coverage. A reader invariably
finds that he knows more than the reporter about anything that
interests him. (Well, sometimes. Often reporters know a lot, but they
have to write for the eighth grade. The effect is the same.)
It isn’t just information.
Newspapers have to pander to the dull political center. Web sites
don’t. If you want a libertarian view of things, there is
LewRockwell.com; left-wing, Counterpunch.org; against the war,
Antiwar.com. Many of these sites link to the established media, but
only to stories that suit them. Thus the majors do the work, and the
blog reaps the benefits.
Finally, websites are not the
only competitors facing papers. There are list-serves. For example, I
am interested in what is sometimes called human biodiversity, taboo in
the media. Invariably the papers peddle the notion, obviously wrong as
a matter of daily observation, that people and races are equally
intelligent, the sexes identical in their capacities.
The field is fascinating,
important, virtually illegal, and studied by exceedingly bright
people. Their work is available on the net in the form of list-serves,
often by invitation only. These amount to global discussions, by
researchers across the whole earth, of what is actually known. Many
such lists exist, dealing with everything from weird lapdogs to
cryptography.
Newspapers? Why?
Note: I write a weekly
technology column for the Washington Times and would like to do a
series on submersibles, either deep or shallow (preferably both). For
what it’s worth, I hold a NAUI Master Diver ticket and have dived
for decades. I can get to the Philippines or wherever necessary. I’d
be happy to hear from any university or company willing to be written
about.