Archive for May, 2009

The President’s thoughts on the changing media world

I watched Barack Obama’s speech at the White House Correspondent’s Dinner last night, and thought his words to journalists at the end were noteworthy. None of it is particularly enlightening, but it shows that even the President recognizes the identity crisis news media is facing and reinforces the belief of many that journalism should – and will – survive.

I want to end by saying a few words about the men and women in this room whose job it is to inform the public and pursue the truth. You know, we meet tonight at a moment of extraordinary challenge for this nation and for the world, but it’s also a time of real hardship for the field of journalism. And like so many other businesses in this global age, you’ve seen sweeping changes and technology and communications that lead to a sense of uncertainty and anxiety about what the future will hold.

Across the country, there are extraordinary, hardworking journalists who have lost their jobs in recent days, recent weeks, recent months. And I know that each newspaper and media outlet is wrestling with how to respond to these changes, and some are struggling simply to stay open. And it won’t be easy. Not every ending will be a happy one.

But it’s also true that your ultimate success as an industry is essential to the success of our democracy. It’s what makes this thing work. You know, Thomas Jefferson once said that if he had the choice between a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, he would not hesitate to choose the latter.

Clearly, Thomas Jefferson never had cable news to contend with but his central point remains: A government without newspapers, a government without a tough and vibrant media of all sorts, is not an option for the United States of America.

So I may not — I may not agree with everything you write or report. I may even complain, or more likely Gibbs will complain, from time to time about how you do your jobs, but I do so with the knowledge that when you are at your best, then you help me be at my best. You help all of us who serve at the pleasure of the American people do our jobs better by holding us accountable, by demanding honesty, by preventing us from taking shortcuts and falling into easy political games that people are so desperately weary of.

And that kind of reporting is worth preserving — not just for your sake, but for the public’s. We count on you to help us make sense of a complex world and tell the stories of our lives the way they happen, and we look for you for truth, even if it’s always an approximation.

This is a season of renewal and reinvention. That is what government must learn to do, that’s what businesses must learn to do, and that’s what journalism is in the process of doing. And when I look out at this room and think about the dedicated men and women whose questions I’ve answered over the last few years, I know that for all the challenges this industry faces, it’s not short on talent or creativity or passion or commitment. It’s not short of young people who are eager to break news or the not-so-young who still manage to ask the tough ones time and time again. These qualities alone will not solve all your problems, but they certainly prove that the problems are worth solving. And that is a good place as any to begin. – Barack Obama

May 10, 2009 at 9:56 pm Leave a comment

Kindle – the future of books?

My professor Chris Delboni showed me her Kindle after class last week. She wrote a detailed post about her experience with it in her blog months ago and has mentioned it in class, but I did not appreciate it until I saw it.

Kindle, a product developed and sold by Amazon, is basically the iPod of books.

As a book lover, I was skeptical about the Kindle’s ability to provide an enjoyable reading experience. But Kindle is surprisingly easy to read (something about it not being back-lit allows you to read it without hurting your eyes the same way staring at a computer monitor does)

After playing with it for awhile, I am now convinced that the Kindle or a product very similar to it will be the future of books. I imagine students no longer being weighed down by heavy textbooks but being able to have them all loaded into a single lightweight device. The current Kindle holds up to 1,500 books and even lets you save your page, highlight, and take notes.

Rather than discouraging book sales and hurting the future of reading, I think it has the potential to revive it. And Amazon has just launched a wider version which makes newspaper and magazine reading easier with Kindle.

I really think this is the future of books, and I can’t wait to get one!

May 4, 2009 at 5:44 pm Leave a comment


Taylor on Twitter

In addition to this blog, I will also be twittering my reporting experience this semester.

 

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