What Happens When Journalism Meets the Web?
Election Coverage!
Of course, election night has always been one of the busiest nights of the year for any newsroom. But before the Internet, reporters and editors would wait for the polls to close, get as many results as they could, write their stories, and go home for the night. As we know, this sometimes produced disastrous results:

But these days, the old guard newspapers — the New York Times and Washington Post — are providing real-time updates throughout the night via their web sites. The New York Times web site features interactive maps that are updated continuosuly. The Washington Post has even expanded to the mobile world — you can sign up to get text messages with election results.
I’d love to know how popular that texting service was on Super Tuesday. My guess is that people who care enough to sign up for texts would probably be in front of a TV or at their computers.
Interestingly, the “Dewey Defeats Truman” headline could never happen online — it would simply be erased moments later, as the AP did when it mistakenly called Missouri for Hillary Clinton last Tuesday, and then had to reverse its call and give the state to Barack Obama. Little harm was done — in fact, I doubt many viewers will remember that mistake. A far cry from the fame (infamy?) of the image above.
Blog Overload?
Below are just a few(!) of the blogs that are listed on washingtonpost.com’s Blog Directory. In my opinion, there are way too many. No one could possibly follow this many blogs overall, not to mention just from one Web site. What’s more, their names do little to help readers differentiate and make good choices about what they want to read with their limited time. For instance, in the Politics section alone there’s The Fix, The Sleuth, The Talk and The Trail. Those all sound the same to me! However, they are all traditional areas of coverage for mainstream newspapers, and while producing them is certainly a lot of work, they are not totally beyond the realm of the newspaper’s coverage.
Take a look, though, at some of these names and descriptions. When was the last time you saw these topics covered in-depth in the print edition of the Washington Post?
PostRock: J. Freedom du Lac and and David Malitz riff on the world of popular (and unpopular) music.
Channel This: Writers for The Post’s Style section recap their favorite TV shows.
Offbeat: Emil Steiner on real, strange news.
Under God: Claire Hoffman takes a daily look at what we do in the name of God.
On The Plane: Post reporters file dispatches as they travel overseas with the president and other officials.
I wonder: do these topics really better lend themselves to online coverage, and that’s why they deserve space online but not in print? Or is the Post desparately trying to drive page views by blogging about whatever is left over in their notebooks?
Welcome!
This blog is intended to look at how the Web — in all its different forms — is affecting traditional print journalism. I would argue that the advent of the Web is the single biggest issue facing newspapers and magazines today, both from an editorial and business standpoint.
On the editorial front, the world simply does not operate on a 24-hours news cycle any more. By the time we get the newspaper in the morning, chances are we’ve already read about much of the “news” online. This seems to have produced two shifts: one, more newspaper content is “news analysis” — pieces that try to lend another layer to the traditiona. who, what, when, where, why and how of a story; and two, newspapers have ramped up their online content to be continuously updated. Case in point: even the staid New York Times, which didn’t even print a color photograph (too racy!) on its front page until 1997, now has a variety of blogs on its Web site. (Its blog City Room even covered the death of Heath Ledger with minute-by-minute updates — a huge departure for a newspaper that has always been above the fray of celebrity journalism — but that’s another topic).
From an advertising standpoint, newspapers are dying. Their main revenue stream — classified advertising — has been almost wholly usurped by searchable, real-time and often free Web sites like Craig’s List. This crisis is affecting newspaper in different ways, which I’ll explore on this blog. To read about a recent example, check out this video and article about the departure of L.A. Times editor James O’Shea, who quit out of a refusal to make the budget cuts he was asked to implement by the publisher.
More to come …
