I still believe journalism is needed. Good journalists will always be needed if this country is to maintain a healthy democracy. But sometimes the road is hard, and journalists face a huge challenge: how best to take the step.
Today in my Principles of Journalism class we watched a documentary by Manny Mendoza called "Stop the Presses: The American Newspaper in Peril." The fact that news readership is moving online came across very clearly. There are still people out there who take a newspaper and even prefer it to Web news, but that generational gulf keeps growing wider. Advertisers are moving swiftly online and drawing the "lifeblood" of newspapers with them. Journalists must figure out a way for their newspapers to survive online.
With the drop in profits, and the realization that one man could be made to do the work of two men, comes media consolidation and "multimedia" journalists. Journalists and aspiring journalists must now be more well-rounded and innovative than ever before.
The Web is an "instant" medium. Users are used to browsing on their own time; how they like and when they like. As a result, time has become the key for journalists. Time is tricky; on one hand, journalists can update their stories and make changes as necessary while still offering timely and relevant news to their readers. On the other hand, many users only make one pass before moving on. They don't check back for updates or corrections. The time limit will inhibit the quality of journalists' work. Facts could be distorted, people misquoted.
So the challenge facing today's journalists is twofold: to make it on the Web in one piece and report the best they can with the time they have.
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