Recipe For Big-Media Success: Ignore Your Audience

from the all-the-news-that-we-decide-is-fit-to-print dept

A post on a newspaper-industry blog takes the Torontoist to task for ignoring the story of the arrests of a number of suspected terrorists in the city, something the city and country's mainstream media was all over. Never mind that Torontoist, like the other "-ist" sites, doesn't pretend to be a straight-up news site, it's more interested in pop culture and entertainment, and its editors are probably intelligent enough to realize that it didn't have much to add to a story that its audience had probably already seen elsewhere. The post is pretty telling, though, in that it reflects the mainstream media's idea that being everything to everyone is a viable strategy, particularly online, also ignoring the reality that bloggers don't need to be journalists at all. It's interesting to note that when Torontoist did cover the story, its entry didn't solicit any comments -- so perhaps actually knowing your audience isn't such a bad thing. The original dressing-down ends with an arrogant comment typical of too many journalists' view of bloggers: "They need to learn a lot about journalism." If that's the case, then this guy needs to learn a lot about the internet.
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  • identicon
    JustAnotherHero, 6 Jun 2006 @ 11:07am

    um... ok how does that have anything to do with the title? Sounds like a fishing trip similar to the crap cnet has been pumping out of late.

    And seriously, how meaningless are your lives that you feel the need to point out that your made the first comment?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      whargoul, 6 Jun 2006 @ 11:30am

      Re:

      ...how meaningless are your lives that you feel the need to point out that your made the first comment

      Second Post!

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Just Another Joe, 6 Jun 2006 @ 11:38am

    Where's the link to the article basking the Toronto? The "ignoring the story" link points to an unrelated -- yet useful -- article about a Firefox flash killer. -- Using this link gives you a direct link to the article. http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=31

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Just Another Joe, 6 Jun 2006 @ 11:38am

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Jan Christiansen, 6 Jun 2006 @ 11:54am

    Big media

    The problem big media has with the terrorist arrests in Canada is that they do not have the facts and so they are reporting speculation and reaction as news.

    It was not useful to me to hear a commentator on the CBC radio network this morning speculating that when the suspects were running around in the woods with guns maybe they were just playing paintball.

    Nor do I find it helpful when the media (copying the American networks) go and interview the families of the accused.

    As a Canadian, I want to hear the wiretaps and see the videos then I can make up my own mind. In the meantime the three tonnes of ammonium nitrate suggests some of those boys should wind up doing some serious time.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Last Post, 6 Jun 2006 @ 12:07pm

    Last Post

    *And seriously, how meaningless are your lives that you feel the need to point out that your made the first comment? * Ummm is that not what you just did- or were you trying to be ironic? PS- Last Post

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 6 Jun 2006 @ 4:56pm

    hey joe... YOU BROKE THE LAST POST


    *new last post :P

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Three Men In A Boat, 6 Jun 2006 @ 7:55pm

    Recipe for small-media failure: Ignore your audien

    In Washington, DC, there used to be a bookstore called Sidney Kramer Books that specialized in books on Economics, Politics, and Area Studies. When the big box stores opened in DC, their response was to widen their selection. When the store closed, the owner's comment, with hindsight, was that they should have sharpened their focus, rather than broaden it. The Torontoist seems to have figured this out.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Alan Abbey, 12 Jun 2006 @ 7:22am

    Torontoist not on the story - and big media arroga

    May I take a second to expand on my comments on the Poynter blog. If Torontoist made a point of saying on its web site that it is a blog about pop culture and fun stuff in Toronto, then I'd say the criticisms and the claims that it "knows its audience" is on point. But it doesn't. It says it is a blog about everything going on in Toronto. Even if it doesn't have any investigative reporters, it could at least have pointed to the best stories out there and added some meaningul commentary about how (or if at all) such events will affect the atmosphere and life of Toronto - certainly an area theoretically in their area of expertise. To ignore something like that was just sloppy work.

    Further, the "ists" and other similar blogs are presenting themselves as alternatives to the big media. So, where is the alternative viewpoint? What is the impact on minority communities going to be? Is there even a sense of outrage (at the arrest or that the arrest was trumpeted by the cops)? I still think they should have done something with the story rather than wait nearly 2 days to get to it.

    That seems to me a fundamental misunderstanding of the power of the Web, not my so-called MSM outlook.

    link to this | view in chronology ]


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