Press Complaints Commission (PCC) receives 20 complaints following OK! tribute issue to terminally ill Jade Goody.
Category Archives: Magazines
Project for Excellence in Journalism: The State of the Media report 2009 – ‘the bleakest yet’
Pew’s Project for Excellence in Journalism has released its State of the Media report and – unsurprisingly – the annual evaluation of the US media scene makes for particularly depressing reading this time around.
As the report points out, the problems created by growing online audiences for legacy news organisations have been excerbated by a simultaneous economic collapse.
“Journalism, deluded by its profitability and fearful of technology, let others outside the industry steal chance after chance online. By 2008, the industry had finally begun to get serious. Now the global recession has made that harder,” reads the report.
The report in full, including individual sections on magazines, newspapers, online, local TV and network TV, can be read at this link, but below are some key findings:
Newspapers
In numbers:
- One in five journalists who were employed by a newspaper in 2001 have gone
- Around 5,000 professional newspaper jobs are suggested to have been lost in 2008
- Last year, publicly traded newspaper stocks lost 83 per cent of their remaining value, having already dropped by 43 per cent between 2005-7
On survival:
- Many US newspapers are planning a geographical retreat in circulation to cut costs
- Plans to go online-only may not save as much money as hoped, the report suggests:
“Papers still make roughly 90% of their revenue from print and, although the numbers vary by paper, the cost of printing and delivering the printed newspaper averages 40% of costs. For now, it doesn’t add up to sacrifice potentially 90% of revenues to save 40% of costs.”
- What newspapers will survive and what structural differences to these survivors have, asks the report. Will print still be a part of these news brands?
- The death of the newspaper industry is not imminent, adds the study, as on the whole US newspapers were profitable in 2008
Hope for the future?
- Alternative news operations and websites have continued to grow in number, BUT the scale of these is still small and they lack profitability
- Newspapers have improved over the last year in adapting to new trends and building partnerships
Online
- Insufficient innovation in online advertising
- When it comes to alternative, online news start-ups and distribution models, ‘[T]here has been little honest assessment of economic sustainability’, says the research
- Yahoo news continues to dominant as main news source online – its newspaper advertising partnership and human-based news editing are particular assets, suggests the report
Special analysis of citizen media and new journalism ventures is also offered in the report. Contributor to the newspaper section of the report, Danna L. Walker, blogs here; while the Columbia Journalism Review has created a ‘guess the year of the report’ quiz game.
Online Journalism Blog: What next for magazines? Six reasons why there’s a future
Following his piece on the state of the magazine industry for Journalism.co.uk, Alex Lockwood rounds up six reasons to be cheerful about the future of mags from this week’s NMK’s ‘What happens to magazines?’ event.
[And Another Thing] Arena: Never mind the nipples, it’s all just business
David Hepworth cuts to the chase about the demise of men’s magazine Arena [hat tip to PJ].
“Arena was the first men’s magazine of the modern era but that alone doesn’t guarantee anyone’s survival.
“As they say in the Wild West, pioneers are often dead men with arrows in their backs.”.
Waxy.org: The citizen team translating the Economist into Chinese
If you haven’t spotted this already it’s definitely worth a read: Andy Baio looks at a very unusual online collaboration project.
A group of fans are translating each weekly issue of the Economist magazine into Chinese and distributing it via PDFs to a Chinese audience. They call themselves ‘The Eco Team’. Full story at this link…
Ethan Zuckerman’s post is another look at what’s happening.
Folio: New investors for UGC photo magazine JPG?
Following its closure earlier this year publisher 8020 Media has found new backers and will relaunch user-generated magazine JPG.
RBI staff vote against further industrial action
National Union of Journalist (NUJ) members at Reed Business Information (RBI) have voted against further industrial action following a strike ballot at the publisher.
In the Wednesday ballot, 111 voted against further action being taken in response to proposed merger of production desks at Flight International, ICIS and Contract Journal and issues of compulsory redundancies.
According to an internal memo seen by Journalism.co.uk, the NUJ chapel will meet with the company again on March 4 to discuss new offers to staff, with separate meetings to be held for members at New Scientist and Estates Gazette.
In the ballot, 64 NUJ members voted in favour of taking industrial action.
Last month the group announced 35 staff redundancies in the UK, citing ‘long-term structural needs’ and the new challenges of the economic downturn.
Parent company Reed Elsevier recently extended loan arrangements for its $2 billion debt.
In December Reed terminated the sale of magazine arm RBI, as a result of ‘the recent deterioration in macro-economic outlook and poor credit market conditions’.
Smashingmagazine.com: New ‘Magazeen’ WordPress Theme
Your thoughts please on this new blog theme from SmashingMagazine.
Dan Blank: What benefits is Twitter bringing to magazine brands?
Missed this great post from Dan Blank last week looking at what impact using Twitter has had on the School Library Journal, published by Reed Business Information (RBI).
Mediabistro: CJR to investigate magazines’ online problem
The Columbia Journalism Review (CJR) has received a $230,000 grant from the MacArthur Foundation to investigate why magazine websites are struggling to grow online traffic and audiences.