Um texto no espaço FreeExchange do The Economist com um olhar curioso sobre as opções de gestão dos media no tempo presente.
Recomenda-se.
Extractos:
I’m actually a little surprised that journalism has not been more aggressive or successful with appeals for government help. (…) But I would have imagined that the press might have been able to win public support for its operations based on the “public interest” role it plays.
One wonders if the effort to spice up copy to compete with online sites by focusing more on horse-race journalism, entertainment news, and tabloid stories, at the expense of quote-unquote serious journalism—investigative reporting and the like—compromised the news business’ ability to argue for such support.
Vejam “Can good design save the newspaper?” de Jacek Utko na TED (http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/jacek_utko_asks_can_design_save_the_newspaper.html).
“Jacek Utko is an extraordinary Polish newspaper designer whose redesigns for papers in Eastern Europe not only win awards, but increase circulation by up to 100%.”
Yet in some ways, Palin’s passing the test of the debate seemed to have the effect of reducing her importance as a key player, at least to a degree. She was now less controversial than she had been when there were more acute doubts about her, but she was also receiving less coverage. By the next week (Oct. 6-10), Palin’s presence in the news fell back down to just 18% of the stories and then to a mere 8% by mid-October.