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About The Authors

Suw Charman-Anderson

Suw Charman-Anderson

Suw Charman-Anderson is a social software consultant and writer who specialises in the use of blogs and wikis behind the firewall. With a background in journalism, publishing and web design, Suw is now one of the UK’s best known bloggers, frequently speaking at conferences and seminars.

She recently launched Kits and Mortar, a blog about planning a green, cat-friendly self-built home. Her personal blog is Chocolate and Vodka, and yes, she’s married to Kevin.

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Kevin Anderson

Kevin Anderson

Kevin Anderson has been an online journalist since 1996, designing, editing and writing websites for both broadcast and print media. In 1998, he joined the BBC and became their first online journalist based outside of the UK, covering the US for its award winning news website. After coming to the UK in 2005, he developed a blogging strategy for BBC news, helped launch a programme on the BBC’s 5Live covering weblogs and podcasts and was on the team that launched the interactive radio programme World Have Your Say on the BBC World Service.

Kevin is now the Blogs Editor for The Guardian, where he is responsible for management, strategy and ‘leading by doing’ for Guardian Unlimited blogs.

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Corante Blog

Thursday, June 12th, 2008

Information is only scarce if you live in a bubble

Posted by Kevin Anderson

Just back from a week with Suw and our families at my home in the US, and I’ve had some space and time to think about things in a more considered way that I usually have time to in London. Via FriendFeed and a room there on Digital Journalism set up by Adam Tinworth, I stumbled upon an interesting post by Kristine Lowe asking whether you would rather marry a blogger or a journalist. The post has kicked off a fascinating discussion raising a number of issues in journalism. Craig McGinty had this pithy observation:

There are still many journalists who live in the land of scarcity, where information is something to be controlled, unaware that 99% of the time it’s like water and many others are drinking from the same trough.

Journalists are under the misguided belief that information is scarce because they often live in informational silos of their own making. They only read “serious” journalism from other publications and seem to have completely missed the information explosion of the last 20 years with multi-channel television and the internet. It’s only down to their narrow professional focus that they miss the fundamental fact that most people are trying to cope with a dizzying choice for information.

Journalists have only belatedly woken up to this reality as their jobs are threatened, and the institutional response seems to have got bogged down in arguments about quality, fact versus opinion and a fundamentalist construction of what is news. For too many journalists, anything outside of a narrow, overly institutional definition of news is banal and unworthy of coverage. And just as Clyde Bentley of the University of Missouri says that most journalists are poor judges of banality, I’m increasingly of the view that they are also poor judges of fact versus opinion. For many journalists, “opinion” is pejorative shorthand for “something not written by a journalist”.

Once one realises that information scarcity isn’t the issue but attention is the new scarce resource, then the role of journalist as gatekeeper is irrelevant. The question then shifts to: What is the value that journalists add to this sea of information? The answer cannot simply be to add more information. The answer also can’t be that the journalist is simply a better or cleverer writer. Look at information choices, and quality and cleverness often don’t cut through the noise. What is the value that a journalist adds? Answer that question and maybe we can move beyond the rut that discussions about journalism are stuck in and develop a business model to support journalism and journalists.

(Want to see value added journalism? See the Des Moines Register excellent package on a tornado that devastated the town of Parkersburg on 25 May, 2008.)

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4 Responses to “Information is only scarce if you live in a bubble”

  1. Gerel Says:

    I agree that in blogosphere, information and opinions are not judged against the traditional news values and I think social media does stretch the journalistic boundaries in such ways that information and news can be about anything and everything.

  2. Adam Tinworth Says:

    It remains a constant source of amazement and despair to me that so few journalists have any genuine curiosity for things outside their narrow area of interest. It makes me wonder if we’ve been recruiting badly for decades…

  3. Bob Says:

    Can we get over the false either-or journalist-blogger debate already? Kevin, do your colleagues who write for the paper Guardian reallly “live in informational silos of their own making”? I don’t know any journalists who don’t look far and wide for information (multichannel TV included - find me a newsroom where the 24 hour news stations aren’t on, 24 hours a day), then look to how value can be added to that - through context, factchecking, shaping, style. And I don’t know many bloggers who entirely shun the big-name journalists in their fields, either.

  4. Kevin Anderson Says:

    Bob,

    I wouldn’t hold up having a 24-hours news channel on as example of the wide-ranging media diet of journalists.

    I don’t have enough time to waste watching the filler and tolerating the noise on cable news (especially in the US but also here in the UK). I watch them clipped up on YouTube or when someone points me to a clip. It’s rarely news anyway. Continuous television news doesn’t have much place in my media diet. I grab it almost entirely on demand now.

    I wasn’t making a journalist-or-blogger argument. I was making a journalist and blogger argument. As I often say, my reading, viewing, listening habits are voracious and promiscuous.

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