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Corporatization of the News Media

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Title: Corporatization of the News Media


1
Corporatization of the News Media
  • Profits v. Editorial Integrity
  • Can they coexist?
  • Critical Issues in Journalism and Global
    Communications, JMSC6002/March 2002
  • D. Weisenhaus

2
Profits v. Editorial Integrity
  • News is a business. It has always been so. --
    Taking Stock Journalism and the Publicly Traded
    Newspaper Company, 2001
  • The present newspaper business model is deeply
    flawed. --William Woo, Stanford University

3
General questions
  • Are there aspects of news production that should
    be off-limits to budget/company pressures?
  • What can news departments do to enhance their
    profitability? Should they even think about that?
  • What can editors and news directors do to protect
    integrity of reporting from business pressures?

4
History
  • Separation of business and news is only about a
    century old. In 1800, most common name for US
    paper was The Advertiser!
  • Purposes advertise commerce or promote partisan
    politics
  • Joseph Pulitzer Dont teach business side of
    journalism because it would corrupt journalists.

5
Newspaper trends...
  • As in Hong Kong, U.S. newspapers are privately
    owned and try to make profits
  • Not licensed by government
  • Do not receive government subsidies
  • Are protected by law
  • U.S., most newspapers are owned by shareholders,
    stock traded on Wall Street
  • Trend toward chain newspapers. Gannett is largest
    with more than 100.

6
How profitable are newspapers? Until recent
recession, very profitable!
  • In U.S., newspaper profit margins were 2-3 times
    the average for US manufacturing. 19-27 vs. 7-8
  • investment in news coverage, declined 10, from
    1992 to 1997
  • production expense down
  • payroll down
  • marketing up
  • revenue/profit up

7
Hong Kong profits
  • Ming Pao HK14 million loss for 6-month period
    ending Sept. 2001, down from HK49 million
    profits for same period in 2000.
  • Next Media expected profits of HK210 million
    for 2001, down from HK 300 million for year
    2000.
  • Oriental Press Group HK170 million for
    six-month period ending 2000.

8
Grand contradiction
  • Media is commercially based or market driven
  • Media in free society has crucial public
    function promote ideas and inform
  • Protected by law

9
What is the business of news?
  • The business of news is news. Growth of newspaper
    industry driven by publics appetite for
    news...News was product around which business was
    shaped. News was selected, presented and packaged
    in appealing -- and profitable -- ways. (comics,
    sensational headlines, extra editions, penny
    papers, news graphics)

10
Now?
  • The business of news is business, not newsNews
    is shaped by audience rather than audience shaped
    by the news.
  • Business of news is no longer providing broad
    public information to mass audience but providing
    specialized information to smaller and more
    profitable audiences.
  • --Taking Stock

11
Conglomerates
  • Six firms dominate all American mass media. Each
    is a subsidiary of a larger parent firm, some
    operating in other industries.
  • AOL/Time Warner, General Electric, Viacom,
    Disney, Bertelsmann, News Corp.
  • AOL/Time Warner worth 350 billion, 100 million
    global subscribers, 75 million cable homes, 30
    magazines

12
Pro v. Cons of Big Business
  • Pro more resources, more distance between
    advertiser and editorial content, more power
  • Con more resources to protect, less concern over
    editorial integrity, no accountability to
    community
  • Any more arguments?

13
How to rectify?
  • Civic journalism? Booster vs. watchdog?
  • Antitrust laws?
  • New business models?

14
New Business Models
  • Newspapers owned by nonprofits. St. Petersburg
    Times owned by Poynter Institute. Problem Hard
    to start. Need owner to set up foundation like
    Nelson Poynter.
  • Green newspapers Investors willing to accept a
    lower rate of return on stocks in socially
    responsible corporations.
  • Tax breaks for investing in newspapers.

15
Go back to Core Values?
  • Integrity, fairness, accuracy, full disclosure,
    sound news judgments
  • 1) obligation to the truth
  • 2) serve public interest first
  • 3) monitor powerful/offer voice
  • 4) provide forum for comment, criticism
  • 5) maintain independence
  • 6) make news engaging, relevant
  • 7) keep news comprehensive, proportional
  • 8) remain true to personal conscience
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