Time and the end of media as we know it

Time, Time magazine that is, published an opinion piece I found heartening and just a little sad this week.   Sad, because I grew up with the newspaper, heartening because I still am furious over the way Walter Cronkite and his cronies sucked us into believing America was rotten to the core in the Vietnam era.  Everytime I hear that the three major networks lose viewers, I cheer.

Let me tell you why I happened to look at Time just now.  We don’t subscribe to Time.  Several years ago one of our sons signed up for an LSAT preparation course and somehow they gave him a subscription to Time—I’m thinking now it must have been a lifetime subscription because it’s still coming and we haven’t paid a cent for it.  Makes me wonder how many real (paying) subscribers Time really has.

This may be the first article I’ve paid any attention to in all these years and it’s about the end of media as we know it.  

Yahoo!

Here is what James Poniewozik (whoever he is) had to say about the END!   Following his litany of bad news about the media:

It’s enough to make journalists wonder, Is this the end?

Yes, probably. And a beginning. Because there was good news for the media in 2008 too, and it had a lot in common with the bad news. For while the media business (the exchange of information for money) was lousy, the media (the conduits of information) were multiplying.

Of course, part of what he is lamenting is that fewer people are able to make a living at news gathering and to that I say, so what!   Many of you so-called reporters have let us down and I won’t be shedding any tears.

With the price of information dropping like a bank stock, no one knows how to make money off the media anymore. Or enough money, anyway: most of the companies firing reporters are profitable.

Then there is this:

Like the car companies, individual media outlets will probably have to learn to be smaller. And they’ll need to see their new-media “problems” as part of the solution. Internet users don’t hate the media. In fact, when given the tools by something like Twitter or YouTube, they want to be the media. People want the vetted information the news media offer–and they want to riff on it, respond to it and even, as in Mumbai, add to it. Journalists should embrace that rather than futilely fight it.

Trying really hard isn’t he to find the silver lining.    And, even in their death throes these “journalists” are still patronizing.

This means offering users more ways of interacting, commenting and contributing. It means seeing new media not as the dumbing down of civilization but as a new way of telling stories and even finding stories. And it means recognizing that the audience is no longer passive–it wants and expects to participate, even as it wants help in making sense of the info deluge.

So, Mr. Ponie…., you and your fellow journalists were thinking the new media was dumbing down civilization.    We are not dumb,  and we aren’t the passive sheep that Walter Cronkite led to slaughter.  Thank goodness for new journalists—bloggers—who are getting to the real stories.   Readers can now gather information from myriad sources and sort out the truth without you college-educated professional journalists helping us make sense of it!

Some additional random thoughts:

* I told you awhile back that after subscribing for at least 30 years to the Washington Post I cancelled my subscription right after the election.  I informed the Post that the final straw was their treatment of Sarah Palin.   But, here we are in January and it was still being delivered, so today I called again, they assured me it would really stop this time and that I wasn’t obligated to pay for those many weeks of a free subscription.  I sure hope they were paying the poor carrier though!

* Rush Limbaugh said today on his radio program that “drive-by media” journalists write for each other basically to show off to each other, they really aren’t thinking about us.

*  Over the last few days I wanted more news on the war in Gaza and where did I find it?  On blogs.  I especially recommend Atlas Shrugs who has really been on top of the story.

*  Another story I wanted to hear more about is one that the Washington Post only covered in a sneering op-ed—- the Obama birth certificate case.   I still do not understand why that story cannot be treated as a straight news story describing both sides of the issue.  Well, today, I was out grocery shopping and there it was, front page coverage, on the Globe.  Yes, a supermarket tabloid, you know the kind of publication we make fun of with story titles such as “My child was fathered by an Alien.”   Please forgive me Globe for poking fun, I’ll never do it again.

Come to think of it, wasn’t it  the National Enquirer that exposed the truth about John Edwards and his love child? 

I’ve never bought a supermarket tabloid, but you know what, I’m going back tomorrow and buy the Globe.   So, Mr. Poniewozik, here is a positive thought,  maybe there will be work for unemployed Time reporters at the Globe.

P.S.  I love blogging, I get a tingling feeling down my leg when I think how I’m getting even with Walter Cronkite for lying to me.

Happy New Year!

As we begin another year at Refugee Resettlement Watch, Judy and I wish all of our readers a good year ahead!

In July Refugee Resettlement Watch will turn two and we are happy to report that our readership numbers continue in a steady upward trend.   For a small, plain, focused blog we are thrilled that over 200,000 readers have visited us so far.  

We enjoy posting each article knowing that we bring you information that you might not read anywhere else.   And, in a few minutes I’ll post our 1417th post.

Finally, as we have done on other occasions, we want to encourage you to have the same fun and experience the satisfaction we get by writing a blog of your own!    There is so much information the mainstream media is not bringing to the public and now through blogging we have this easy way of becoming  investigative journalist/pundits (no journalism school involved!)—get the satisfaction of helping advance free speech—give blogging a try!

If you are already a blogger, feel free to post a comment with a link to your blog and tell us and our readers what you write about.

Commenting at Refugee Resettlement Watch

I guess it’s a good thing we are getting comments because for the longest time we didn’t get any so what I am about to say was  never an issue.  Now it is.

As you know already, we do moderate our comments.   First, we are not posting foul language.  You know what I’m talking about, you put it in and we trash your comment.    If you are too nasty to another commenter, I’m going to dump y0u too.    

We also are not posting appeals from people all over the world trying to get into the US.

But, most importantly,  we have lives.  Believe it or not, this is not the most important thing we do every day, so there will be times when we are away and your comments won’t get posted for hours and hours.  

Also, I have decided after seeing a bunch of unmoderated critical comments when I got home that I am not going to spend the evening or the next day answering you all.  You can chat with each other, but I have all sorts of news to post.   That is what I enjoy doing and what I think is needed.  The mainstream media is not telling the public the whole story about refugee resettlement on many levels and that is what I need to spend my limited time doing.

If you are unhappy with things we say here, I encourage you to start your own blog.  You can give an opposing view,  you can explain how you think the refugee program is just fabulous, you can defend Muslim immigration, you can criticize us all you want at your own blog.   Let me know, and I’ll come over and see what you say from time to time.  We will even give you a link!

Now back to work!

Excellent review and a must-read book

Janet Levy writing at American Thinker  today reviews Robert Chandler’s book, “Shadow World: Resurgent Russia, The Global New Left, and Radical Islam.”   Levy concludes:

The United States is at a critical juncture in its history faced with threats from international Marxists, an internal socialist movement and global jihadists. Once any of these elements achieves significant positions of power within the United States, they will proceed with their plans to destroy Western civilization. Our freedom, sovereignty and way of life could be extinguished by any of these forces that are acting against our democratic republic. Robert Chandler’s warnings in Shadow World must be heeded if we are to survive.

Read the review, get the book, and get to work! 

Find your place, your role, in saving America.  Let me make a recommendation.  Don’t spend a lot of time being anxious and running around like a chicken with your head cut off.  Read this book, but don’t spend all your time wallowing in books like this.   If you care about our way of life, our freedom and our great country then examine your talents and find a place to apply them. 

Are you good with people in your community, then be a community organizer for the right side.  Find like-minded people and figure out ways to spread the word.  Create new groups.  Join existing community groups and speak up.

Can you write?  Then send letters to editors, government officials, etc.  Better still, start your own blog and find some area that needs to be exposed—don’t just yak, do research and figure out ways to make your work public, bypassing the mainstream media.  Comment at other people’s blogs.

Join some of the mushrooming number of conservative organizing groups on the internet.  Join a religious conservative group.  Join a gun club!   Help build coalitions of groups.  By the way, building coalitions is a bedrock strategy of the Alinsky school of community organizing.

I think conservative talk radio is great, but it can have the effect of making you think our views are being heard.  Encourage talk radio hosts to give more instructions on action that needs to be taken.  I don’t think conservative listeners always know what to do with the information they have been given.

Anyway, you get the gist!   Find your place, go to work and don’t get too anxious about the big picture (keep it in the back of your mind), but don’t let it consume you.

The Cult of Obama and bye-bye WaPo

This is off topic, but what the heck, the beauty of writing a blog is that one has no boss!  We have a good website in Maryland called the Baltimore Reporter and this story (cross-posted from Flopping Aces) attracted my attention today.  It includes mention of how the Washington Post admitted on November 8th that they had completely gone overboard in their adoration for The One.  No kidding!

After subscribing to the WaPo for 28 years, we are this week cancelling our subscription.  They can write what they want, but we don’t have to pay for it.  The Post is in deep financial doo-doo so I hope this (the adoration of Obama) will be the final straw for them.  Bye-bye WaPo!

P.S.  If you hadn’t seen it already elsewhere see Obama’s creepy cult of personality  discussion at Newsweek.  The Washington Post Company owns Newsweek too, so they all knew, in advance!