[Dialogue] [Fwd: [IP] Google owns the news by 2014]
Ed Reames
popgoesweasel at coralpost.net
Thu May 12 19:09:14 EDT 2005
I thought that this was an whimsickle glimpse of the future.
Ed Reames
La Rivera de Belén
Costa Rica
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-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [IP] Google owns the news by 2014
Date: Thu, 12 May 2005 18:32:42 -0400
From: David Farber <dave at farber.net>
Reply-To: dave at farber.net
To: Ip ip <ip at v2.listbox.com>
References: <00b901c5573d$2bd99af0$2802a8c0 at RESEARCH>
Begin forwarded message:
From: Peter Jones <peter at redesignresearch.com>
Date: May 12, 2005 5:53:58 PM EDT
To: dave at farber.net
Subject: Google owns the news by 2014
Reply-To: peter at redesignresearch.com
Dave - I wonder if you would find this as interesting and relevant as
I did.
Your list comes to mind as the primary alternative channel for this
discussion.
The year is 2014. the press as we know it no longer exists. Traditional
reporting has collapsed. News is churned out by the media giant
Googlezon.
(Google has taken over many companies and joined forces with Amazon.)
The
news consists of blogs, attitudes, discoveries, preferences, claims, and
random thoughts, gathered and shaped by computers and a few human
editors,
then fed back to ordinary people who produce the continuing
conversation.
The New York Times is off the Internet. It still publishes, but the
newspaper has become a newsletter read only by the elite and the
elderly.
This is the finding of a clever, eight-minute mock documentary, EPIC
2014,
produced by the fictional Museum of Media History (in reality,
journalists
Matt Thompson of the Fresno Bee and Robin Sloan of Current, a new
cable news
channel in San Francisco). Thompson and Sloan recently added a short
section
taking the history up to 2015. The mockumentary is starting to reach
a mass
audience at a time of unusually high anxiety for the news industry.
The news
business has been hobbled by a string of scandals and credibility
problems.
Skirmishes between reporters and bloggers seem like the beginning of
a long
war between old media and new. Newspaper publishers are nervous--some
would
say paralyzed with fright--over polls showing that young adults are not
reading papers. Their audience is dying off. A lot of young people
say they
get their news from a brief look at headline news or from late-night
comedians. ...
http://story.news.yahoo.com/s/usnews/20050511/ts_usnews/
googlingthefuture
Mockumentary site at: http://www.robinsloan.com/epic/
Peter Jones
REDESIGN RESEARCH innovation insight
http://redesignresearch.com/blog/reblog.htm
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