About the Public PressUser login
* * * Join us on Facebook! |
Desperate times call for innovation
American Journalism Review's senior editor, Carl Sessions Stepp, wrote a bulleted list of ways to succeed with the new newspaper. "Maybe it Is Time to Panic," Stepp says. A few highlights:
Hey, he's singing our song! Nonprofit and noncommercial journalism dovetail nicely with the outline Stepp provides. Like the other leading journalism publications, Columbia Journalism Review and Quill, AJR has long been hunting for solutions to the business-model mess. In 2004 Stepp spent some time at the St. Petersburg Times (owned by the nonprofit Poynter Institute) and NPR, and wrote in a forward-thinking piece titled, "Journalism Without Profit Margins," that the staff working in nonprofit newsrooms seem to have an enhanced "shared ethic and enthusiasm" to make the product the best it can be. In that piece, Stepp wrote:
Following up on these observations by writing a laundry list of ways to improve newspapers is a start. But the time to implement new ideas is now. Let's hope that "panic" is only the first emotional response to dealing with this crisis, not the last.
|
Get the newsletterWhat's the big idea?
The Public Press is a project of Independent Arts & Media. |