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.What would happen if there were no more “linear” television outlets on stories like these? I read the papers often during the day, and the AP, and Twitter, but there would be a huge hole without television news organizations with ongoing assets in the field. Will Amazon or Hulu be doing that down the road? I guess I will have to get CNN+
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If it helps, I have not seen Don Lemon or Rachel Maddow once since the invasion started.
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On Feb 27, 2022, at 9:10 PM, Kevin M. <drunkba...@gmail.com> wrote:
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Early this morning CNN’s Matthew Chance did get out and about, and had a riveting video report on the aftermath for a Russian column that had been repulsed from an advance on the Capital over a bridge. He showed tanks and trucks and armored vehicles completely destroyed (by those American Javelins Trump tried to use to extort fake dirt on the Bidens 3 years ago?). He alluded to dead Russian bodies he did not want to show, then (inadvertently I am prepared to believe) did come up on a dead Russian that was shown briefly, and now I have seen the piece rerun at least once, so I guess that did not violate CNN policy too much. The piece also showed him crouching down, then realizing he was inches from an unexploded grenade and moving away with deliberate speed.It was pretty valid news, and very good TV. I’m sure CNN will repeat it if ten throughout today.I admit to not having a good understanding of what a streaming-dominant television world will look like. I am not sure how linear news divisions could be maintained without a critical sized audience. aBC can always have talking heads and broadcast video it gets from others, but whatever vestige remains of an actual news gathering operation could not be maintained if it only had sizable numbers of viewers during intermediate crises. Maybe streaming networks will be able to support real news divisions in the future, but my experience with Netflix like operations has not included many live programs. Lives sporting events is the exception, but those are set pieces, relatively passive. Will a day come when one of the options on Amazon or Netflix or Disney is a live Newscast?Adam’s point about the need for a “filter” is precisely what I have been trying to say. I too have spent a lot of time clicking on Twitter IDs and then trying to research the credibility of the source. Consumers of News should not have to function as producers and editors and fact checkers. It reminds me of my experience at work, with patients coming in having diagnosed themselves and created their own treatment plans from cursory Google searches. If my use of the internet to get information about breaking news events is as accurate as what my patients bring to me about their own mental health, we are in big trouble. Plus, I find that the more a conclusion is the result of one’s own internet searching, the more stubborn one is to hang on to them, even in the face of contradictory expert judgement. Indeed, the whole culture and spirit of the Internet seems to be aimed at freeing people from the tyranny if “experts” - aka people who know what the hell they are talking about. We have seen the harvest if this approach in Vaccine denial.
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PGage wrote:"I admit to not having a good understanding of what a streaming-dominant television world will look like. I am not sure how linear news divisions could be maintained without a critical sized audience. aBC can always have talking heads and broadcast video it gets from others, but whatever vestige remains of an actual news gathering operation could not be maintained if it only had sizable numbers of viewers during intermediate crises. Maybe streaming networks will be able to support real news divisions in the future, but my experience with Netflix like operations has not included many live programs. Lives sporting events is the exception, but those are set pieces, relatively passive. Will a day come when one of the options on Amazon or Netflix or Disney is a live Newscast?"This is an interesting question. Currently channels like CNN and Fox News are profitable because they create appointment to view programming in primetime that can be sold to advertisers, but also those cable bundle revenues. As the cable audience declines and everyone moves to streaming, at some point that becomes a significant challenge.I do think that at some point bundles will be become bigger and slightly less fluid than they are now. It's really not in, say, Disney's interest that I can subscribe for a month, binge the latest series and then cancel. If that churn becomes a major problem, then I can see it becoming more like traditional cable contracts where you have to subscribe for a year or more, and can't cancel at a moment's notice. On the other hand, it's entirely likely that Disney will eventually push you to a Disney/Hulu/ESPN combo, just as Warner-Discovery push you to an HBO Max/Discovery+/CNN combo.The question is whether everyone will do news, and what we've seen in recent years is that with a few exceptions, news isn't all that profitable. Local news outlets have gone, and even the local TV news operations which are perhaps profitable right now, rely on network TV to maintain their position. When those viewers go, where does leave those who can't pay or at least subsidise local news? Big regional US papers seem to be in the hands of asset-stripping hedge funds who probably aren't looking more than a handful of years forward. And then there are a few who are in much better positions and are cleaning up. The New York Times busily growing a powerful subs business, and the Washington Post having a benign billionaire owning it (benign in that I don't believe he interferes editorially). Globally, beyond CNN and some specialist financial news players like Bloomberg and CNBC, you have state funded outlets. The BBC is paid for directly via UK licence fees by citizens (although some of it is ad-supported). See also Deutsche Welle, Al Jazeera and many others. There are agencies like Reuters and AP, but they require subscribing services to stay afloat.Lack of news means a challenge to democracy. If you don't know what's happening then anything could be happening.Kevin wrote:"The vaccine coverage illustrates why counting on a network to filter your information doesn’t work anymore. Yes, it’s more convenient, but when the filters available are deeply flawed, viewers ultimately have to do it themselves anyway. And let’s be honest, the anti-vax people aren’t interested in even basic research; they are merely seeking those whose opinions align with their baseless beliefs. "And this is why we do need filters. A CNN or a NY Times telling me about Covid is vastly more useful, informative, and likely right, than a Twitter or Facebook stream. Viewers won't do it themselves. Sure - some anti-vaxers would say whatever to support their beliefs. But they mostly weren't born that way, they got information from rogue "sources." If we don't have trusted sources to provide information then we'd be looking at carnage. Most people won't look at a tweet, chase down who the person is, work out what else they've said, Google them to find out what expertise they might have in the subject, and then come to a decision about whether what they're saying is accurate.Certainly, Fox News presents blatant falsifictions and misinformation, but does NBC News, ABC News or CBS News? Does NPR or PBS? Does the NYT or LAT? Does Axios or Puck? I might not like or agree with everything everyone says, but they have an editorial process that does indeed filter the firehose of "content" gushing out of the internet. And we need that.
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PGage wrote:"I admit to not having a good understanding of what a streaming-dominant television world will look like. I am not sure how linear news divisions could be maintained without a critical sized audience. aBC can always have talking heads and broadcast video it gets from others, but whatever vestige remains of an actual news gathering operation could not be maintained if it only had sizable numbers of viewers during intermediate crises. Maybe streaming networks will be able to support real news divisions in the future, but my experience with Netflix like operations has not included many live programs. Lives sporting events is the exception, but those are set pieces, relatively passive. Will a day come when one of the options on Amazon or Netflix or Disney is a live Newscast?"This is an interesting question. Currently channels like CNN and Fox News are profitable because they create appointment to view programming in primetime that can be sold to advertisers, but also those cable bundle revenues. As the cable audience declines and everyone moves to streaming, at some point that becomes a significant challenge.I do think that at some point bundles will be become bigger and slightly less fluid than they are now. It's really not in, say, Disney's interest that I can subscribe for a month, binge the latest series and then cancel. If that churn becomes a major problem, then I can see it becoming more like traditional cable contracts where you have to subscribe for a year or more, and can't cancel at a moment's notice. On the other hand, it's entirely likely that Disney will eventually push you to a Disney/Hulu/ESPN combo, just as Warner-Discovery push you to an HBO Max/Discovery+/CNN combo.The question is whether everyone will do news, and what we've seen in recent years is that with a few exceptions, news isn't all that profitable. Local news outlets have gone, and even the local TV news operations which are perhaps profitable right now, rely on network TV to maintain their position. When those viewers go, where does leave those who can't pay or at least subsidise local news? Big regional US papers seem to be in the hands of asset-stripping hedge funds who probably aren't looking more than a handful of years forward. And then there are a few who are in much better positions and are cleaning up. The New York Times busily growing a powerful subs business, and the Washington Post having a benign billionaire owning it (benign in that I don't believe he interferes editorially). Globally, beyond CNN and some specialist financial news players like Bloomberg and CNBC, you have state funded outlets. The BBC is paid for directly via UK licence fees by citizens (although some of it is ad-supported). See also Deutsche Welle, Al Jazeera and many others. There are agencies like Reuters and AP, but they require subscribing services to stay afloat.Lack of news means a challenge to democracy. If you don't know what's happening then anything could be happening.
On Feb 28, 2022, at 5:42 PM, PGage <pga...@gmail.com> wrote:
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