The next miracle (v11.1): Owen Youngman

Knight Professor of Digital Media Strategy, Medill / Northwestern

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Co-operative-etition, Chicago style

The festival of links you can create these days when writing about new business models for the news industry is a wonder to behold. As we have noted here before, it seems sometimes there are almost as many conferences on the topic as there are stories about paid content, most of them involving Rupert Murdoch and/or Google.

Chicago News Cooperative logoOne prominent example, of course, is beginning to play out right here in Chicago: The Chicago News Cooperative launched last week, publishing two-page reports in the Friday and Sunday editions of the New York Times. I of course am watching with much interest, given that, by my count, I worked at the Tribune with around three-quarters of the 20 people named on the staff page today.

I suspect the Tribune and Sun-Times are watching with interest, too, given that the Tribune chose Sunday to publish another [not "the second" as originally reported--ORY] in a series of spadeas about its priorities (Capturing the Chicago Experience – click to download PDF, 3.44 mB). Its letter to readers from editor Gerry Kern ends, “We are Chicago’s newspaper. We tell your stories.”

(By my lights, the most remarkable thing about the Chicago News Cooperative example is that the NYT’s own journalists actually wrote about the launch. I guess that’s another example of how the world is changing; in the Olden Days, writing about anything your employer had done to try to improve its business prospects had a good chance to get you hooted out of any newsroom in America.)

But let’s not spend any more time here on background.  If you want more, read Alan Mutter’s piece at “Reflections of a Newsosaur” from earlier this month. Instead, let’s see what Chicago readers found in their driveways and newsstands Friday and Sunday morning, and not just in the NYT (using the acronym consistently today, to avoid confusion).

After all, CNC editor Jim O’Shea and his colleagues say they’re not out to supplant the existing newspapers; they are out to protect and sustain a kind of reporting they perceive as threatened, the public-service journalism “that we feel is crucial for a democracy . . . and provide accountability for the institutions and public officials in the city, county and state.” (Quote is from a WTTW interview with O’Shea, video after the jump.)

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You never squawk alone

The last full week of August somehow wound up being Media Week at owenyoungman.com, maybe because I had been gone to Santa Fe for the opera and chamber music season for the previous 10 days. In addition to some interesting meetings involving the journalism school, the computer science school, and a prospective media partner for some of our work, I found myself on WTTW’s Chicago Tonight on Aug. 27 and on WGN Radio’s Extension 720 on Aug. 28.

chgotoniteThe Chicago Tonight gig (16-minute video at WTTW) was precipitated by the Chicago Reader’s changing hands, an outcome of the bankruptcy filing by parent Creative Loafing Inc.  Not surprisingly, the Chapter 11 status of the Tribune and the Sun-Times was also a focus, although the three cases are pretty different (particularly the Sun-Times’; see yesterday’s post).  And we talked about the state of community media on the Internet here in town, since one of the guests was Thom Clark, co-author of “The New News: Journalism We Want and Need” from the Chicago Community Trust.

The next night’s chat with Milt Rosenberg was two hours of unadulterated fun.  (Here is a 19-minute video excerpt of the opening of the program from the WGN Web site.) With Brad Flora of Windy Citizen – that’s @bradflora to you – and Bill Adee of the Tribune – that would be @Bill80 – we held forth on some of the same topics, but with way more emphasis on blogs and blog aggregations, social media, and all things digital (to coin a phrase).

(n.b.: Should you want to have the whole two hours playing in the background sometime, here’s the link. To quote a Kevin Pang tweet to me during the broadcast: “This is too entertaining for a Friday night….just hearing Uncle Milt say ‘Twitter’ makes me squeal with delight.”)

As we like to say, enough of the pasture.  Next up: more of the future.