Micah Sifry of the techPresident blog recounts an interesting panel on how internet media is changing political journalism. I want to specifically focus on these comments…

Jarvis:

So Hillary Clinton has called her campaign a conversation. Can a
campaign be one? Or are they necessarily propagandistic, getting a
message out? Even on the Dean blog that was what it was about.

Brady:

I think it’s more like a conversation that you have at a job
interview, not the kind that you have over a beer. I’m skeptical of
that. I’d love people sitting there answering straight questions
completely honestly. We go through this with each cycle, that we think
we are going to find out who these people really are, and then by
election day we say, why haven’t we talked about the issues? I think
the key thing in this campaign is going to be how do these people react
to being covered all the time.

Rosen:

There’s a problem with this question, that we’re going to find out
who these people really are. I think that is a vain hope. We should
change that to, let’s force these people to be who they really are in
public. Instead of trying to strip away a false facade. One thing that
could change is this: in every campaign the candidate and his advisers
decide things that they don’t want to talk about. But these may be
things that the public wants to know about. We can try to get them to
talk about those things. We can try to get them to be realer in that
sense, in trying to get them to address the topics that people want to
hear about.

The speakers go on to entitle this concept of a candidate being "real" in front of the media and general public as "authenticity". I would like to explore authenticity on the side of the candidate. As Jarvis mentioned, Hillary Clinton has labeled her campaign as a "conversation". In many, many of her video conversations to the public she encourages the public to comment, argue, and to join the conversation. Is she authentic in requesting such feedback? Probably not. She is gunning for the highest political position in the entire country, and a top spot with the influencers of the western hemisphere. Propaganda is the name of the game. And she doesn’t play it all that well. By asking us, ordinary citizens, to talk with her she expects us to give her the answers. I would urge candidates to, rather than being "authentic" to be honest in how they plan on running this country. That is what matters.

The web brings a new atmosphere to campaigning such that the candidate is always being recorded and observed. The campaigns know this and now are able to control every outlet of information. Look at Obama, each of his videos show an energized and charismatic person with incredible enthusiasm and heart. In effect, authentic. But authenticity may appeal to some, what about others who wish to hear how this enthusiastic person will run a country? Indeed this race has gotten really hot really quick. And usually we begin asking issue questions very near the end of the race. With the internet asking all types of questions from all types of angles, what will the end of the race look like? Will we have run out of relevant questions to ask, will we have had our fill of information?

Now Giuliani is slowly getting into the web race. However, his ride is a slow and steady one atop a horse called "I was the hero of 9/11". His media coverage is less web-tastic than the potential democrat candidates but then again, strives within new york. The giuliani website is lacking, what many other candidates have adopted as prime media coverage and message dispersion, video. Albeit the website itself is lackluster at best. However I am not writing to quarrel with the design of candidate’s websites. This is to bring to light what we, as citizens and public media, understand as to the effects of web media on campaigns.

Summary: Web media is inevitable and inescapable. The public eye is always watching. Campaigns understand this and have adapted to control every outlet of information. We can draw new information from them by being persistent and unyielding in our coverage. We can demand honesty to skills less authenticity of person. The facade is there and we know it. Now tell us what we want to hear, be it through a facade or not.

A very good friend of mine happened to email me an interesting article [if you don't want to register with WT.com then email me and I will send you a transcript of the article.] he found in the Washington Times
. It touches on a subject that has frequented my posts, the popularity and utility of newspapers versus internet media. Jennifer Harper of WT wrote on March 13, 2007,

"Political insiders turn to the old standby for updates, even in the age of blogs and cable news. The
traditional newspaper is the most popular ‘destination for political
news,’ according to ‘The State of the News Media 2007,’ a 700-page
report released yesterday by the Project for Excellence in Journalism."

She goes on to say in the article that a major component of newspaper readership is due to the "political junkies" those people who follow politics "closely". However, I beg to differ Jennifer. The fact that "newspaper readership has dropped 20 percent since 1992" is a bigger component to the livelihood or death of print news than a host of political junkies getting their "fix" from papers. In fact, now that politicians are using the internet and YouTube as major outlets for their campaigns one could go as far to say that the brunt of news is begotten online.

Many newspapers themselves are realizing the impact of an online presence and are encouraging their journalist staff to contribute to their own blogs. Check out USA Today and their grasp of internet media. They have incorporated blogs, classifieds, and the well-known formerly paper-unique crosswords and sudoku. The point is that newspapers still and probably will always have some role in our society. Now however it will probably have to be a lot more dynamic.

We crabs in a barrel, you ain’t gettin out until I do first
And that’s why the guns burst
Whatever happened to strenght in numbers?
Some of the greatest minds on the planet are among us
But so many start on strugglin’ and never get saved
Man, Martin must be turnin’ in his grave
Like remind my soul – Akrobatik, Remind My Soul

"Some of the greatest minds on the planet are among us" So true. So very true.

The struggle for power is still ripe in many people. They yearn for the almighty dollar and would do almost anything to attain it. It is true that because of the struggle for power, violence towards other humans was born. Before the notion of violence was ever thought of, we used weapons to hunt for food to sustain our livelihood. Weapons were a tool for living, not a tool for killing. Akrobatik captures this in his inspirational lyrics, the pursuit of peace was lost as an agenda. Taking it back is key. Now with knowledge and community as the forefront of this battle. He says, "Martin must be turnin’ in his grave". Alluding to the peace keeper who tragically departed from this world before his vision was fully realized.

The community is here. We are gathering together, sharing information and ideas on a global scale. The key is in the content. Now that content is being generated by more and more people we can see a multitude of minds coming together to foster knowledge and progress. Blogging is the latest realization of this. Blogging is uniting the greatest thinkers in the world underneath their own unique umbrellas. Each niche is breaking the boundaries between the professional and the layman. Status is taking a bow and making way for content.

I am glad and fortunate to be able to share my ideas and notions with the world. What with the internet being such a perversely global agenda, we can decide its future as well as our own.

Such a good title, if I do say so myself! Indeed I began to wonder just that over this weekend, the title of things. They matter so much. After talking to a friend a couple days ago I am still looking back on that conversation trying to figure it out. I am still thinking and wondering what exactly it was that she said which is pulling me back to it. Today I finally figured it out. I keep going back to a sentence she said that I didn’t want to hear. Maybe it wasn’t profound or powerful, but its meaning to me was something I did not and still do not want to hear.

Now, imagine that you have a company, a business, trying to break into your niche with success. The product/service is worthwhile to consumers, the business model is stable, and marketing is doing there job of hooking customers. But, maybe this isn’t enough. Maybe more is needed to either cover current costs, or to embrace developments coming towards you. I say, tell them what they don’t want to hear. Hook them with something they would’ve never even dreamed of hearing from you.

As soon as the conversation with my friend started turning to what I did not want to hear, I began to wonder and wonder. I WANTED to know. I really did. I’m not sure what it was about not wanting to hear it, but wanting to know it. It is like a horrible tragedy that you would never want to hear about but now that you heard it you want to know more. More of what caused it, more of how it occurred, more of what you don’t want to hear. I believe that this desire and curiosity to know overrules every other sense. It does not matter how horrible or how disbelieving, we don’t want to hear it but we do want to know it. Speaking rather abstractly [heh, most of this post is abstract] knowledge is power that we get by listening, listening to things we would not want to hear about in the first place. The listening is what triggers the curiosity. I am still wondering know why she said that, and how she said that, and where it all came from. Could this be taken advantage of by my fellow marketers? Probably.
How can we tell people something they don’t want to hear in order to make them incredibly curious of us? Should we stick to something global or something relevant to our business? Should we use facts or opinions? A lot of questions come up. I think a smart approach would be to do some experimentation. In a certain area you could tell people that your store may not accept everyone but it will be here. "We don’t want you to come to our shop." It generates curiosity, peaks interest. Of course you would probably follow it up with another ad or statement. Something to the effect of, "You can come if you want, but we really don’t want you here." And another, "This is not the place for you." or "We are unique, for unique people." I do wonder how creating dissidence within a community would fair in the human mind. Would they turn to a spiteful mindset in which no one can tell them which stores they can go to, or maybe an arrogant mindset in which they are better than others so they can go in? So many questions I have, and so little area to roam.

Curiosity is very unique. I believe it is one of the most important and vital human traits. Promotes progress, change, development. Of course, my sketchy-unsubstantial plan may backfire on me and people will hate my brand because I don’t care about them. Who knows.s

The Guardian, a prominent paper based out of London, announced that they will be making the switch to a prominently online publication. Owned by The Scott Trust, a charitable organization which believes in keeping the paper completely independent from outside financial influence, –The Guardian has a daily circulation as reported in 2005 of over 300,000 copies in the UK which is on the lower readership bracket compared to the other dailies such as The Daily Telegraph which reports its readership at over 900,000.

Hopefully this move by Guardian chiefs and editors to convert to a wholly online publication will boost readership for the historical paper. Who knows, maybe pixelized news will convert some non-Guardian readers to pick up the "paper" news to compare with what they see on their screens. Jeff Jarvis of Buzzmachine puts the whole matter into a more detailed construct as he was present when the announcement was made. Check out his post, ‘The web is preeminent’.

There are bound to be more advents of paper to pixel conversions in our future. Let’s just wait and see.