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The case for print journalism

Sep 10, 2016 - Politico - Why Print News Still Rules - "I’ve been an online journalist for 20 years—and still, you’ll have to pry my newspaper from my cold dying hands."

I get most of my news from the Web as it flows to my desktop, my tablet, my phone, and now my watch.

I'm sorry to hear that.

Walking through the POLITICO newsroom I inhale the news from the TV screens that cover the walls.

Mmm. It's possible to get "news" over the TV. ?? What's the definition of "news"? The fictional HBO series The Newsroom, which was about a TV news program, defined news as information that a voter could find useful on election day.

When it comes to news, I'm an ocean that refuses no river. But when it comes to immersion—when I really want the four winds of news to blow me deeper comprehension—my devotion to newsprint is almost cultistic. My eyes feel about news the way my ears feel about music driven from a broken pair of speakers—distorted, grating, and insufferable.

Uh, what? Get to the point, instead of writing the opening to a novel.

Reading online, I comprehend less and I finish fewer articles than I do when I have a newspaper in hand.

I've read a story or two that supports the notion that reading print leads to better comprehension. I don't remember why. That's funny. I obviously read that claim online.

A print newspaper supports my idea of adopting the Slow News Movement.

More form the Politico story:

As a more rudimentary form of media, newsprint has the power to focus me. It blocks distractions. Give me 20 minutes with the newsprint version of the Times and I'm convinced I could clobber anybody in a news quiz who used the same time reading from the Times website.

I don't know about this claim:

What accounts for print’s superiority? Print - particularly the newspaper - is an amazingly sophisticated technology for showing you what’s important, and showing you a lot of it. The newspaper has refined its user interface for more than two centuries.

Define "important". Who gets to decide what is important? Obviously for a newspaper, the publisher, maybe the editorial board, and the paper's editors get to decide what's important. But what if 90 percent of what's published in a local print newspaper is unimportant to me? Enter the web. It's not the local web. It's the world wide web.

But my Slow News Movement idea of reading news for 30 to 60 minutes per day and that's it may be better supported by a morning or evening routine of reading a print newspaper that has a finite ending. Once immersed into the web, it's up to the reader to say, "Enough". The final words on the last page of the newspaper is a hard, finite ending. Then it's time to do something else. Sure, like wasting time on the web.

My Slow News Movement idea eschews the breaking news mindset of thinking that its imperative to know everything that is happening at the moment that it happens. Nope. Wait until the next morning or whenever it's time to engage in SNM reading. Sometimes, a lot of the breaking news is wrong in the early stages.

More from the Politico story:

Newspaper designers have created a universal grammar of headline size, typeface, place, letter spacing, white space, sections, photography, and illustration that gives readers subtle clues on what and how to read to satisfy their news needs.

Web pages can't convey this metadata because there's not enough room on the screen to display it all. Even if you have two monitors on your desk, you still don't have as much reading real estate that an open broadsheet newspaper offers.

Maybe that's because media websites are poorly designed because of the obnoxious ads that consume screen real estate because the media org's business model needs that digital

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