Highlights from veteran journalist Charlie Meyerson’s Sept. 26, 2017, presentation at the Downers Grove Public Library, where he offered guidance for weeding through digital noise and social media to find and share news responsibly.
4. R.I.P., The Age of Mass Media*
“We have left behind the age of mass media, and so
large, national organizations–including and
especially television – can no longer offer one-stop-
shopping” … for advertisers or the audience.
—City University of New York’s Graduate School
of Journalism professor Jeff Jarvis, 2007
* Roughly 1955-1995, from the
rise of the major TV networks to
the arrival of the web browser.
5. R.I.P., The Age of Mass Media
Gone is the age
when a handful
of editors—
mostly white
men—decided
the news of the
day.
New officers of the
American Society
of Newspaper
Editors, 1962
(Historic Images
Outlet)
6. R.I.P., The Age of Mass Media
And no one’s
sadder about it
than the giants
of that era.
U.S. newspaper ad revenue
Newspaper Association of America)
7. R.I.P., The Age of Mass Media
Now, reporters
are more often
than not among
the last to learn
of—or at least
to report—
breaking news.
8. R.I.P., The Age of Mass Media
And now
everything is so
much faster:
The
competition,
the news
gathering, the
publication, the
follow-up
reporting …
9. R.I.P., The Age of Mass Media
… and what
used to be a
joke—the one-
man reporting
band—is now
reality.
10. R.I.P. also, The Age of ‘Objective’ Media
… when a
handful of large
news
organizations
aspired to grow
larger (and to
avoid ticking off
advertisers) by
serving—or at
least portraying
themselves as
serving—
everyone.
“Traditional media outlets’
intense desire to be perceived
as sober and objective, and
thus to be respected by
conservatives and liberals alike
[was] a business imperative
that has been transmuted into
an ethical injunction."
—Will Oremus in Slate, January 2017
11. R.I.P., The Age of ‘Objective’ Media
Often resulting
in what NYU
professor
Jay Rosen
has called …
“The View from Nowhere … a
bid for trust that advertises the
viewlessness of the news
producer. …
12. R.I.P., The Age of ‘Objective’ Media
NYU professor
Jay Rosen:
“These are two different ways of bidding for the
confidence of the users.
“In the old way, one says: ‘I don’t have a horse in this
race. I don’t have a view of the world that I’m
defending. …’
“In the newer way, the logic is different. ‘Look, I’m not
going to pretend that I have no view. Instead, I am
going to level with you about where I’m coming from on
this. So factor that in when you evaluate my report.
Because I’ve done the work and this is what I’ve
concluded.’”
13. But this “new
way” is a return
to the way
things were
before the Age
of Mass Media.
Between 1930 and 1932,
for instance, Chicago had
no fewer than seven
newspapers, and you
probably got just the one
that most closely
matched your
perspective.
R.I.P., The Age of ‘Objective’ Media
14. So now you’re on your own…
You have more choices for news than ever before—more
great ones, and more terrible ones.
How do you know which are which?
18. How to spot not-news
Read, listen or watch the whole thing
before sharing—especially if you’re not
confident of the source.
How are you reacting to it? Are you intensely
hoping the information turns out to be true? False?
Check it out at sites like Snopes,
PolitiFact or FactCheck.
(If it seems too good to be true, it probably is.)
(Or in the immortal motto of
the old Chicago City News Bureau:
“If your mother says she loves you, check it out.”)
20. Check it out.
Does the “Contact Us” email address
match the domain (not a Gmail or
Yahoo address)?
Does a search for the website name
raise suspicions?
22. What about the source?
How did you find it?
Was it promoted on a website?
(Which website?)
Did it show up in a social media feed?
(Who shared it?)
(Was it sent by someone you know?)
23. Is the source reliable?
Does it cite and
hyperlink to
a variety of
other sources
—including
experts?
Do the facts it
cites appear in
reports
from other
news outlets?
25. Consider the headline or main message.
Does it use excessive punctuation?!?!
Does it use ALL CAPITAL LETTERS for
EMPHASIS?
Does it make a claim to reveal a secret
or tell you something The Media
don’t want you to know?
A note on headlines …
27. Good headlines
Connect content
with the maximum number of people
to whom it’s
useful and relevant.
They begin with the most interesting words.
They’re brief; they omit needless words.
They create—and reward—curiosity.
28. Bad headlines
Fail to connect content
with people who’d find it
useful and relevant.
They’re long, boring and irrelevant.
They don’t spotlight interesting words.
They generate little curiosity.
Or they …
Connect content
with people to whom it’s
neither useful nor relevant
(turning them off to future communication).
29. Are the images reliable?
Can you confirm, using a reverse image search,
that they haven’t been altered or taken from some
other context?
Phony sites often use a real image from an unrelated event.
But even if a source is reliable …
30. Is it timely?
Check the
date.
Search for
the subject
to find out if
anything
newer has
happened.
31. Remember …
Copying an existing
website
and creating fake
tweets
is easy.
Bots are active in social
media and they’re
designed to dominate
conversations and
spread propaganda.
32. Is this really a problem? Will it be for long?
Remember when people needed
lessons in how to search the Web?
44. Not sure
what to
say?
Copy and
paste the
most
interesting
passage
from the
content
you’re
sharing.*
*But don’t forget
the quotation
marks.
Share smart.
47. Connect Facebook to Twitter, or Twitter to Facebook
(Note: You need to write something on
Facebook for this to work. Otherwise,
you just get a Twitter link without
context.)
Share smart.
48. But know the difference
between posting to the
public and posting to
just friends.
(Note: If you’ve linked
Facebook and Twitter,
only your public
Facebook posts will
share to Twitter.)
Share smart.
49. This is just the start. Social media companies have
created whole free courses to help you learn how to
use their tools. Or just Google.
52. And feel
free to
critique
how I do
it!
Charlie Meyerson
linkedin.com/in/cmeyerson
facebook.com/meyerson
@Meyerson on Twitter
C@ChicagoPublicSquare.com
53. News literacy
in a digital age
Charlie Meyerson
linkedin.com/in/cmeyerson
facebook.com/meyerson
@Meyerson on Twitter
C@ChicagoPublicSquare.com