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2001
Batten Award Luncheon Keynote
"I
especially want to commend the Pew Center for Civic Journalism for supporting
ways of reporting the news that help engage citizens in public life. In an increasingly
technological - some would say impersonal - world, the Center's work is critical
to the future of democracy ... The Batten Award winners spotlight what is right
and healthy in journalism today."
- Carol A. Cartwright
President, Kent State University
"New Media,
Converged Media, Multimedia: What Shall We Do With Them?"
By Reid Ashe
Publisher
The Tampa Tribune
Jim Batten was never a publisher.
He was an editor, and we remember him as one of the great editors of his age.
As CEO of a Fortune 500 newspaper company, he supervised dozens of publishers
but never held the title himself.
Still, I like to think of Jim as
a publisher's patron saint. Whenever I face an especially tough problem, I find
myself wondering, "What would Jim have done?"
Jim was good at a lot of things,
but he was especially good at managing the tension between business and journalism.
Jim created an environment in which you knew what mattered and you knew you
were going to be heard. Jim set an example of caring - caring about the job
and caring about each other. That was the environment in which we dealt with
conflict. In that kind of environment, it came naturally to look, amid conflict,
for common ground.
Civic journalism was one of those
areas of common ground. From the start, civic journalism was designed to build
readership, community and civic capital. It was supposed to be good for journalism,
good for business and good for our communities.
This was introduced as a revolution
in journalism - a way to repair society's broken connections and reinvigorate
democracy. In retrospect, I think we either promised too much or people expected
too much. Civic journalism is not a solution. It's an approach.
The movement encouraged us to experiment
with new techniques, but there was nothing radical about its goals and values.
This is a personal opinion, of course, but I think we could have as easily presented
civic journalism as a "back-to-basics" movement and thus avoided some of the
pompous denunciations with which the movement was greeted.
In fact, it goes all the way back
to the fundamentals of human nature. No matter how much we bowl alone and build
houses without front porches, no matter how much we isolate ourselves in office
cubicles, in single-passenger cars and in front of the TV set at night, humans
will always be social animals. We still need a sense of belonging and a chance
to participate in shared institutions.
Journalism, I believe, should create
a virtual town square, where readers can participate in the social, cultural,
political and economic life of the community - without having to gather in the
same time and place.
The
image I carry in my head is of the primitive marketplace. It's the agora, the
souk, the bazaar, a clamorous place you could find near the heart of town in
every traditional society. Vendors came to sell their goods, attracted by the
knowledge they'd find buyers. Buyers came for the best selection and competitive
prices.
It was a place to haggle and trade
but it was more than that. It
was also a place to find magicians and musicians, evangelists and healers. It
was a place to renew friendships, tell stories, play games, arrange marriages
and, whether openly or covertly, discuss politics.
Let's get back to the theory of civic
journalism. It says the problem with newspapers, and the problem with society,
is that people are losing their sense of belonging.
Political institutions have grown
adept at manipulating the public as they polarize debate. Journalists abet them,
portraying constructive debate as debilitating conflict, looking for winners
and losers. If you're looking for reasons to tune out politics, to give up on
city hall, to vote for none of the above, you'll find them in abundance in the
typical news report.
Yet human nature doesn't change,
except over hundreds or thousands of generations. We will always have basic
needs as social animals. We'll always need a sense of belonging. We belong to
many things. We belong to a culture. We embrace a set of traditions. We participate
in an economy and in markets for goods and for our own labor.
We even preserve some forms of tribal
ritual. Let me give you a personal example. Before I moved to Tampa five years
ago, I'd barely heard of our NFL team, the Buccaneers. This past year I barely
missed a game. Why? Because every Monday morning during the football season,
that's what people are talking about. You can't avoid it. Talking about the
Bucs has become a tribal ritual. It lets us begin an encounter by establishing
our common loyalty. It's a form of recognition, a sort of tribal grunt.
This, too, is a need that's fed by
newspapers. We are, or should be, the medium for all manner of social and cultural
interaction. Our role is not just to report the news, but to give people a sense
of belonging.
There
was a time when news held its own value. People who lived in isolation would
eagerly await the next ship or telegraphed report. Today we're awash in a sea
of news. It's everywhere - on the radio, the television, the Internet, even
on our pagers and Palm Pilots. News has become a commodity, its value driven
down by abundance.
We have to find ways to raise the
value of news. The value is not in the raw information. It's in its ability
to support linkages and relationships and to facilitate participation.
Former Wichita Eagle Editor
Buzz Merritt gave us the image of the lonely lineman, out in miserable weather
repairing a broken cable, strand by strand. That's his view of the civic journalist,
out repairing severed connections - between journalists and communities, citizens
and community institutions, citizens and each other, citizens and their newspapers.
Making Connections
Now, let's talk about another way
to make connections, the Internet. This has been a real "Field of Dreams." We
built it and they came. The problem was, they didn't bring money.
We all played out our dreams: Publishers
dreamed the Internet was a newspaper. To broadcasters, it was a TV set. To retailers,
it was a store. To bankers, it was a branch.
To investors, of course, it was a
bust.
But the Internet is here to stay.
You can find almost anything on the
Internet - school lunch menus, trash collection schedules, neighborhood association
meetings. There's more information about city hall and the school board on the
Internet than we can ever publish in the newspaper. It's more than information.
You can find like-minded citizens and join their mailing lists. And you can
find new competition for classified ads.
But even as the Internet creates
paths around newspapers, it also gives us a marvelous new tool. We can update
our stories all day and tell them in unlimited space. Readers can discuss them
in the same virtual space. We can integrate video and interactive maps and put
an archive at the reader's fingertips. We can enhance advertising with deep,
searchable information. We can use sophisticated software to match buyers and
sellers.
This is important, because as civic
journalists, our job is to make connections. And here we have a tool that sends
messages, from anywhere to anywhere else, with blazing speed, in elaborate complexity.
This is for us!
It didn't take long for us to discover
that readers could write back to us and to each other. Some journalists saw
this as a nuisance. Our mailboxes get cluttered with nut mail, but we also pick
up good leads.
We
moved on to some things we couldn't do in the newspaper. We created online guides
to community life. We found ways to augment our classified ads. We began to
make our databases available online. What really sets the Internet apart from
every medium that preceded it, though, is its inclusion of all manner of user-generated
content.
Journalists are instinctively wary
of user postings. We haven't screened them. They're often slanderous or wrong
or politically incorrect. They are, however, the real world, and they're going
to be out there whether we like them or not. If we attach them to our own sites,
we can give them a sense of direction if not a constructive purpose. This is
public participation in raw form. It's not always pretty. But it's close to
the heart of our mission as civic journalists.
American journalism is once again
experiencing the stress of hard times. Make no mistake. We're getting whipsawed.
Advertising is in retreat, yet newsprint prices are continuing to rise. We're
facing and making tough choices. Most of us are beyond the point of doing more
with less. Now we have to do less with less still.
There are two ways to cope with stressful
times. The natural tendency is to put your head down and revert to familiar
patterns. The other is to decide what's fundamental and preserve it at the cost,
if necessary, of everything else.
Civic journalism, among its many
benefits, gives us a way of setting priorities. It says we're here to talk about
the shared interests of our community, the things that will stimulate civic
discourse and make connections. It says the Internet is a tool that lends itself
to the task. And it suggests that all of this supports our efforts to build
a commercial marketplace.
There are no easy answers, but there
are better ways to do hard things. I learned this from Jim Batten: Agree on
values, treat people with respect and look for common ground. That's a good
approach to management, and to journalism too.
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