VOICES
Everything That Rises
Media
convergence is an opportunity, not a curse
By
Janet Kolodzy
The fear of Big Media has
overpowered much of the debate on cross-ownership of newspapers
and television in local markets. But the issue isnt who
owns the media; its what those owners do with it. Journalists
tend to believe in competition, but when we stop to consider,
competition hasnt always brought diversity and quality in
news. Convergence can if done right.
Convergence means cooperative relationships between television,
online, and print media. In places where this already exists,
good journalism still flourishes. In some cities, local or regional
cable news networks have developed relationships with newspapers,
and diversity of opinion hasnt suffered.
Yet some critics equate convergence with a loss of jobs, heavier
workloads for journalists, and monolithic news and opinion. They
see it as the manifestation of the dark side of media consolidation.
Convergence can indeed be all those things, if journalists let
it.
But convergence can also harness the benefits of online, broadcast,
and print to provide news to people when and where they want it.
Few people get their news from one source anymore. Just look at
all the ways people got news about the war in Iraq. They used
TV for immediacy, online for diversity, and print for context.
Journalisms adaptation to that fragmentation has been sluggish.
Convergence is one way to keep up.
So far, television and the Internet have reaped the biggest benefits
of convergence. Hundreds of print reporters operate in major cities
with only handfuls of television reporters and few, if any, online
reporters. With convergence, TV and the Internet get the depth
of reporting and expertise that newspapers offer. In exchange,
newspapers reach people who would never buy a newspaper, let alone
subscribe to one.
Example: The Hartford Courant collaborates with a Fox affiliate.
The Tribune Company, which owns the Courant and WTIC Fox 61, has
placed its own stamp on convergence. Instead of trying to turn
its print reporters into TV journalists, the Courant hired a television
producer, Ellen Burns, to turn newspaper stories into TV stories.
One example: reports on how New Yorks Cardinal Edward Egan
handled priest sex-abuse cases when he was the bishop in Bridgeport,
Connecticut. While the Courant wrote its reports, Burns packaged
them for Fox 61. Instead of a weak, hurriedly produced and day-late
TV story, WTIC viewers saw a well-researched, quality report.
The TV version also was aired in New York, and the Courant piece
made it into Newsday, both Tribune properties. More people learned
of the story in different ways. The winner: the public.
Meanwhile, local and regional cable news networks have succeeded
by using the depth of newspaper reporting to bring more government
watchdogging and analysis to television. Newspaper reporters realize
the reach of television when they go on the regional cable news
networks to talk about their stories or to provide analysis.
Convergences unfulfilled potential is in redistributing
reporting resources. Watching dozens of media organizations descend
on West Warwick, Rhode Island, after the recent deadly nightclub
fire left me wondering about all the other wasted reporting opportunities.
After the first day, all those reporters kept repeating the same
two basic stories: who was to blame, and how the survivors and
victims families were faring. Convergence could have freed
up some of those reporters to pursue investigative or other angles,
providing some diversity and depth.
The key is to play to the strengths of each medium, and to respect
those strengths. We saw some of that in the war with Iraq. New
York Times reporters provided updates on CNN and PBS, adding depth
and nuance. We heard the Los Angeles Times on NPR or someone from
MSNBC on Imus in the Morning. NBC and Fox News reporters were
filing Weblogs. The war tested the ingenuity of news organizations
to manage resources to get the most diverse coverage.
But convergence, clearly, can be mismanaged. As one Tampa reporter
put it, We need managers who know the value of all media
so that this new tactic can be harnessed properly. A carbon
copy of a story in print, online, and on television doesnt
cut it. Nor does a single perspective.
Journalists can devote their energy to debate the red herring
of cross-ownership or they can channel it to make convergence
work.