James Curran speech: “Journalism in Crisis”

May 19, 2009

James Curran, professor at Goldsmiths College and Director of Goldsmiths Media Research Center opened the day of conferences with “Journalism In Crisis”, a speech on the issues the media industry is facing today.

JIC marks the 20th anniversary of the British Journalism Review and James Curran declared it makes it “a double pleasure to be at the University of Westminster today”.

The major cause of the crisis journalism in facing nowadays is the emergence of internet as a popular medium. Since 1999, the proportion of UK households using the internet rise up to 62%. Two third of the nation is connected which makes us to wonder “What’s the impact of the internet on news production?”

James Curran pointed out that many people believe the internet is not creating a “crisis” but an endless list of opportunities and quoted Jim Callaghan who once said: “Crisis? What crisis?”; words that many academics and media personas echoed in the recent years.

The Goldsmiths professor then dealt with what he thinks are the main issues journalism is facing nowadays. The first one is what he calls “the tabloid approach”. For him, too many newspapers are trying to catch the reader’s attention by any means.

“We must make the readers crossed” seems to be journalists’ new let motive. “If one way to gain a reader’s attention is to make them angry, another one is to make them frightened”, he added.

Curran also believes that today’s journalism encourages excesses and inaccuracy. Too many stories have been “sexied up” to make them more attractive to the readers.

He later outlined how British media are unrepresentative of the nation’s real political views, arguing that the UK press’s political views are way more conservative than the population’s.

An other problem Prof. Curran mentioned was the increasing pressure journalists have to face in order to produce stories fast. They don’t get the time to “think” their angle anymore and most of the time recycle the information they get from a limited number of sources. The consumer ends up reading the same stories in different websites, which undermine the value of news production today.

Professor Curran cited the failures of both PSB and commercial broadcast models, illustrating his point by examples of the Iraqi War coverage in the New York Times.

“The American media tradition is in crisis because it is being converted to the net,” James Curran argued that many newspapers in America are in serious trouble because of the emergence of the internet. “It’s beginning to look as if the business to produce news by advertising is in crisis,” Curran said.

“About 60 newspapers has died in the last year in the UK. Yet, the web apocalypse that is hitting journalism in western countries is not happening everywhere else in the world. In eastern countries such as India, newspapers sales are on the rise.”

James Curran believes that the web is giving the British PSBs a way to reach a younger audience.

Citizen journalism and web-based journalism are getting global. But James Curran insisted that “dominant news brands are still dominant”, user-generated content has not taken over as the favourite form of journalism yet.

First quote from Mr. Curran

May 19, 2009

Professor James Curran from Goldsmiths College will shortly deliver the opening speech “Journalism In Crisis” focusing on “a crisis not just in journalism, but also in media reformism”, he said.

Mr. Curran didn’t expand any more and has apparently been asked a number of times what his speech will be about, but has kept his cards close to his chest. When asked if he was going to deliver something groundbreaking, he said “No, I don’t think so.” Mysterious.

BBC, Sky News at the University of Westminster

May 14, 2009

BBC Director General Mark Thompson and Sky News associate
editor Simon Bucks are two of several journalists speaking
at Journalism In Crisis.

JIC is a conference which the University of Westminster and the
British Journalism Review are putting on jointly.

Over two days, the event will combine talks and smaller
breakout sessions on topics ranging from citizen journalism
to news as a business to how the web is changing all news media.

The event runs 19-20 May, 2009  at the university’s campus
in central London at 309 Regent Street, London, W1B 2UW.

Keynote Speakers

On Tuesday, James Curran a professor at Goldsmiths College will
deliver ‘Journalism in Crisis,’ the first of two keynote speeches that day.

Professor Curran is the director of the Goldsmiths’ media center and
has written many books on media, history, influence and business.

The second keynote on Tuesday will be from Todd Gitlin, a professor
of journalism and sociology at Columbia University.

Giltin writes about the media and America.

Over 40 University of Westmintser journalism students will  be at the
conference covering it live for Westminster News Online.

Opportunities

Coverage which the students produce will also be offered to
the large UK media organisations like Sky, BBC and ITV News.

“That’s an exciting opportunity for [our students],” Rob Benfield says.

Benfield, a TV veteran with over 35 years of experience, is now
a lecturer at the University of Westminster.  He is executive producing
the student coverage.

Geoffrey Davies, the head of Westminster’s Journalism and Mass
Communications department also thinks the conference is good
for future journalists.

“This is a huge amount of work for students,” Davies says.
“But, it’s invaluable experience that can only help them in
their careers.”

Research and Alternatives

Davies thinks that to have the  Department of Journalism and Mass
Communication
, and the British Journalism Review cooperating to put
on  Journalism in Crisis shows the university at its best.

“Events like this confirm our status as the leading media research
university in the country,” Davies says.

In its brief on Journalism In Crisis, Westminster reports that  this
conference will address how journalism’s traditional business model
is under threat.

But, the brief says it will also discuss the alternatives emerging on the web.

It’s the alternatives that are likely to be most interesting to the students in
attendance, alternatives which some students will already be utilizing as they
cover the conference live for WNOL.