The "New Media" vs. "Old Media" Debate
Yet sometimes the new media takes itself a bit too seriously, particularly in its proclamations that it is changing the world. (See Sullivan, Andrew.) Today’s Dallas Morning News has an editorial that has been a long time in coming. Basically, the familiar charge of those who most trumpet the idea of the “new media” as a vanguard bravely storming the castles of retrograde “old media” is that the “old media” (I am using the scare quotation marks with irony attendant; I hate scare quotation marks) does not cover (Choose one or more) 1) Big business/government perfidy dear to the accuser’s heart; 2)"Good News" – they only focus on bad news that makes us/me/people I support/causes I embrace look bad; 3) The Real News, whatever that means.
There is a problem with this. As the DMN editorial shows, the accusation is often butt-naked wrong. Indeed, almost every time I hear about one of these stories that has allegedly been ignored by the major media it takes approximately 8.5 seconds to find old media coverage that antedates the Brave New Media’s supposed scoop. In other words: The assertion is often baseless and may well be an outright falsehood. And if the story has not been covered, the reason often is not some deep, dark conspiracy on the part of the news media. The explanation might be simple: There is not enough to the story to amount to a pisshole in the snow, as my grandfather would have said.
This is not to say that blogs and websites and chat-rooms and list serves and whatever else makes up this “new media” do not make up a wonderful and exciting outlet. It is to say that many of the accusations levied at the “old media,” which oftentimes does a pretty damned good job of setting up their own online sites, blogs, chatrooms, and whatever else, are not worth the bandwidth on which they are printed. And if at times the new media is ahead of the curve, shouldn’t that be a good thing for all of us who want as much openness as possible? They would be rather useless if all of these new sources did not bring something new other than a snarky attitude and bad hygiene to the table.