Skip to content

Future of News

Ryan Thornburg

  • About
  • Classes

Tag: history

Journalists Without Journals

Journalism is an inalienable state of mankind. Professional journalism is not.

By coincidence, I recently found myself reading two things that, as a pair, illustrated nicely the reason I’m so sanguine about the future of news and so panicked about the future of news companies. Continue reading “Journalists Without Journals”

Author Ryan ThornburgPosted on April 6, 2008Categories New Media EconomicsTags blogs, citizen journalism, history, pro-am journalism
Ryan Thornburg

Recent Posts

  • 2017 Graduation Speech to UNC Department of Statistics and Operations Research
  • Trump and McCrory in N.C. Counties
  • Round-up of my tweets at #nicar16
  • Survey: Is N.C’s Born-Digital News Legacy Being Sent Down the Memory Hole?
  • Email Newsletter Success Metrics

Categories

  • College Media
  • Daily Filter
  • Data Driven Journalism
  • Innovation
  • Interactive Journalism
  • Journalism Education
  • Leadership
  • Multimedia Journalism
  • N.C. Journalism
  • N.C. Politics
  • New Media Economics
  • Online Newsrooms
  • Online Politics
  • OpenBlock
  • Producing Online News
    • Chapter 11
  • Research Questions
  • Slides
  • Social Media
  • Top Menu
  • Tutorials
  • Uncategorized

Tags

  • Adrian Holovaty
  • Andrew Dunn
  • audience
  • blogging
  • blogs
  • citizen journalism
  • CMS
  • comments
  • commodity news
  • data
  • design
  • Drupal
  • Email
  • Everyblock
  • facebook
  • Google
  • Harvard
  • HTML
  • interactivity
  • iPad
  • Jay Rosen
  • JOMC
  • JOMC 153
  • JOMC 491
  • JOMC491.3
  • JOMC491.4
  • Knight Foundation
  • Len Downie
  • mobile
  • N&O
  • News & Observer
  • North Carolina
  • ONA
  • online newsroom survey
  • openblock
  • Penny Abernathy
  • politics
  • programming
  • SEO
  • social media
  • Tar Heel Bus Tour
  • Twitter
  • UNC
  • Wordpress
  • WRAL

Archives

March 2023
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  
« May    
  • About
  • Classes
Future of News Proudly powered by WordPress