Journalism in the Nutmeg State.

Saturday, November 15, 2008

The next Curry

The Courant has to hunt up a new left-leaning columnist to replace Bill Curry, who ended his column last Sunday. How they do this will say a lot about how well they grasp the changing industry. One possible move would be to reach back toward such very able "old hands" as Michelle Jacklin and David Fink. They certainly know the territory. But a move like that is an admission that the Courant is stuck in "old news" thinking. The next four years will be about some kind of convergence of media, with a heavy emphasis on the online product. Would the Courant be better off looking for somebody with a little more digital expertise and orientation? (Maybe even somebody who likes to shoot, edit and upload video. But that might be asking too much.)

Keep an eye on NPR

Imagine that the ladder of "print" is getting slowly pulled up. Which mother ship is it getting pulled up into? We wonder if new chief Schiller will expand the part of NPR online that simulates print. And locally, they have the advantage of a strong reporting/anchoring staff. John Dankosky is becoming a brand name for them. Four years from now, all news operations will be somewhat similar -- some blend online multimedia plus broadcast. NPR and its Connecticut affiliate might be very good at that.

Should we all get along?

The storm of bad finances and perhaps a subliminal sense that we are surrounded by people who don't like us has driven former rivals into each other's arms in one market.
It's probably a trend, but would it work in Connecticut?
Tribune already has the capacity to be a multi-media news service in the Hartford market.