Friday, September 30, 2011

Momo Ito and Henry Jenkins @T-600 IU



As a graduate student, you experience stressful moments around course work, research and trying to live a life. All of this effort is worth only if your work is meaningful to you. Being today at the T-600 talk was an inspirational experience. It was wonderful to listen two established media scholars  (and nice people!) who are doing an amazing research but also make the effort to have an impact on society. Their experience in Project New Media Literacies is an example of how media scholars help make a change by bringing to the education system their own knowledge and skills.
It was also interesting to listen to the motives that lead Henry Jenkins an Mimi Ito to their research choices: the story of Jenkins overcoming his mother’s death by reading comics and Ito’s life as a culturally different child.
Ito and Jenkins left me today with two important messages: first, as a researcher do what you love, even if you get "beaten up" by others and you’ll find a way to build a successful carriere  and second- you can only do it by having a cross section of supportive and positively reinforcing networks. 

Friday, September 9, 2011

Media industry revenues are down while production and jobs are stable


Online v. Offline Media in the U.S.: Is the Media Shrinking?
T-600 presentation by professor David Waterman


While revenues of media industry are shrinking, Media production and jobs are more stable than what we expect.

In his presentation at T-600 seminar at Indiana University,  Professor David Waterman claims that while public attention has focused on damage to established delivery systems like newspapers and the music industry, a more significant questions is how is online media affecting the variety and quality of media content.
The results of an analysis of historical economic statistics, based on U.S. census data, shows that total U.S. media industry revenues has steadily declined since 2000 by about 25% in total compared to the lowest historical levels since at least the 1950's.
However, while media industry revenues are shrinking, media production remains stable and jobs in the industry still exist.

Another interesting finding in the data is evidence for a strong shift away from advertiser towards direct payment support since 2000. So if other media such as Television and the music industry are succeeding in this new model, how come newspapers are failing to do so? The answer, according to Professor Waterman, is clear: newspapers cannot charge money for information that is so easy to copy and spread around. It is a matter of supply and demand at the moment news is a commodity that has lost its market value.