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Signs of the TimeApril 4th, 2007 |
So Time Magazine has gone through a redesign. But along with the redesign, they’ve also changed their editorial policy, and in very interesting ways.
I’ve been reading Time since I was a kid. Living overseas, it was always an interesting experience. For one, the domestic issue of the magazine is radically different from the international edition, which was far more sober, considered, and content-full. Of course, on that level it competed with Newsweek (which was somehow more sober and considered) and The Economist (which is and was the epitome of sober and considered).
What I see in the redesign, however, is a move away from sober. Instead, there’s clearly a huge response to the Internet. The letters column is called “Inbox,” which of course today suggests electronic mail more than snail mail. The “ten questions” section now uses reader-submitted questions instead of ones provided by a professional reporter. But most importantly, the writers who formerly worked to provide balanced reporting and factual content are now editorializing in virtually every article. Basically, there’s a lot more analysis in the news, rather than just reportage.
To me, this is an inevitable and probably wise move on Time’s part. The facts can be gotten from a lot of places on the Net, and every single one of them will be filtering them in some fashion. What calls out to an audience today is a voice. It doesn’t have to be an ideologically-inspired voice either — frankly, I’d rather hear from an even-handed and pragmatic voice than yet another shrill ideologue on either side of the political spectrum.
The days of letting facts be reported without comment seems to be dwindling… and while it opens up lots of questions about whether we’ll ever see truly unbiased reporting, it does mean that perhaps less facts will pass by unexamined. And that would be a good thing.

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[...] Danuser yesterday commented on Raph Koster’s Signs of the Time, “Cable news is a joke. The FCC only cares about censoring smut, not monitoring [...]
that people latch on to magnetic voices. In a day when there are more voices than ever, people have far more access to information (and opinion) than they have ever had in all of history. By just about any metric, I’d surmise we are a lot better off. http://www.raphkoster.com/2007/04/04/signs-of-the-time/#comment-120759 Nice. True. Golden Age Syndrome strikes again! (And is summarily slain.)
[...] accountability and accuracy in the media. So when I read the following line by Raph Koster in his recent observations on changes to Time, I got kinda fired [...]
[...] made a statement in a post on his site, saying: The days of letting facts be reported without comment seems to be [...]
[...] just written an extremely interesting piece on ‘opinions’ and the game press, citing a Raph Koster piece about Time Magazine’s [...]
[...] Zenke has just written an extremely interesting piece on ‘opinions’ and the game press, citing a Raph Koster piece about Time Magazine’s [...]
Pleased to see other personalities thinking about the nature of game journalism, and Slashdot Games’ and MMOG Nation’s Michael Zenke has just written an extremely interesting piece on ‘opinions’ and the game press, citing a Raph Koster piece about Time Magazine’s redesign. Specifically, Koster suggests: “The days of letting facts be reported without comment seems to be dwindling… and while it opens up lots of questions about whether we’ll ever see truly unbiased reporting, it does
[...] pass this up. I’ll be brief.Raph has made this simple - and brilliant - statement in regards to the state of the new media on his official website:The days of letting facts be reported without comment seems to be [...]
It’s obvious that I’m not the only one trying to not get trapped into MMO-think or game-think. Danc is studying product development methodologies that aren’t even from software development, let alone games. Raph spends almost as much time talking about recent web developments and broader media topics as he does MMOs. I suspect that one reason these two express their thoughts so cogently is this drive toward diversification. It allows them to see the same issues everyone else sees, but