Is the Guardian worse than it used to be?

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Only game in town, that's it.

The Fields o' Fat Henry (Tom D.), Friday, 17 July 2020 10:53 (three years ago) link

I didn’t forget this 🙃

BREAKING. The Observer tactical voting guide for the top 50 seats that could decide the election, recommends Labour voters in Kensington vote ⁦@LibDems⁩ to stop the hard Brexit Tory. #SamForKen #GE2019 https://t.co/AuqUbzp6sD

— Sam Gyimah (@SamGyimah) December 8, 2019

scampos mentis (gyac), Friday, 17 July 2020 10:57 (three years ago) link

📊🧐

Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Friday, 17 July 2020 10:59 (three years ago) link

Emma Dent Coad lost that seat by 150 votes. Gyimah was over 7k behind.


https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kensington_(UK_Parliament_constituency)

scampos mentis (gyac), Friday, 17 July 2020 11:01 (three years ago) link

I'm not sure when I last read a guardian article. I've had an aversion for a while and I think it's been a good decade since I actually bought a paper but I was still occasionally getting linked to pieces (although less than to the FT or foreign papers) but even that seems to have dried up now. It's just v clearly written by and for a different class of people and the whole enterprise feels like a bitter echo from a v different age

rumpy riser (ogmor), Friday, 17 July 2020 11:06 (three years ago) link

Also I suppose what I'm saying is that Corbynism one way or another is in the past, the scars will take a long time to heal but the next generation of readers won't care about it, but if they keep publishing TERF articles under the guise of debate it's going to poison the relationship with those readers for years to come.

Matt DC, Friday, 17 July 2020 11:09 (three years ago) link

Will they survive long enough to get a next generation of readers? They've alienated a portion of the current one.

Also as things get worse they might need to give a strong voice to economically left material they might be uncomfortable with tbh.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 17 July 2020 11:24 (three years ago) link

the next generation of newspaper readers

rumpy riser (ogmor), Friday, 17 July 2020 11:28 (three years ago) link

and other fictions.

scampos mentis (gyac), Friday, 17 July 2020 11:32 (three years ago) link

Up and coming blacksmiths

Appleman Appears: 20/2/2020. Whose Cider You On? (Bananaman Begins), Friday, 17 July 2020 11:34 (three years ago) link

Time for The Guardian FM

xyzzzz__, Friday, 17 July 2020 11:37 (three years ago) link

That's the whole point, even this generation of young people don't buy physical newspapers but they still engage with the news and read articles (even if they hate them). The same will be true of the next generation as well in some way and the Guardian knows full well that they are never going to turn up at a newsagents and pay money for a physical paper but they might still read it online and presumably they want them to keep doing so.

It's doubtful whether that will ever be an economically viable proposition given the amount of content that newspapers put out on a daily basis but it does explain why they are going out of their way to keep older readers onside.

Matt DC, Friday, 17 July 2020 11:41 (three years ago) link

Even before the pandemic I would not have been shocked at Guardian print edition ending this year or next.

nashwan, Friday, 17 July 2020 11:45 (three years ago) link

I'm pretty sure I haven't bought a physical newspaper in five years at the very least, maybe eight or nine, and I used to do habitually.

Matt DC, Friday, 17 July 2020 11:49 (three years ago) link

V interesting insights on hate reading model.

the hate-reading works so many, many ways

— Owen Hatherley (@owenhatherley) July 17, 2020

xyzzzz__, Friday, 17 July 2020 12:06 (three years ago) link

in here Left Twitter and Appalling Old Twats have a sort of mutual abusive relationship, and it's miserable (esp as it's only the Appalling Old Twats who really benefit from it)

— Owen Hatherley (@owenhatherley) July 17, 2020

otm don't give them the oxygen - delete your twitter and close these tabs

||||||||, Friday, 17 July 2020 12:41 (three years ago) link

Amen to that.

Scampidocio (Le Bateau Ivre), Friday, 17 July 2020 12:48 (three years ago) link

I will never log off

xyzzzz__, Friday, 17 July 2020 12:51 (three years ago) link

Good points on how the model has moved on.

I think that actually the moment has passed. (A take! A veritable take, sir! I thought old England had lost the art!). Clickbait doesn't work anymore, no do hate-reads or even social shares. Advertising rates are simply too low, Facebook takes too much of the pot and agencies...

— Dan Davies (@dsquareddigest) July 17, 2020

xyzzzz__, Friday, 17 July 2020 13:19 (three years ago) link

I think Alphie and I must follow like 95% of the same people on Twitter because he’s always posting stuff I’m also reading and about to link. That’s an interesting thread, I had never heard of Nathan Tankus!

scampos mentis (gyac), Friday, 17 July 2020 13:24 (three years ago) link

Who I follow breakdown:

95%: same as ilx poster gyac
4%: tankies
0.5%: ilx people(not gyac tho')
O.2%: ilx people that don't post anymore #onhere
0.3%: committed shitposters/book Twitter ppl

xyzzzz__, Friday, 17 July 2020 13:46 (three years ago) link

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/D5CRW2CWAAAfnkt.jpg

mark s, Friday, 17 July 2020 14:18 (three years ago) link

long live the O.2%

||||||||, Friday, 17 July 2020 14:29 (three years ago) link

but they still engage with the news and read articles

...is this true?

rumpy riser (ogmor), Friday, 17 July 2020 20:00 (three years ago) link

How young does Matt mean? There’s a huge amount of variation.

scampos mentis (gyac), Friday, 17 July 2020 20:05 (three years ago) link

...is this true?

Yes -- but it's taking a while to dawn on the industry that the things <35 readers want are now fundamentally different to the things they're used to providing and that they'll have to change how they do what they do, not just the subjects they write about.

For example: in the early days of lockdown, across nearly all audience segments, the most sought-after thing people said they wanted was expert voices – they wanted to hear from the Faucis and Whittys of the world to know what they should do. For the mainstream 16-35 audience, however, the most sought-after thing was verification: they had already heard from a morass of voices, mostly online, and more often wanted to know if something they'd heard was actually true. Journalism as fact checking, not as conduit.

There's also the huge, bigger-than-generation-gap gulf over "objectivity". This is more complicated than "we hate the voice from nowhere stop both sides-ing" – it's about trust in the institutions and writers themselves.

It's more stark in the US than the UK, but younger audiences really don't trust the neutral these-are-the-facts framing at all. They assume everyone has a stance, so they are used to checking out the bona fides of everything they read, and working out from which angle a writer is coming before deciding how to appraise their work. This means house bylines or faux-objective writing make them feel as if the writer or publication is trying to conceal their true agenda. This is a problem for print media in particular, because the very approach that makes them seem trustworthy to readers in their 60s, undermines them with readers in their 20s.

The younger audiences also, to a slightly lesser degree, want to hear predominately from people who they think are broadly "like them". As they're predominately left, they'd expect to find those voices in the Guardian – and are then disappointed when they get there to find the wrong things being written about, in the wrong way. The BBC is in a similar fix.

(Interestingly, publications that use things like podcasts to humanise their writers have found that their writing is much more trusted as a result, even if it's still written in that older "balanced" style; this might be a way to square the circle. Laura K gets much more positive perceptions from Brexitcast listeners, for instance)

stet, Saturday, 18 July 2020 01:37 (three years ago) link

(The FT, btw, is a massive outlier and avoids these issues with younger audiences completely – it has the highest trust ratings of all the papers, and is trusted across virtually all other segments too. I suspect it's because people have a pretty clear idea where it's coming from, and because of the links with finance see it more as a factual information service like a newswire, even though it's really not)

stet, Saturday, 18 July 2020 01:40 (three years ago) link

That’s a really interesting post, thanks stet.

I feel almost guilty that I was only coming here to post Marina Hyde having a normal one last night:

What’s your real name, “Frank Owen’s Legendary Paintbrush”?? Man up and tell us, darlink https://t.co/EdK5spsh0h

— Marina Hyde (@MarinaHyde) July 17, 2020

scampos mentis (gyac), Saturday, 18 July 2020 08:48 (three years ago) link

stet, that's interesting but, um, do you have the data for that? :)
Have online publications even started to consistently link to original sources when writing about them? Most didn't a few years ago, I assume most still don't although it depends on the publication/stance.

For example, I hardly ever read the local news site because it's unreadable with ads and shite but they had a few figures about Covid cases in the area which I couldn't reconcile with govt published ones. I actually had to contact the writer of the piece to find out where they were from and why they were incorrect. They weren't at all transparent about what these numbers were, just presented as a list. Just a small example, but generally why I can only read articles about data (or scientific studies, or law, or comment on written text) as long as I can read the referenced text at source. NB I am slightly above age 35...

Do younger audiences really put the time in to check? Obviously great if they do, but what does this actually involve?

kinder, Saturday, 18 July 2020 09:56 (three years ago) link

I don't think I can share it, but I'll ask because in theory my work could.

On the verification stuff, it's really clear <30s are much more active in checking out stories. Not in a rigourous way like you're describing, more "ok random WhatsApp fwd let's see if the BBC says the same thing". Marked difference compared to prevalent Boomer "I saw it on Facebook they wouldn't publish it if it wasn't true"

stet, Saturday, 18 July 2020 10:35 (three years ago) link

I'm guessing the FT avoids the trust issues because they are providing a lot of investor-type information and it has to be accurate reporting? Maybe a bit like the Economist you read around the good in-depth reporting but avoid the opinion (which was often incredibly boring reformist Bible).

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 18 July 2020 11:10 (three years ago) link

I've always been as online as possible but this is interesting.

I can't be the only person on the left who ended up being So Very Online 2015-2019 in part because if I took a break from twitter and just read the news, I pretty quickly started getting actively misinformed on matters I cared about.

— Lafargue (@Lafargue) July 18, 2020

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 18 July 2020 11:24 (three years ago) link

thanks stet, don't post anything you shouldn't, I don't know where you work and was interested in generally how you found this out!
also wonder what proportion of actual 16-35 yos the newspaper audience is that you describe.

kinder, Saturday, 18 July 2020 12:37 (three years ago) link

by the vitally important voice of the left, marina hyde https://t.co/JnZVS0bSqt

— gart/barfield (@wurrance) July 18, 2020

a Marina Hyde joint from 2013, from before she was consistently hilarious and taking the conservative establishment down with her devastating wit every week and she wrote a horrible puff-piece on what a top bloke Farage is.

calzino, Saturday, 18 July 2020 18:23 (three years ago) link

Booming post Stet.

I wouldn't quite put the FT and the Economist together here, the FT isn't quite Reuters but its reporting is as close to spin-free as you're going to get in a national newspaper. It also has a sustainable online revenue model and generally seems to be having a good crisis.

I don't if there are many readers who would rely on the Economist in the same way, I suppose its useful if you want to flaunt a surface knowledge of what's going on in the South China Sea and less so unless you want to be told that privatisation and deregulation is the only solution to, say, long waiting lists for allotments in England.

Matt DC, Saturday, 18 July 2020 19:31 (three years ago) link

On trust - the Guardian is reasonably well trusted as far as UK news outlets go but that's not saying much. Trust is journalism in general is in the doldrums but trust in *individual journalists* can be very high.

Matt DC, Saturday, 18 July 2020 19:35 (three years ago) link

will never understand why people pay money monthly just to read some psueds opinion on boring old politics brought to you by some shite broadsheet that died long ago. watching the news now i do wish i lived underground like were planned but i had to scrap

fkknutter, Saturday, 18 July 2020 19:50 (three years ago) link

10/1 deems
20/1 treeship
50/1 nakhchivan

imago, Saturday, 18 July 2020 19:51 (three years ago) link

100/1 banky
150/1 krtek

calzino, Saturday, 18 July 2020 20:13 (three years ago) link

500/1 Gaz Coombes

Matt DC, Saturday, 18 July 2020 20:42 (three years ago) link

Thanks for the clarifications Matt.

Was just reading a piece, proposing a Momentum based media initiative.

https://newsocialist.org.uk/proposal-momentum-media-fund/

It talks about missed opportunities for Labour to have it's own media in the past, and touches on the question of trust.

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 18 July 2020 21:15 (three years ago) link

xp
"In Supergrass we kept our political view for the pub table"

calzino, Saturday, 18 July 2020 21:21 (three years ago) link

“fkknutter” otm

Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Saturday, 18 July 2020 21:58 (three years ago) link

apart from the bit about scrapping living underground, ffs!

calzino, Saturday, 18 July 2020 22:09 (three years ago) link

I guess I am surprised if the younger readership is holding up because plenty of ppl I know who were reading it at least online 5-10 years ago aren't any more, and my 20yo brother and his friends will follow links but aren't going to check the front page for news and have never really established any sort of newspaper habit (they don't really watch films either which seems more wild to me)

rumpy riser (ogmor), Saturday, 18 July 2020 22:26 (three years ago) link

That's true but idea of checking a homepage for news is in decline across the industry - unless they have the app downloaded (which I think is a minority of slightly older users) audiences just don't consume online media like that any more. Traffic to the homepage is usually much lower than it is to other pages.

Audiences tend to arrive through other ways, mainly social media - it's one of the reason why the big tech providers, Facebook in particular, are both so powerful and resented. (The fact that Facebook and Google are also eating their advertising lunch several times over is adding injury to insult here).

Matt DC, Sunday, 19 July 2020 09:57 (three years ago) link

Also readers will be engaging differently with the news when they're 30 to when they're 18-20, that's almost inevitable.

In general I agree that the idea of loyalty to any one news outlet is over but the Guardian itself has been one of the beneficiaries of more omnivorous reading habits. Whether that's commercially sustainable is a different question.

Matt DC, Sunday, 19 July 2020 10:04 (three years ago) link

That Marina Hyde post by Calzino deserves more attention.

That's 2013. Hyde promoting NF in a 'he's just a laugh' way. She also explicitly (hyperbolically) says that she'd do anything to avoid having a drink with Ed Miliband.

It's disgusting. It's complicit - in the way that HIGNFY? is. It's shameful. And she has got away with it.

the pinefox, Sunday, 19 July 2020 14:26 (three years ago) link

you can't cancel the Baroness, she's got friends in high places. it beggars belief that someone who prefers Farage to Ed Milli gets so many plaudits from liberals and left leaning social democrats (alright "melts" then!) for her oh so droll and hilarious takedowns of Tories. She is about as Tory as they fucking come really.

calzino, Sunday, 19 July 2020 14:46 (three years ago) link

she was happy left-posturing when Blair and Brown were in power and attacking them from the left, but when Labour got a centre-left leader, like the Greens she shit the bed at the idea.

calzino, Sunday, 19 July 2020 14:54 (three years ago) link


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