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The troubles with business journalists

Chrystia Freeland had some interesting thoughts on this in Sunday’s New York Times:

I have a solution: scholarly blogs, or what I call PEAPs in my Public Face of Scholarship. The advantages of PEAPs include:

My article predicts an equilibrium:

Journalism might evolve into a hybrid in which neither professional nor amateur journalism clearly dominates. Professional media may add to their bundles blog-like features for the readers who would otherwise defect to blogs. Indeed, many newspapers already have blogs on their websites that combine professional writing and reporting with interactivity. This might carry over to the rest of the newspaper, with each story providing a point of connection with reader commentary and blogs. Or current forms of professional media might be replaced by professionally managed group blogs. [footnote omitted]

But: there will always be a role for well-financed professional reporting.

Some dividing line between professional and amateur media is likely to remain. For example, professionals by definition will have more resources than academics to report on facts.
Conversely, bloggers, particularly authors of PEAPs, will continue to offer more specialized expertise than the mass media can offer. [footnote omitted]

The question is whether that professional reporting will come from anything like conventional newspapers.