Media release
28 June 2010
Journalism’s Future at Stake
Is serious journalism dying? Was it in any good it the first place? What must be done to ensure its survival?
These are some of the questions to be tackled at The University of Auckland’s forthcoming Winter Lecture series on “The
end(s) of journalism”.
The six-lecture series will examine the decline in serious journalism brought about by digital convergence, media
proliferation, fragmented audiences and the global recession.
It will look at the long-term implications of these developments, given how vital the media are to democratic
deliberation. Alternative technological possibilities, programming forms and funding alternatives will be canvassed.
Academics from the University’s Departments of Political Studies, Film, Television and Media Studies, and Māori Studies
will present the lectures along with Colin Peacock, presenter of Mediawatch on Radio New Zealand National and Gavin
Ellis, former editor-in-chief of the New Zealand Herald.
The lunchtime series begins on 20 July with a lecture illuminating journalism’s present predicament and prospects by
returning to its roots. Subsequent lectures will consider the current state of New Zealand journalism, the Māori
presence in media stories, citizen journalism on the internet, news satire, and the near-term future of serious
journalism.
“The media in forms old and new affect everyone, and play a key role in supporting democratic purposes,” says series
organiser, Dr Joe Atkinson. “This is a timely series in a period of extreme upheaval for traditional media and the
lectures will be of wide general interest.”
Event: 2010 Winter Lectures at The University of Auckland on “The end(s) of journalism”
Dates: Six successive Tuesdays from 20 July to 24 August
Time: 1pm
Venue: Maidment Theatre, 8 Alfred Street
Further information: www.auckland.ac.nz/winter, phone 373 7599 ext 87698
A FLYER GIVING FULL DETAILS OF THE LECTURES IS ATTACHED.
The end(s) of journalism
A series of six weekly lectures in
the Maidment Theatre, 8 Alfred
Street from 1-2pm.
20 July-24 August
Everyone welcome. Free admission
Winter Lectures 2010 at The University of Auckland
Digital convergence, media proliferation and the fragmentation of news audiences were already beginning to damage
serious journalism long before the flight of classified print advertising to the internet and the downsizing and
outsourcing of news production. Then global recession hit the news industry, and highly respected newspapers started to
fold. Given the central contribution of the media to the quality of democratic deliberation, what are the long-term
implications of these developments? Is serious journalism dying? Was it any good in the first place? What other
technological possibilities, programming forms and funding alternatives might we consider feasible?
Lecture 1
Tuesday 20 July, 1-2pm
Dr Geoff Kemp, Department of Political Studies, The University of Auckland:
The beginning and ends of journalism
Chair: Professor John Morrow, Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Academic), The University of Auckland
This lecture returns to the roots of journalism to illuminate its present predicament and prospects. It starts at the
beginning, exploring the origins of journalism and the periodical press in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. It
reflects on the relationship between practice and theory – the generation of ideas justifying journalism’s role – and
between this and broader processes of change in medium and markets.
The first points to a legacy of ideas about the ends of journalism; the second points to the difficulties of meeting
those ends in imperfect and shifting conditions. The vogue for Jurgen Habermas’s grand theory of the emergence of a
democratic public sphere is considered as a setting for this story, along with R.W.T.
Martin’s distinction of “free press” and “open press”. The story reaches the nineteenth century with journalism as an
articulation of the public – a self-aware body with a critical voice, an institution free more than open, re-imagined as
“the press” and the “fourth estate”. The scene then shifts to industrial chaos in the media as the twenty-first century
nears, journalism’s bodily integrity broken on the wheel of technological and economic transformation, the parts picked
over by tweeters and bloggers, a babel not a public. But the body called journalism can never die, says Michael
Schudson, society needs it too much. Is this the story that history tells?
Lecture 2
Tuesday 27 July, 1-2pm
Colin Peacock, Mediawatch presenter, Radio New Zealand National: Watching the watchdogs
Chair: Dr Brian Edwards, distinguished radio and television broadcaster
Radio New Zealand’s Mediawatch is a programme which strives to reflect the views of media professionals and critics, as
well as reporting week-by-week on the media from the perspective of readers, viewers and listeners.
Broadly speaking, many critics, academics and some journalists feel that standards are falling in journalism and the
media in general. Judging by their feedback to the programme, many Mediawatch listeners clearly feel the same. They
complain that the media seem less thorough and more trivial than in the past; more sensational and tabloid in style;
more cynical and less ethical than they used to be. They complain about too much opinion and too few facts – a media
striving for impact rather than truth or understanding. Yet hundreds of thousands of New Zealanders still turn to them
every day for entertainment and information about the world around them. So are standards falling? If so, which ones –
and how far? Is it something to worry about? Is it happening elsewhere in the world too? Should we continue to depend
upon the “old” media to give us “all the news that’s fit to print” – and broadcast? Or is that asking too much of an
industry in decline, in which journalists are outnumbered by people in PR, communications and promotions – not to
mention bloggers?
Lecture 3
Tuesday 3 August, 1-2pm
Dr Sue Abel, Departments of Māori Studies and Film, Television and Media Studies, The University of Auckland: A question of balance
Chair: Carol Hirschfeld, Head of Programming, Mäori Television
In order to maintain balance in television programmes, the Broadcasting Act 1989 requires television broadcasters “to
present significant points of view either in the same programme or in other programmes within the period of current
interest”. This lecture examines the extent to which the point of view of Māori is considered a “significant point of
view”. This examination is carried out on three levels. The first level is the dearth of stories about the Māori world
in “mainstream” news – stories which are presented as an intrinsic part of New Zealand and therefore of interest to all
New Zealanders. The second level is the use of Māori as sources. Research shows that even in what might be called “Māori
stories”, Pākehā are used as sources at least as often as Māori. At a third level, when Māori do speak as sources, they
do not necessarily get the chance to articulate a distinctively indigenous worldview which also includes the relevant
history which is important to an understanding of the issue at stake. Finally, the lecture considers the implications of
these absences.
Lecture 4
Tuesday 10 August, 1-2pm
Dr Luke Goode, Department of Film, Television and Media Studies, The University of Auckland: Citizens as gatekeepers
Chair: Russell Brown (Media7, Hard News on Public Address, Wide Area News)
According to leading citizen media commentator and advocate, Dan Gillmor, blogging, citizen journalism and social media
platforms have transformed journalism from lecture into conversation. Leaving aside the problematic analogy of
news-as-lecture, what kinds of conversation are emerging in online news environments?
Can we look past the signal-to-noise ratio and discern the seeds of a more deliberative political culture, given the new
forms of engagement with news which include citizens themselves taking on various journalistic and editorial functions?
What role can so-called “mainstream media” play in this new environment structured increasingly by software platforms
such as Twitter and YouTube and not merely by news channels and brands?
This lecture explores the civic (rather than commercial) implications of current tends in the online news environment.
It concludes with some reflections on the implications of those trends for the ways in which we understand citizenship
today.
Lecture 5
Tuesday 17 August, 1-2pm
Dr Joe Atkinson, Department of Political Studies, The University of Auckland: Politics as comedy
Chair: James Griffin (Outrageous Fortune, Sione’s Wedding, Funny Business, Spin Doctors, bro’Town, Diplomatic Immunity)
This lecture explores The Daily Show, a half-hour mock news programme and hybrid talk show whose website gleefully
trumpets its populist inversion of conventional journalism. The show has gained critical acclaim through numerous Emmy,
Peabody, and TV Critics Awards. In 2006 its host Jon Stewart was named by the US magazine Television Week the fifth most
powerful person in television news. The lecture asks whether “fake” news shows like The Daily Show and its spin-off The
Colbert Report are positive or negative for democracy. Are they either a substitute for, or a useful antidote to,
conventional television news? The lecture approaches this question by way of Aristotle’s distinction between epideictic,
forensic and deliberative forms of rhetoric, highlighting their strengths and weaknesses in relation to both
conventional journalism and civic engagement more generally. It concludes by comparing hybrid journalism with other
popular television genres.
Lecture 6
Tuesday 24 August, 1-2pm
Gavin Ellis, former Editor-in-Chief of the New Zealand Herald, doctoral candidate in Political Studies, The University of Auckland: Paying the piper
Chair: Professor Stuart McCutcheon, Vice-Chancellor, The University of Auckland
This lecture — which draws on research undertaken for a doctoral thesis — explores the near-term future of serious
journalism from a structural perspective. It examines the different types of organisation that deliver what we might
describe as democratically-significant journalism and assesses their ability to do so in the future. We have all grown
up in the era of mass media: Major commercial and public service entities have had the ability to disseminate volumes of
information to large audiences to create a common understanding of ideas and events. However, technology, audience
fragmentation, corporate expansionism and recession have created a “perfect storm” that has undermined the business
models of commercial media organisations large and small. Increasingly, they are either unable or unwilling to fund the
level of editorial resource needed to sustain the sort of standards-based journalism that meets the democratic needs of
society. On the other side of the coin, communities are becoming less inclined to pay for the news. Today’s lecture
proposes that alternatives to profit-driven news media companies will be needed and that their structure cannot be left
to chance if standards-based journalism is to survive in an environment where not everyone is prepared to pay the piper.
Lord Stern giving Robb Lectures
Lord Stern of Brentford, author of the influential Stern Review on climate change, will deliver the 2010 Sir Douglas
Robb Lectures at The University of Auckland.
“Climate change: The economics of risk, growth and inequality” is the theme of his lectures on 8, 9 and 10 September
(7pm, Fisher & Paykel Appliances Auditorium, Owen G Glenn Building, 12 Grafton Road).
Further details at www.auckland.ac.nz/robb
ENDS