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BLOG  |  MAY, 2009

Are Blogs Really Today's Magazines?

May 22, 2009 at 1:00 pm
by Chris

Joel Johnson, in response to a New York Times article about Wired magazine, posted earlier this week about his experience in helping Wired.com set up its blogs and why he is also concerned for Wired's future. He has some valuable insight into the class of print and online cultures within this one company, so read the entire piece. But this quote troubles me a bit:

Wired makes a fantastic magazine. The "puzzle" edition last month was just brilliant, and I skimmed it from cover to cover. But for technology and pop science reporting, the market has moved on. Tech magazines, now matter how well executed, are nothing more than a cute anachronism, with the same sort of boutique market as hand-made stationery. Which isn't to say that we or anyone else who writes for money isn't doomed; we just don't have to buy paper by the ton roll, nor keep a support staff around nearly as large as our editorial staff.

I can see what he means in that there is something odd about a publishing entity that has historically been on the cutting edge of technology continuing to do things the old-fashioned, slow-fi way: When I was a junior in college, my step-father gave me his entire collection of Wired magazines, which he'd kept in perfect condition since he started subscribing- at issue #1! Believe it or not, this was an incredible resource. Imagine a decade of technology and culture reporting- not to mention that the art direction of Wired has always been inspiring (my film degree project was ultimately an homage to the visual sensibility I inherited from my step-father and Wired). The image to the left is from a 1998 issue, but if you click it, you can browse the covers from all issues of Wired from 1993 to the present.

But, I do remember thinking that it was ironic that while Wired was covering the most current advances in technology, they still printed on cheap paper that would leave the ink on your fingertips if it was even slightly warmer than seventy degrees.

But I think the point that Johnson is getting at is this: Are blogs really capable of filling the void left by magazines like Wired if they fail? As he points out in his article, "It's not unusual for print journalists to look down at online writers, and often rightly so. There are some amazing reporters and writers whose work appears in Wired, people who do the sort of storytelling that bloggers rarely have the time or skill to do." In other words, writing for print publications and writing for blogs are two very different kinds of writing. On this point, Johnson also writes about the process of establishing the Wired blogs, "I cleared out writers that weren't working. That didn't always mean they were bad writers, but usually just bad bloggers—there is a difference. Even the best magazine writer may not be able to write and report in front of an audience." So, if the blogs are taking off but the magazine is dying, what does that mean for the future of Wired's content? I would say that, for me, it's the magazine's legacy that led me to follow their blogs, and that without the stellar long-form articles that are written monthly for the magazine, I probably wouldn't continue to follow the blogs. So what does this mean for the future of content? Are we trading frequency for quality?


Comments
Ryan | May 22, 2009 3:16 PM

Maybe this just means that people don't want that long form kind of writing anymore- it's not that it's any better or worse, but people just communicate differently now.
David Marker | May 22, 2009 7:42 PM

I've subscribed to WIRED for almost the entire time it's been available and, even though I've seen it struggle here and there, I think it's got a good thing going right now. I would much prefer to curl up on my couch with the magazine than with my laptop reading their blogs.
Ted | May 24, 2009 9:21 PM

Blogs will never be what long-form journalism was- as Chris has said in other posts about privacy, this is a choice we've already made, intentionally or not.
Chris Butler | May 26, 2009 9:59 AM

@Ryan, you know, I'm just not really prepared to accept that at this point. There's a lot of "this-trend-is-indicative-of-an-evolution-in-human-behavior" talk when it comes to issues such as this and I just don't think there's enough data to support quick and general conclusions like "people just communicate differently now." It may be true that people communicate differently today than they did a decade ago, but does that mean that long form journalism, or long-form writing of any kind, for that matter, is obsolete. I sincerely hope not!

@David Marker, Agreed!! WIRED is a top-notch publication. It's certainly had a few rough spots, but I actually think that right now it's as good as ever, which makes me really hope that they don't get sunk.

@Ted, well, not sure I want to say that at this point. I feel that the word "blog" really just means frequently updated, taggable, shareable and sequentially ordered content. I don't think that length of content needs to be a defined characteristic. I follow many outstanding blogs that post longer articles less frequently, as well as those that post shorter content more frequently. There's room for both.
Angie | May 26, 2009 1:04 PM

What about print on demand? That could be the missing link.
Chris Butler | June 1, 2009 9:05 AM

Angie,

It may very well be... There are many POD services popping up (I wrote a blog post on the effect of print on demand services on web content in April) that are starting to shape an industry of its own. I've had particularly good experiences with Lulu.com as well.

Chris