How many mistakes are in the pages of The New York Times every day? I counted seven this morning, and that’s to be expected. Journalism is a human practice, and it will always include human error. What we need more of is virtuous risk-taking to the end of hooking people’s attention. In other words, how the hell are we going to empower citizens with the information they need to be free and self-governing if they’re too bored to even bother?
Part of the job of the journalist is to make the significant interesting, and experimentation to this end will have its most exciting results through individuals who are able to establish a foundation of trust as guides to the great American dumpster fire. In 2020 and beyond, I hope to see the rise of the journalistic influencer: those who work to entertain the public with utmost allegiance to truth, motivated by the goal of establishing equitable public power.
This sort of risk-taking is dangerous — but, well, so was the Times’ coverage of Hillary’s emails. In order for journalism to evolve and, indeed, in order for democracy to persevere, we need to make more good mistakes.
In my book, How to Start a Revolution: Young People and the Future of American Politics, I introduce extensive research and reporting through personal narrative sprinkled with comedy. Despite multiple rounds of editing and fact-checking, I’m quite sure I’ve messed up in those pages, and I’ve certainly messed up while cracking jokes on my Twitter feed. I’ve also recently taken risks with a premature obituary for Mitch McConnell’s career (intended to outline the baldly anti-democratic nature of his obstructionism) and a satirical piece about Elizabeth Warren’s political evolution (meant to expose the perverse incentive structure of progressivism as it is compounded by misogyny).
Perhaps the former was too gimmicky. There were poor, unfortunate souls who read the latter and thought it was written in earnest. Still, I maintain that these risks were virtuous in that my goal was to empower people with information. I believe part of my journalistic obligation is to make the significant interesting. I am 100 percent serious when I say I believe it is part of my journalistic duty to entertain.
I’ve received some criticism that amounts to saying I am using my platform “for attention.” While I’m irked by the inherent sexism of that critique, I must admit it’s essentially correct: What’s the point of being a writer if not to get people to engage with your ideas? It is absolutely my goal to “get attention,” in order to get as many readers as possible to feel so empowered with information as to insist on their right and duty to the political conversation.
This is how I have chosen to use my platform as an “influencer.” I hear that word used with derision, but I take no offense at the assertion that I am influencing the culture. What’s troubling is the stigma of frivolity around the term. There are scammers, to be sure, and altogether too many Instagram celebrities selling that tea that makes you shit. But there is also democratic potential in the advent of the influencer.
It seems to me that readers connect most often with individual thinkers rather than the publications they write for. If we can see more journalists aspire to build large platforms, and see more of those who already have them insist on operating out of duty to citizens, there is an opportunity to build a model of ethical influencing that expands into a broader journalistic culture in which citizens comprehend the purpose of the journalist and their personal duty to empower themselves with information.
It is endlessly clear that our democratic crisis is also an epistemic one. Individual minds are trapped in feedback loops, and no two bubbles are the same. The solution to this fractured reality requires citizens to invest in media diets maintained through the constant rigor of critical thinking. Indeed, not everyone is a journalist, but anyone can be a journalist, and I believe we should all operate as journalists in interacting with the onslaught of content, verifying information, and always asking questions, both of authority and of ourselves.
The only truly certain prediction for journalism in 2020 is that mistakes will be made — so let’s make some good ones.
Lauren Duca is a freelance journalist.
How many mistakes are in the pages of The New York Times every day? I counted seven this morning, and that’s to be expected. Journalism is a human practice, and it will always include human error. What we need more of is virtuous risk-taking to the end of hooking people’s attention. In other words, how the hell are we going to empower citizens with the information they need to be free and self-governing if they’re too bored to even bother?
Part of the job of the journalist is to make the significant interesting, and experimentation to this end will have its most exciting results through individuals who are able to establish a foundation of trust as guides to the great American dumpster fire. In 2020 and beyond, I hope to see the rise of the journalistic influencer: those who work to entertain the public with utmost allegiance to truth, motivated by the goal of establishing equitable public power.
This sort of risk-taking is dangerous — but, well, so was the Times’ coverage of Hillary’s emails. In order for journalism to evolve and, indeed, in order for democracy to persevere, we need to make more good mistakes.
In my book, How to Start a Revolution: Young People and the Future of American Politics, I introduce extensive research and reporting through personal narrative sprinkled with comedy. Despite multiple rounds of editing and fact-checking, I’m quite sure I’ve messed up in those pages, and I’ve certainly messed up while cracking jokes on my Twitter feed. I’ve also recently taken risks with a premature obituary for Mitch McConnell’s career (intended to outline the baldly anti-democratic nature of his obstructionism) and a satirical piece about Elizabeth Warren’s political evolution (meant to expose the perverse incentive structure of progressivism as it is compounded by misogyny).
Perhaps the former was too gimmicky. There were poor, unfortunate souls who read the latter and thought it was written in earnest. Still, I maintain that these risks were virtuous in that my goal was to empower people with information. I believe part of my journalistic obligation is to make the significant interesting. I am 100 percent serious when I say I believe it is part of my journalistic duty to entertain.
I’ve received some criticism that amounts to saying I am using my platform “for attention.” While I’m irked by the inherent sexism of that critique, I must admit it’s essentially correct: What’s the point of being a writer if not to get people to engage with your ideas? It is absolutely my goal to “get attention,” in order to get as many readers as possible to feel so empowered with information as to insist on their right and duty to the political conversation.
This is how I have chosen to use my platform as an “influencer.” I hear that word used with derision, but I take no offense at the assertion that I am influencing the culture. What’s troubling is the stigma of frivolity around the term. There are scammers, to be sure, and altogether too many Instagram celebrities selling that tea that makes you shit. But there is also democratic potential in the advent of the influencer.
It seems to me that readers connect most often with individual thinkers rather than the publications they write for. If we can see more journalists aspire to build large platforms, and see more of those who already have them insist on operating out of duty to citizens, there is an opportunity to build a model of ethical influencing that expands into a broader journalistic culture in which citizens comprehend the purpose of the journalist and their personal duty to empower themselves with information.
It is endlessly clear that our democratic crisis is also an epistemic one. Individual minds are trapped in feedback loops, and no two bubbles are the same. The solution to this fractured reality requires citizens to invest in media diets maintained through the constant rigor of critical thinking. Indeed, not everyone is a journalist, but anyone can be a journalist, and I believe we should all operate as journalists in interacting with the onslaught of content, verifying information, and always asking questions, both of authority and of ourselves.
The only truly certain prediction for journalism in 2020 is that mistakes will be made — so let’s make some good ones.
Lauren Duca is a freelance journalist.
Sue Robinson Campaign coverage as test bed for engagement experiments
Jim Brady We’ll complain about other people living in bubbles while ignoring our own
Errin Haines Race and gender aren’t a 2020 story — they’re the story
Brian Moritz The end of “stick to sports”
Mira Lowe The year of student-powered journalism
Christa Scharfenberg It’s time to make journalism a field that supports and respects women
Talia Stroud The work of reconnecting starts November 4
Logan Molyneux and Shannon McGregor Think twice before turning to Twitter
Sonali Prasad Climate change storytelling gets multidimensional
Fiona Spruill The climate crisis gets the coverage it deserves
Margarita Noriega The platforms try to figure out what to do with single-subject newsrooms
J. Siguru Wahutu Western journalists, learn from your African peers
Heather Bryant Some kinds of journalism aren’t worth saving
Geneva Overholser Death to bothsidesism
Bill Adair A Nobel Prize, a Brad Pitt film, and a Taylor Swift song
Kourtney Bitterly Transparency isn’t just a desire, it’s an expectation
Sarah Schmalbach Journalist, quantify thyself
Craig Newmark Formalizing newsrooms’ battle against disinformation
A.J. Bauer A fork in the road for conservative media
Jake Shapiro Podcasting gets listener relationship management
Seth C. Lewis 20 questions for 2020
Meg Marco Everything happens somewhere
Lucas Graves A smarter conversation about how (and why) fact-checking matters
Irving Washington Leadership isn’t something you learn on the job
Jeremy Olshan All journalism should be service journalism
Carl Bialik Journalists will try running the whole shop
S. Mitra Kalita The race to 2021
Helen Havlak Platforms shine a light on original reporting
Julia B. Chan We 👏 take 👏 breaks 👏
Candis Callison Taking a cue from Indigenous journalists on climate change
Eric Nuzum Podcasting finally creates another mega-hit show
Mariana Moura Santos The future of journalism is collaborative
Sara K. Baranowski A big year for little newspapers
Annie Rudd The expanded ambiguity of the news photograph
Mike Caulfield Native verification tools for the blue checkmark crowd
Joni Deutsch Podcasting unsilences the silent
Tonya Mosley The neutrality vs. objectivity game ends
Sarah Marshall The year to learn about news moments
M. Scott Havens First-party data becomes media’s most important currency
Rasmus Kleis Nielsen The business we want, not the business we had
Meredith Artley Stronger solidarity among news organizations
Hossein Derakhshan AI can’t conjure up an Errol Morris
Imaeyen Ibanga Let’s take it slow
Alexandra Borchardt Get out of the office and talk to people
Sarah Stonbely More people start caring about news inequality
Jeremy Gilbert and Jarrod Dicker A call for collaboration between storytelling and tech
Tanya Cordrey Saying no to more good ideas
Kristen Muller The year we operationalize community engagement
Emily Withrow The year we kill the news article
Joanne McNeil A return to blogs (finally? sort of?)
Laura E. Davis Know the context your journalism is operating within
Cindy Royal Prepare media students for skills, not job titles
Richard Tofel A constraint of the reader-revenue model emerges
Raney Aronson-Rath News deserts will proliferate — but so will new solutions
Rachel Glickhouse Journalists get left behind in the industry’s decline
Greg Emerson News apps fall further behind
Matthew Pressman News consumers divide into haves and have-nots
Alana Levinson Brand-backed media gets another look
Jasmine McNealy A call for context
Tom Glaisyer Journalism can emerge newly vibrant and powerful
Jeff Kofman Speed through technology
Simon Galperin Journalism becomes more democratic
Rachel Schallom The value of push alerts goes beyond open rates
Whitney Phillips A time to question core beliefs
Doris Truong The year of radical salary transparency
Nicholas Jackson What’s left of local gets comfortable with reader support
Bill Grueskin Our ethics codes get an overhaul
Elizabeth Dunbar Frank talk, and then action
Dan Shanoff Sports media enters the Bronny era
Beena Raghavendran The year of the local engagement reporter
Steve Henn The dawning audio web
Tamar Charney From broadcast to bespoke
Matt DeRienzo Local broadcasters begin to fill the gaps left by newspapers
Linda Solomon Wood Everyone in your organization, moving toward a common goal
Nathalie Malinarich Betting on loyalty
Monique Judge The year to organize, unionize, and fight
Jakob Moll A slow-moving tech backlash among young people
Heidi Tworek The year of positive pushback
Josh Schwartz Publishers move beyond the metered paywall
Felix Salmon Spotify launches a news channel
Nushin Rashidian Are platforms a bridge or a lifeline?
Lauren Duca The rise of the journalistic influencer
Gordon Crovitz Fighting misinformation requires journalism, not secret algorithms
Carrie Brown Engaged journalism: It’s finally happening
Michael W. Wagner Increasingly fractured, but little bit deliberative
Joshua P. Darr All that campaign cash will make the media’s problems worse
Jennifer Brandel A love letter from the year 2073
John Keefe Journalism gets hacked
Masuma Ahuja Slower, quieter, more measured and thoughtful
Pablo Boczkowski The day after November 4
Brenda P. Salinas Treating MP3 files like text
Joe Amditis Collaborative journalism takes its rightful place at the table
Sarah Alvarez I’m ready for post-news
Monica Drake A renewed focus on misinformation
Kathleen Searles Pay more attention to attention
Juleyka Lantigua A changing industry amps up podcasters’ ambitions
Kevin D. Grant The free press stands against authoritarians’ attacks on truth
Kerri Hoffman Opening closed systems
Madelyn Sanfilippo and Yafit Lev-Aretz News coverage gets geo-fragmented
AX Mina The Forum we wanted, the forum we got
Colleen Shalby Journalists become media literacy teachers
Zizi Papacharissi A president leads, the press follows, reality fades
Logan Jaffe You don’t need fancy tools to listen
Mary Walter-Brown and Tristan Loper Power to the people (on your audience team)
Alfred Hermida and Mary Lynn Young The promise of nonprofit journalism
Moreno Cruz Osório In Brazil, collaboration in a time of state attacks
Francesco Zaffarano TikTok without generational prejudice
Victor Pickard We reclaim a public good
Dannagal G. Young Let’s disrupt the logic that’s driving Americans apart
Cory Haik We’re already consuming the future of news — now we have to produce it
Alice Antheaume Trade “politics” for “power”
Nico Gendron Make better products if you want to reach Gen Z
Ernie Smith The death of the industry fad
Mario García Think small (screen)
Ben Werdmuller Use the tools of journalism to save it
Rachel Davis Mersey The business of local TV news will enter its downward slide
Jonas Kaiser Russian bots are just today’s slacktivists
Knight Foundation Five generations of journalists, learning from each other
Cristina Kim Public media stops trying to serve “everybody”
Barbara Gray Join local libraries on the frontlines of civic engagement
John Garrett It’s the best time in a century to start a local news organization
Ståle Grut OSINT journalism goes mainstream
Rick Berke Incoming fire from both left and right
Stefanie Murray Charitable giving goes collaborative
Peter Bale Lies get further normalized
Elizabeth Hansen and Jesse Holcomb Local news initiatives run into a capital shortage