November 11, 2004
We have our house back
: The White House is no longer under siege. The barriers are down. The street is open.
I'm not talking politics. I'm talking about the building.
I went running t his morning in D.C. from Dupont Circle down to the White House and was delighted to see the construction and barriers in front of the White House suddenly gone. Pennsylvania Avenue in front of the black fence is closed to traffic but open to us, turned into a broad promenade with lamps, a beautiful setting, and a good view of all the TV reporters using the White House as their backdrop.
The last time I walked this way, you couldn't get anywhere near the White House. It felt as if this, too, had been stolen from us by the terrorists.
But now it's open again. God knows what security measures lie underneath these broad stones (trap doors?); at least it's invisible. So it almost appears as if Washington is finding its normal.
Add to that the lowering of security levels in New York, New Jersey, and Washington and it feels good.
I can hear the "comment" links being clicked now by those who would say this was all a right-wing conspiracy, if not a vast one: They left the barriers and alerts up, this theory says, until the election to keep us scared into voting for their side and now they're down. But I'm not a conspiracy theorist. If we were that good at organizing things we'd have organized Iraq better or we could at least organize American elections better. Oh, that's right, those are covered by conspiracy theories, too.
Nevermind. It was great to see the road to the White House opened up again.
Exploding radio
: Fred Wilson says I'm wrong about radio's reinvention happening online and in satellites it will come from HD radio. He's a big fan (and investor). Hope he's right. But I'll take a wait-and-hear attitude.
Argue with me
: Corante has started a series of interviews in the hopes of sparking conversation. I was honored to be the first interviewee and I enjoyed the opportunity to think through Ernie Miller's good questions and summarize what I think is the state of the art of media today. But now I want to hear from what you all say; so does Corante. So I'll post a few of the Qs & As here and ask that you add in your comments -- but do it at Corante. That's why I closed the comments here. Instead, go comment here. Here's the first: Where do you see it all headed?
JJ: The means of media are now in the hands of the people.
The people we used to call consumers, readers, or viewers (let's call them citizens now) will take more and more control of what we used to call media (I don't know what new name to give it, but now it's as much about conversation as it is about consumption). The elements of this upheaval:
* Control: I say the most revolutionary invention in media was not the Gutenberg press but the remote control. It and the cable box, the VCR, and the TiVo enabled us to control consumption of media -- and we took advantage of that. Bad TV died; good TV rose in the ratings; HBO was born; TV exploded; TV improved -- thanks to the good taste and newfound control of the American public.
* Creation: Now come tools that let us create media: blogging software (which is merely history's cheapest easiest publishing tool connected to history's best distribution network) and all those neat things that come with Macs today. They allow us to make text, photo, audio, and video media. And what we make has value. Jonathan Miller, head of AOL, told me that 60-70 percent of the time spent on his service is spent with content created by his audience. That's where the money is.
* Marketing: At the same time -- thanks mostly to Google and blogs turning links into assets with tangible value -- we the people have the ability to market content; we do every time we link to it. Jon Stewart's blockbuster appearance on Crossfire got a few hundred thousand viewers on CNN but ten times that online thanks to the links of Fark and bloggers.
* Distribution: And the means of distribution are getting cheaper and faster: BitTorrent shares the cost of distribution across the network; RSS automates it; broadband will soon be part of the public infrastructure like roads or even a fundamental right like voting. So look again at Stewart on Crossfire: That segment didn't need carriage on a cable network with big clearance to be seen by millions; it got there via BitTorrent and iFilm.
So now anyone can control, create, market, distribute, find, and interact with anything they want. The barrier to entry to media is demolished. Media, always a one-way pipe, now becomes an open pool. And, most important, the centralization of media -- the marketplace, the network, the monopoly -- is replaced by a decentralized universe. This changes everything. It changes the relationships. It changes the economics. It changes the power.
One tangible result of this is nichefication of media. Some would say that's a bad thing; they wail about the death of great shared experience of American media. But the truth is that the shared experience lived only from the '50s to the '90s as the growth of three networks resulted in the death of competitive newspaper towns and we lived in a world of one-size-fits-all media. That is over. Now you can find the content that suits your needs. And that's good. That's about control. Which leads me to...
Jarvis' First Law of Media: Give the people control of media, they will use it. The corollary: Don't give the people control of media, and you will lose.
Whenever citizens can exercise control, they will. Today they are challenging and changing media -- where bloggers now fact-check Dan Rather's ass -- but tomorrow they will challenge and change politics, government, marketing, and education as well. This isn't just a media revolution, though that's where we are seeing the impact first. This is a chain-reaction of revolutions. It has just begun.
Arafat's crimes
: Here is a list of Arafat's victims. It is a very long list. This is just one day of terror: ... Oct 4, 2003 - Twenty-one people were killed, including four children, and 58 wounded in a suicide bombing carried out by a female terrorist from Jenin in the Maxim restaurant in Haifa. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack. The victims: Admiral (res.) Ze'ev Almog, 71, of Haifa, and his wife Ruth Almog, 70; their son Moshe Almog, 43, and grandsons Tomer Almog, 9, and Assaf Staier, 11, all of Haifa; Zvi Bahat, 35, of Haifa; Mark Biano, 29, of Haifa, and his wife Naomi Biano, 25; Hana Francis, 39, of Fassouta; Mutanus Karkabi, 31, of Haifa; Sharbal Matar, 23, of Fassouta; Osama Najar, 28, of Haifa, cook; Nir Regev, 25, of Nahariya; Irena Sofrin, 38, of Kiryat Bialik; Bruria Zer-Aviv, 59, her son Bezalel Zer-Aviv, 30, and his wife Keren Zer-Aviv, 29, with their children Liran, 4, and Noya, 1, all of Kibbutz Yagur. Lydia Zilberstein, 58, died on October 10 and George Matar, 57, died October 15.... [Thanks, Tom Gross]
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JEFF JARVIS is former TV critic for TV Guide and People, creator of Entertainment Weekly, Sunday editor and associate publisher of the NY Daily News, and a columnist on the San Francisco Examiner. He was until recently president & creative director of Advance.net, the online arm of Advance Publications. Now he is working with The New York Times Company at About.com on content development and strategy and consulting for Advance, Fairchild, and the City University of New York's new Graduate School of Journalism, where he lead the creation of the curriculum for the new media program. He says he is at work on a book. This is a personal site.
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It's mine, I tell you, mine! All mine! You can't have it because it's mine! You can read it (please); you can quote it (thanks); but I still own it because it's mine! I own it and you don't. Nya-nya-nya. So there.
COPYRIGHT 2001-2003-20?? by Jeff Jarvis
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