Recently, analyst Victor Davis Hanson observed that, not only is our world changing radically but it is changing radically very quickly.
Nowhere is this more true than in the world of mainstream print media, where legacy organizations are collapsing much more quickly than many of us would have expected, raising the question of—what’s a writer to do? How can a writer make a living?
Especially, how can a student with real writing talent, who aspires to be a non-fiction writer, fulfil the dream? It’s possible, but it requires clear and creative thinking.
First, many who rail against the media get the cause of their problems all wrong: That is, we hear that the media are too left-wing or too right-wing or too shallow or too whatever. Nope.
Well, maybe true, depending on your perspective, but irrelevant.
Historically, media marketed information as well as opinion, and the Internet has now made most information free. As a result, advertisers, who were always the major financial support of most media, are dropping in numbers and willingness to pay, and subscribers are simply going online to find information—including the information from advertisers.
Even oldsters like me are onto this now: If I would like to buy an oil-filled space heater from the local hardware chain, why should I scan the papers, hoping to find it in one of their ads when I can just go to their site and search on “space heaters”?
When I started working on this post, I had one example of mainstream media decline, and then suddenly, two, then three, then four. But first, from Hanson:
Looking for a place to feel inspired and challenged? Like to share a smile or a laugh? Interested in becoming more familiar with Canadian writers who have a Christian worldview? We are writers who live in different parts of Canada, see life from a variety of perspectives, and write in a number of genres. We share the goal of wanting to entertain and inspire you to be all you can be with God's help.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Popular Posts
-
By Linda Hall I write by hand. I have the dubious distinction of having written twenty books in twenty years all by hand. I get big pil...
-
We writers who blog for The Word Guild were asked to say a bit about ourselves. I am a 64-year-old science writer who now lives in Ottaw...
-
by Linda Hall If you haven't seen the “Which Downton Abbey Character Are You?” quiz, you soon will. It’s all over Facebook. Being a...
-
Our five grandchildren were ages 2 ½ -8 when my husband was diagnosed with colon cancer that had progressed too far for successful treatme...
-
Several years ago I conducted an informal book promotion experiment. Speaking at events I often set up a table and tried to sell my books. B...
-
E. Stanley Jones on the Power of Pentecost By Rev Dr Ed & Janice Hird an article previously published in the Light Magazine https://l...
-
I stood at the library counter to check out a book by one of my favorite fiction authors. “Did you know Maeve Binchy died?” the wom...
-
If someone asked me what I liked best when I was a child, it might have been hearing stories. When Mom tucked us in at night, she t...
-
Awards are very special to receive. I’ve received a few of them myself for writing and gardening. I’ve always felt encouraged. Recently I r...
-
Write Canada is more than a professional networking conference. It’s a safe place where beginning and intermediate writers can learn ...

1 comment:
Denyse, the train of the publishing industry is evidently hurtling way faster down the track of massive change than I and many of us would have realized. You've shown us that reality, and that is a heads up.
Thank you.
~~+~~
Post a Comment