Email or username:

Password:

Forgot your password?
Top-level
Chris Trottier

The only benefit that institutional journalism has nowadays is cultural gatekeeping.

Quite frankly, that “feature” is useless.

It only matters to people who think The Atlantic has a sacred cultural pedigree that elevates it over Buzzfeed.

And typing the previous sentence made me laugh so hard, everyone in my hotel lobby is staring at me like a freak.

26 comments
Pete Forsyth

@atomicpoet
Quality of editing isn't worth consideration?

Chris Trottier

I’ve spoken a lot about what’s wrong with institutional journalism and social media.

But let me talk a little more about feasible alternatives.

Back in the 60s-00s, there was a “zine” movement. It was just typewritten or handwritten newsletters that were photocopied over and over again, passed from person to person.

Zines were at the vanguard of culture, and often wrote about things before institutional journalists became aware of them.

There is virtual space for that now.

🍸Pooka🥕Boo🍸

@atomicpoet Interesting, but the issue now is separating opinion from fact. People hear things, sometimes even skewed data; and don't understand how to comprehend what they are reading.

Chris Trottier

Zines were what popularized so much subculture. So much about fashion, music, and sexuality was written about in zines before they were ever a consideration at popular newsstands.

Some people believe the Internet killed the notion of a subculture. This is not the case.

Instead, the Internet built space for ever more cultural niches, and subcultures splintered into microcultures. Which were documented first in blogs, then on spaces like Tumblr.

Mariya Delano

@atomicpoet god I miss early Tumblr, it was like digital collage-building.
Collecting little scraps of the internet with images and text and assembling them on your own page.

Totally agree that zines are awesome and should be brought back into the forefront of culture digitally!

Chris Trottier

Now I believe that the institutional takeover of social media is an attempt to not just wipe out what’s left of subculture but also microculture—what the kids nowadays call “aesthetic”.

What this is actually doing is forcing it all underground.

And the Fediverse can become a social record for this underground.

Chris Trottier

There’s already much subculture/microculture on the Fediverse. Stuff that is unlikely to find its way into the Atlantic or New York Times.

While institutional journalism is going down with the Twitter ship, they’re missing out on a whole lot because they’re not here.

Their loss is our gain.

Chris Trottier

One final thought.

During the 2010s, I became active in a variety of microcultures.

The tragedy of most of them is that they were hosted on a variety of proprietary social platforms, and died when these platforms didn’t attain an increase in shareholder value.

But this isn’t a problem with the Fediverse.

The Fediverse is an excellent destination for creativity because no one can own it.

Arnel Šarić Sharan :verified:

@atomicpoet I don't know if you need any confirmation that your words are very actual, but here it is. I've been a journalist since I was 17. I graduated in Journalism in Political Sciences here in Sarajevo.

Quit journalism after a stress-induced heart attack when I was only 34. Since then, I have worked in marketing/PR and am now a community manager in an IT company.

Journalism has been leashed for far too long.

Justinmwhitaker

@atomicpoet that's true, but..that assumes that the servers stay up.

Behind the Fediverse is a whole bunch of Harry Tuttles keeping the whole thing going.

I guess that makes the Fediverse sort of....Punk?

Chris Trottier replied to Justinmwhitaker

@justinmwhitaker The Fediverse subsists on duplicates and duplicates of duplicates.

woolie

@atomicpoet has there ever been paid journalism that is not agenda driven?

Chris Trottier replied to woolie

@wooliex Depends how you define “agenda”.

Nia Molinari

@atomicpoet I've spent my entire life lurking in subcultures. This suits me just fine.

Thomas Panzner

@atomicpoet i‘m still in a mailing list, which started in mid 90s as a Yahoo! Group and had to move to Google Groups (because Yahoo! ended the service) but the number and activity shrinked to a minimum (nearly died)

Alex@rtnVFRmedia Suffolk UK

@atomicpoet 90s Internet initially helped subcultures of the era, particularly the rave scene - but folk got complacent thinking it was a magic safe space where opponents didn't have any clout, and many encouraged by corporate social media that tolerated "edgy" content for traffic/ad revenue ended up oversharing incidents of drug use/dealing and even addiction, anti social behaviour and money laundering, and handed evidence on a plate to cops and prohibitionists...

Thomas Panzner

@atomicpoet never thought of this, i heard about the fanzines from the eighties in the gothic wave music szene. Maybe the Mastodon topic Server‘s can achieve something similar

Charlie Stross

@atomicpoet News flash: they're called "blogs".

(Google took an axe to them by building the best RSS reader experience on the planet—Google Reader—then killing it after everyone stopped linking to blogs directly and began reading them via RSS/aggregator.)

Chris Trottier

@cstross This is why it’s worth reading the entire thread.

Charlie Stross

@atomicpoet not visible in my feed. This isn't Twitter!

the roamer

@atomicpoet

What an interesting lateral perpective on zines and the Fediverse.

I loved zines when they were the real thing; I do believe that zines (as a cheap hardcopy medium) have a complementary role to play in today's digital world; and I am intrigued by thinking of fediverse versions of digital zines too.

#zines

DAME Magazine

@atomicpoet We're here! But we're definitely *not* institutional journalism, in fact trying to build the opposite and stay 100% independent. But it's incredibly difficult. We think the opportunity here (Fediverse) is enormous.

Panama Red

@atomicpoet [[The only benefit that institutional journalism has nowadays is cultural gatekeeping.]]

It's also doing most of the investigative reporting that's going on in this country. Investigative reporting, and accountability journalism more broadly, are difficult, time-consuming, and expensive. Institutional news outlets (be they the NYT or the county's local weekly) are about the only places where journalists can get it done. A few journalists do it independently, but not many.

Go Up