for newspapers, content is (still) the problem
I’m not exactly a digital native, more first generation immigrant. Nor am I an enthusiastic internet pirate.
I grew up with the habit of newspaper buying. I once worked for a national newspaper. I enthusiastically read the paper cover to cover.
Not anymore.
I stopped buying during the week, once we moved away from Finchley Central. The combination of the regular delays on the Northern line and a newspaper  shop on the southbound platform meant a reasonably regular thought process of  “sod it, might as well buy a paper while we wait”.  The mere geography of the new tube station undermined the purchase process.
For a while it remained a weekend pleasure (with coffee and cats) but in the end I stopped that too.
I stopped because the content alienated me. I was disappointed with the bizarre fashion supplements, with the obsession with new media (biogs for authors that were nothing more than “who blogs at”) and some frustratingly elitist editorials ( Few people know nothing at all by Beethoven). I’m still annoyed about the folksonomic zeitgeist.
And I felt like I knew little more when I put down the paper than when I had picked it up. I knew the gist of the news before I read it and I could guess what the columnists were going to say about. There was never any real analysis, nothing that made me understand.
I tried other papers, even straying a long way from my political comfort land. They all annoyed me. Oddly the Financial Times annoyed me least, perhaps because I had a lot to learn about their particular view of the world. And then I just gave up and saved the pounds.
These days I don’t normally get news from the internet, whether that be blogs, the BBC or newspapers. I get it from the radio.
I do go to newspaper websites (of all stripes) to read the comment stuff but mostly it just annoys me. Â Reading it is irrational but I still do it. Paywalls will help me stop irritating myself.
I do still like the supplements ( food , money, gardening and the like) Â but figured I might as well just buy a dedicated magazine. They’ll cover those subjects better anyway. Â And so we do. Shedloads of magazines still pass through our house. Â Proper dead tree media.
So perhaps we could move on from all this paywall business and complaining about the internet. Â Maybe it is time to sort out the lazy, trite content instead?