• NielsBohron@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    The article actually quotes a professional journalist as saying “separate the cream from the crop,” which has never in recorded history been a saying. It’s nonsensical; the words simply don’t make any sense!

    I think it’s a garbage article that has little to no value, whatsoever. People can blame the Internet for the death of newspapers and print periodicals, but maybe (and bear with me here) most journalists are just crap at writing.

    • eric5949@lemmy.cloudaf.site
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      1 year ago

      Well yeah, the internet made anyone who wants to be a journalist capable of being a “journalist” so of course quality goes down. Both the Internet killed journalism and journalists are crap at writing are true, the latter because of the former.

      • NielsBohron@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I will 100% agree that the quality of journalistic writing has gone down since the birth of online news sources, but I’ll still maintain that most journalists have always been crap writers that are only journalists because they can’t write well enough to be published any other way.

        Exceptions exist, of course, but for every Mark Twain or Hunter S. Thompson, there’s a million journalists that are trying and failing to follow in their footsteps.

        • Dr. Dabbles@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Those two things aren’t even remotely the same. Comparing them makes zero sense. One is a light weight investigator delivering updates on happenings in the world, the other is a creator of fictional stories for entertainment.

          • NielsBohron@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I didn’t say that they’re the same thing; just that journalism is a catch-all fall-back major and career for struggling writers. You are apparently unfamiliar with all of the famous authors that got their starts in journalism or used journalism to support themselves when their books didn’t sell.

            A far from exhaustive list includes the two previously mentioned authors, Charles Dickens, Ernest Hemingway, Jon Krakauer, Steig Larsson, Barbara Ehrenreich, HG Wells, Gabriel García Marquez, Maya Angelou, and Bram Stoker.

            One is a light weight investigator delivering updates on happenings in the world, the other is a creator of fictional stories for entertainment.

            Uh, what? Wtf is “a light weight investigator?” And “delivering updates on happenings in the world” doesn’t really do justice to all the various journalistic fields that exist. There’s long-form journalism, criticism, investigatory journalism, opinion and editorial pieces, etc. Just because I don’t have much respect for the average journalist, you shouldn’t make the assumption that I don’t value journalism. There are a host of other fields that I also value highly without having much respect for the average practitioner (medicine, engineering, education, small business, politics, etc.)

            Plus, who said that we were talking about fiction for entertainment? There are other types of published writing, after all. For starters, you’re ignoring that literary fiction exists (ie fiction that is written not as entertainment but to convey larger truths about the human experience), and then there’s the entire field of nonfiction.

            TL;DR: your comment makes it very obvious that you don’t know the first thing about journalism or writing.

            • Dr. Dabbles@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              You claimed journalists became journalists because they couldn’t hack it. Which is obvious nonsense given the fact that there are university courses for journalism. Meaning people intend to become journalists.

              I get it. It’s hot to be anti-“the media” right now, but your claims are just reading like a zealot ranting.

              • NielsBohron@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                You’ve obviously never been in a journalism department in a university. See previous TL;DR

                  • NielsBohron@lemmy.world
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                    1 year ago

                    Nope, just someone who knows people in the business and has been working in academia for years with various departments.

                    Personally, I was never a journalism major. But close friends, roommates, and acquaintances were journalism students, mostly with aspirations of eventually becoming published authors. Plus, I work directly with people both in journalism and in English writing departments, so I’ve had plenty of time and evidence to form an unbiased opinion