President Barack Obama will be on the "Tonight Show" starting in just a couple of hours now. It's a landmark appearance for our history-making President: never before has a sitting President gone on a late night television talk show. So I guess he wants to reassure the American people that he's got the right cards on the table in dealing with the economy.
But... are we, now that the Rocky Mountain News has closed its doors and the Seattle Post Intelligencer has gone all digital... are we really the generation of people that want to get our news from late night talk shows?
We all saw in the last election that sometimes, the fake news shows on Comedy Central seemed to have higher credibility (and their viewers tested higher in actual knowledge about issues and events) than regular newscasts. But is this really how we want to be approached?
I find it a little unsettling myself. I realize that the LA Times is all but dead. And that the Washington Post is remaking itself in a digitized flurry of news. And that maybe even the Grey Lady, the Grande Dame herself, the New York Times is reworking the business model.
But when you read the articles that are being hurriedly typed up and posted on the web, do you notice that sometimes the words seem jumbled? Sometimes the sentences don't make sense? Is it maybe because those the reporters we trusted for decades are shaking their heads and walking away with their pink slips. And the less expensive new help that is willing to work for less and understands the digital age is taking over, but... the fresh-out-of-college enthusiasm doesn't cover bad writing, poor spelling and sloppy sentence structure?
I recall a few years ago walking through a Washington local television newsroom and one of the producers saying to me, "Does the news director know you're in town and available? Hurry and go by his office to say hello." And a photographer watching the "newbie" reporter being mentored by the news director and muttering, "I don't want to be with her if a plane goes down at National."
I don't want to be reading some of these web-reporters when something big happens, like maybe the economy going down. And I realize that Leno isn't new to the business, but... he also isn't from news.
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