Showing posts with label simon Kelner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label simon Kelner. Show all posts

Monday, May 25, 2009

Kelner comes out fighting again

There is an interesting interview with Simon Kelner in Media Guardian this morning.

Kelner is not a great fan of the publication seeing it as constantly sniping at his empire.

It is worth noting though his comments about the business state of the Indy titles

This on the rumours of going free and/or online only

"We make tens and tens of millions in circulation revenues," he says. "To have only one source of revenue leaves you very exposed. And that goes for the idea of online only too."


and this about the losses at the paper

He is furious about Media Guardian's use of the phrase the "loss-making Indy" when, he claims, the title loses less than many of its peers including the Guardian. It is, he says, "a form of journalism that would make Pravda ashamed".

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Kelner wishes he could uninvent the internet


Simon Kelner has made his views known on the internet and the media's failure to incorporate it into a workable business model on making occasions.

Yesterday evening,speaking to students at UCLAN,he reiterated those views describing the net as the "most serious threat to journalism"

The editor in chief of the Independent is an old boy at the University ,back in the days when it was simply Preston Polytechnic and the journalism course contained just thirty individuals.

The relationship between print and online was to Kelner,a conundrum.But the media made a big mistake when it decided to join the rush to put its content online.

People got use to free content and to turn back the clock now was akin to shutting the barn doors after the horse had bolted.

The Independent,he felt, should opt out of the inflationary rush to put all its content online,instead concentrating on niche output which may sustain a paid content model.

The revenues from online advertising will not sustain quality journalism

He is still optimistic about the printed word,believing that newspapers are not simply a medium for content but an intrinsic product themselves.People prefer to hold a newspaper and feel the pages and get the print on their hands.

He displayed a passion for journalism and asked that if the media crumbled,who would hold the legislators to account? Newspapers had to change and should concentrate on giving some meaning to the stories.

We have heard the viewspaper model before.It was a model that he firmly stood behind at the Independent and since being moved upstairs is no doubt pressing to the newspaper's board.

Kelner is a journalism enthusiast and it was heartening to hear his passion coming through.However as with his paper,idealism has to make way for the economic realities.

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Kelner moving upstairs???

Breaking news that Simon Kelner may be moving upstairs at the Independent.

Guardian media is reporting at 12.05 that



Former Observer editor Roger Alton is understood to be in talks to replace Simon Kelner in the same role at the Independent.
Under the plan, Kelner will step up to a senior management role at the Independent and Independent on Sunday, a senior source confirmed to MediaGuardian.co.uk this morning. The role is thought to replace that of the managing director, Terry Grote, who is retiring in May.
However, senior executives at Independent News & Media say no deal has been done.


Another case of the Guardian jumping the gun as with the story of the paper going free or is Kelner really on the way out?

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

The right message but the wrong messenger


A case of the pot calling the kettle black or he who lives by the sword dies by the sword?


Excuse the cliches but Tony Blair waits until the dying days of his premiership to bite the hand that fed him.


Before we all get too hung up on the messenger,perhaps we should reflect that the message has an element of truth.The media can be sensationalist.It operates in a highly competitive environment where profit margins are being pushed to the limit and news sells.


The Prime Minister's speech at Reuters yesterday where he accused the media of acting like feral beasts,and in a competitive 24 hour environment of sacrificing balance for impact journalism,has certainly roused the media community.


No more so than Mr Kelner at the Independent whose paper appeared to take the brunt of the attack and dedicates his front page this morning to a vindication of his paper's policy of opinion



"our editorial approach, and the values that underpin it,
have come under attack from the Prime Minister, Tony Blair.
"


He continues



What clearly rankles with Mr Blair is not that we
campaign vociferously on certain issues, but that he doesn't agree with our
stance. What if we had backed the invasion of Iraq (like, for example, we
supported the interventions in Kosovo and Sierra Leone)? Would he then be
attacking our style of journalism? Of course not. We are unapologetic about our
opposition to Iraq, the biggest foreign policy folly of our age, and we shall
continue to hold him and his government to account.



The paper's founding editor,who appeared on Newsnight yesterday evening espousing the same argument writes that



"Mr Blair is right that technology has transformed the
media in the past 20 years. Once there were three TV stations, now there are
hundreds. Once the news was over by 10.30 pm, now it continues 24 hours a day,
seven days a week. Once there were distinct media forms, now they all merge on
the internet. Blogs? Nobody had heard of them 10 years ago. Now there are 70
million."



But argues that the pressure is not different to any where else,the problem has he sees it is that



"Mr Blair's governments have constantly responded to
media pressure by making rapid, unconsidered policy announcements. And that in
turn is why so much legislation has been hastily presented to Parliament, often
poorly prepared, debated too swiftly and then found faulty in
practice."


The Guardian's leader says Right sermon, wrong preacher



There is an easy response to Tony Blair's lecture on
the failings of the media, and some will seize on it. It is to accuse the prime
minister - the master (some will say) of half truths, evasion and spin - of
breathtaking hypocrisy and an almost clinical lack of self-awareness. Well, yes.
But Mr Blair's heartfelt homily deserves a more serious response. His words will
have struck a sympathetic chord, not simply among people in public life,
frustrated at the way their words and deeds are mediated, but among a broad
section of readers and viewers as well. Much of what he said was true, and it
took some courage to say it, a courage that was doubtless easier to draw on amid
the last embers of a political career
.

But it argues



It also does not mean that Mr Blair has not got
important things wrong, including missing some crucial parts of the overall
picture. A speech about the British media which does not pay tribute to its
strengths falls into the very trap - of painting the world in black and white -
which is part of the prime minister's own charge sheet.


Peter Wilby says Blair still doesn't get it in the same paper



More widely, Blair grossly underestimates the role of
politicians in changing political coverage. His speech yesterday was a rarity:
it wasn't trailed in advance. But consider how often you see stories saying that
a minister "is expected to say today:


Perhaps this is the problem.The speech should be listened to and noted but it is difficult to listen when it comes from the man who at least is partly responsible for the present state of affairs.He acknowledged in his speech this to be the case but 10 years on Mr Blair it is too late to change now.


Finally for now


The comments of New Statesmen editor John Kampfner are worth noting





“ Blaming the media is the modern equivalent of
shooting the messenger. But sometimes the messenger deserves a good shooting.
As a former feral animal, I have witnessed politicians getting increasingly
frustrated that nothing they say gets reported straight. I would scan government
reports and speeches to find the one line that shows it in its worst possible
light. The root cause is that Britain has the most competitive print media in
the world, and the desperate hunt for readers means we can’t afford detached
aloofness.


THIS WILL NO DOUBT RUN AND RUN ..........................


















Sunday, March 25, 2007

Perhaps Kelner was right after all

This morning the IOS carries an article by Tim Luckhurst suggesting that perhaps Simon Kelner was right after all about podcasts.

Focusing on the Telegraph whose

" journalists have not let their editor down. Today's multimedia online presence includes news, comment and analysis delivered as text, interactive blogs, audio podcasts, video and automated gadgetry."

The author suggests that according to one unnamed Telegraph source

"we are not sure how many people are engaging with it. "Figures reinforce the doubt. According to ABC Electronic (ABCe), the industry-backed measure of website audiences, Telegraph online ranks behind competitors, including The Guardian and The Times. "

And

"At a time last week when blogs on The Guardian's website were attracting between 50 and 200 responses, those by Telegraph correspondents were attracting far fewer."

Interestingly he continues that

a leading website editor says the sheer range of the Telegraph's online offerings implies continuing uncertainty. "Will Lewis began with the artificial notion that certain content is suitable at certain times of day. It is basically nonsense. The first lesson of web publishing is that you should put content up when you have it and allow users to decide."