I’m sure every print journalism student has had this conversation before:
(Well-meaning) “So, what’s your major?”
(Proudly) “Communications. Print Journalism emphasis.”
(Confused) “Print Journalism? What’s that?”
(Uncomfortably. Who doesn’t know what print journalism is?) “Uh, you know. Newspapers and stuff.”
(Dawning realization) “Oh, yeah, of course. So, what are you going to do with that?”
(Aren’t the answers to these questions obvious?) “I want to write for a newspaper. You know, news stories.”
“Oh.” (You brace yourself.) “But aren’t newspapers dying? Are you even going to have a job?”
At this point, I want to yell “NO” to the first and “YES” to the second. No, of course newspapers aren’t going to suddenly go extinct! They may change mediums, but the world will ALWAYS need those with a passion for news writing. Citizens will always be hungry for news. It doesn’t matter if paper copies of newspapers become the less-common medium. There will still be a need for news writers.
I think the future of news will be found in the internet. That’s where everything is going right now. Our world is changing rapidly, and most of it is shifting online. Now whether that is good or bad is up to debate. (Want to watch that debate? On the website for the Washington D.C. Newseum they have a series of videos “where the best minds in traditional and new media meet to discuss the role of a free press in an ever-changing digital democracy.” They are incredibly interesting.)
I see myself becoming a web editor, someone who edits content to make it more readable online. I envision a future where the people formerly known as the audience are participants in news writing, making journalism a diverse forum.
The world is evolving, and we just have to make sure we evolve with it.