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Slow news and spotlights

lloydshep | Web World Wide | Wednesday, April 30th, 2008

If we can have slow food, why can’t we have slow news? Why does everything around news have to be fast?

The “slow food” movement treats food as something to be cherished, something to spend time with. Our appreciation and understanding of what food is increases with the time we spend with it. “Slows news” would see us organising our news sites in a way to allow attention to be given to a news story over time, rather than just at the instant at which it is producing the brightest light. To some extent, the rise of the blogosphere has already given us this facility, but it’s diffuse and depends on additional tools and services - RSS readers, Google alerts, Twitter, whatever - to give an individual access to it. So why don’t newspaper sites provide for slow news?

Take, for instance, the front page of the Telegraph. No particular reason to pick on the Telegraph, I just plucked it from the air. As I write this, the following stories are being covered in one way or another:

  • Global warming
  • A father killing himself over a school place
  • The Austrian cellar nightmare
  • Gordon Brown and the 42-day internment plan
  • Boris Johnson “wooing” the LibDems
  • Ian McKellen returning as Gandalf
  • Chelsea v. Liverpool
  • Manchester United v. Barcelona
  • Shoaib’s failed appeal
  • House prices sliding again
  • Calls for a “supermarket Tsar”
  • BSkyB’s “secret weapon”
  • Toll roads - Britain needs more of them
  • Gordon Brown and the 10p tax rate fiasco
  • The price of progress in Beijing
  • A tasy recipe to get to your table in 10 minutes

And that’s just the stuff above the fold. Now, many of these represent a “story space” in which events will unfold. Some of these “story spaces” might even make sense as a navigational entity, say a “topic” page. Off the top of my head I’d say we’ve got the following “story spaces” represented in here:

  • Global warming
  • School admissions and the stress they cause
  • The Austrian cellar nightmare
  • 42-day internment
  • The London Mayoral election
  • The remaking of the Hobbit
  • Chelsea v. Liverpool
  • Manchester Utd. v Barcelona
  • The Champions League
  • Shoaib’s cricket ban
  • House prices
  • Supermarket regulation
  • BSkyB
  • Digital TV competition in Britain
  • Tax in Britain
  • Poverty in Britain
  • Gordon Brown
  • China
  • Recipes

See the problem? From an IA perspective these are all over the place. Global warming, house prices and 42-day internment are all obvious topic pages. But what “level” should the Shoaib cricket ban on? And what’s the best way to organise all the coverage around an individual football match? From a human perspective, these story spaces make perfect sense. I’d love the Telegraph to provide me a single destination on, for instance, supermarket regulation. And I’d love that page to include a bit more than just the most recent stories that fall into that area. I’d love it to include some analysis, some data, some stuff from the web. I’d love it to be “slow.” Which causes another problem. Who does that editing? And how is the page maintained and updated?

Some sites, notably the NY Times, are using “topics” to provide a kind of slow news experience. But for me these topic pages are simply dressed up archives. They do of course provide a valuable service, both to the user and to the site publisher in the form of SEO. But they’re not necessarily all that pleasing as media experiences.

I think this “slow news” idea is one reason why Wikipedia’s coverage of news events is often so attractive. Firstly, Wikipedia provides a single and persistent URL around a story (which newspapers sites often, notably, do not do). Then that page starts to develop and grow. Information starts to attach itself to the URL. The page’s informational value increases at least partly because it’s a single page. And, of course, because of the nature of Wikipedia the “maintenance” question comes pre-answered.

Where’s the newspaper equivalent? I’m not sure I know. But I do think it’s worthy of consideration. At the moment, something happens and newspaper sites shine a bright, searing spotlight onto it. We get a tight, focussed dose of detail. And then the spotlight moves on to something else. If the original subject comes back into the news, we shine the spotlight onto it once more, and we often get the same detail or maybe a bit more. The problem is, to see the whole of a topic, we need some light shining on it all the time. A random series of superbright spotlights gives us a distorted picture of what we’re looking at.

So, slow news and consistent light. Maybe I should tag a few IA types to give some thoughts on this?

11 Comments »

  1. […] Shepherd: Slow news and spotlights [vía]  Imprimir este post    View blog reactions Votar […]

    Pingback by Slow news » eCuaderno — May 1, 2008 @ 4:50 pm

  2. […] thought the new Addictomatic might be one answer to my request for slower news, but it doesn’t work for me because it organises content by its source. It really […]

    Pingback by Dadblog » Addictomatic = not “slow” — May 2, 2008 @ 7:37 am

  3. Hi Lloyd,

    Sorry to be late coming to this.

    Very intriguing idea. What do you see as missing from what Wikipedia can provide? Are you looking for something with a more journalist style? Or is it that Wikipedia simply doesn’t, for whatever reason, tend to cover enough of these ‘newsy’ topics?

    This kind of topic (with analysis) does seem like something that would be very valuable — a kind of briefing on popular topics — and the kind of thing that a large news organisation would be well-placed to provide. I guess the trick would be in maintaining something of a sufficiently high quality for a sufficiently low cost to make it worthwhile.

    Comment by Matt Collins — June 15, 2008 @ 7:13 pm

  4. Hello..

    Have you heard about Dipity.com? This sight might be solution to your slow news problem, or at least a start. It takes topics, similar to NYTimes and Wikipedia, but uses TIME as the organizational tool… so you go to a timeline with many sources and stay up to date on the topic, as well as getting user feedback and via commenting and voiting.

    I think the best part is that you an embed the timeline anywhere, say.. on a blog, so you can follow along w/o ever having to leave the comfort of your own …… site?

    Anyhow.. just thought I’d toss it out there.

    Comment by BJ — June 25, 2008 @ 2:42 pm

  5. Dipity is lovely - I’ve just set myself up on it. But it doesn’t give me *context*, which is what I think I want from slow news. Going to post again on this….

    Comment by lloydshep — June 25, 2008 @ 3:11 pm

  6. […] Comments lloydshep on Slow news and spotlightsBJ on Slow news and spotlightsWordle up : Open to persuasion… on Beautiful tag cloudjohn q on […]

    Pingback by Dadblog » Developing slow news: the BBC — June 27, 2008 @ 10:05 am

  7. […] Comments Adrian Monck on links for 2008-06-27Dadblog » Developing slow news: the BBC on Slow news and spotlightslloydshep on Slow news and spotlightsBJ on Slow news and spotlightsWordle up : Open to […]

    Pingback by Dadblog » Developing slow news: the Telegraph — July 1, 2008 @ 10:24 am

  8. […] much bigger stories (plural), so it’s important to link all these together. (This is part of what Lloyd Shepherd calls “slow news”.) Therefore the article editor has lots of boxes to fill in which ensure the article fits in […]

    Pingback by niksilver.com » An ABC of R2: A is for article editor — November 18, 2008 @ 9:34 am

  9. […] positioned to lead what digital media specialist Lloyd Shepherd has referred to in the past as the slow news movement -  an effort to throw some light on the affairs of the moment, when all we have is the heat of […]

    Pingback by How The Atlantic Is Rethinking Magazine Publishing « Jon Bernstein — October 15, 2009 @ 12:08 pm

  10. […] written about this stuff so often I hesitate to link to anything in particular: but try this and […]

    Pingback by Slow news making a comeback on Google? | Lloyd Shepherd @work — June 11, 2010 @ 12:01 pm

  11. […] da rendere il tempo una variabile della notizie e non perdere ciò che inevitabilmente salto. Il fattore tempo deve essere una possibile via di accesso all’informazione nel suo complesso. Questo tra le altre cose consentirebbe alle persone di creare il proprio metodo […]

    Pingback by click.logg | Siamo maturi per le Slow News? — June 16, 2010 @ 12:35 pm

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