In the jargon of yesteryear's journalism, the "cold cuts" were outdated news that the majority of newspaper readers, as well as radio and TV consumers, were supposed to already know about. Being typified like this, it was just like a sin for a newspapers company to publish such things as fresh news when other media … Continue reading “Cold cuts” news are no more
Tag: TV
The newspapers are many things at once
In this modern era, newspapers are more than a compendium of news, graphics and ads on paper. They're many things at once: a distributer of digital content, a bit of TV and a bit of radio and a more real, direct and active interlocutor with its users. That is the magic of multimedia. Amalgamating many … Continue reading The newspapers are many things at once
New media don’t kill the old media
Since the Internet broke into humanity with all its transformative force back in 1995, there have never been premonitions about the imminent disappearance of the traditional media, namely printed newspapers. The omens in this regard have been based on two parallel measurements: the one that records the number of people connected to digital media and … Continue reading New media don’t kill the old media
New ways to tell stories
Podcasts, on one hand, and the efficient use of all the information treasured by data stores, are driving new ways of telling stories through the printed and digital media that operate unified. Thanks to the sound format, which are podcasts, newspapers can extract fragments of stories then spread as text or TV series, turning them … Continue reading New ways to tell stories
Three platforms that have already changed
The written press, TV and radio have been the most impacted media by the irruption of digital technologies, radically transforming many of the norms and techniques that the exercise of journalism uses to inform the public. This change has implied a progressive migration of the audiences into the digital platforms, especially social media, and a … Continue reading Three platforms that have already changed
Four-eyed standing
Since 80's TVs began to use multiple elements on the screen at once, the human eyes and brain had to optimize their skills to assimilate, in an instant, such diversity of images, process them critically and form an accurate vision of the latent reality. A video broadcasted in real time along with a moving text … Continue reading Four-eyed standing