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Old Media: Not Dead Yet.

Old Media: Not Dead Yet.

By: memery OffLine

On: 1/5/2009 11:01 AM

Posted To: The Circuit

I pay far more attention to traditional media than I ever have. I went to the movies twice over the holidays, and watched a bunch more at home. I thought by now I’d be writing blog posts about the demise of print, but I read more books last year than I did in the 5 years preceding it. And, speaking of books, am I not supposed to have a Kindle by now? (I don’t).

It really crystallized for me the other day when, in a casual conversation with a coworker, I realized I discover an inordinate amount of new music in TV shows, commercials and movies. Six Feet Under may not have put Coldplay on the map (though they did play it relentlessly during its spectacular run), but it put Sia squarely on mine with her epic song “Breathe Me” in the series finale. I spent the entire month of June listening to nothing but Feist after Apple featured the hopelessly irresistible “1 2 3 4” in an iPod commercial. A Toyota commercial literally stopped me in my popcorn-fetching tracks with Pete Droge’s “Going Whichever Way the Wind Blows.” Cadillac introduced me to Black Iris Music, a band that creates music specifically for television commercials. This certainly isn’t your father’s Cadillac.

After the conversation I checked out my iTunes playlists. Pete Droge? Check. Feist? Duh! Sia? Give me all of it. Even Black Iris Music is in there. Then I took a look at my desk and the area surrounding it. I found an iPhone, an iMac, and a Starbucks mug. I drive a Volkswagen, but have a Prius brochure on my coffee table. Death of old media, pffft.

New rules about old media:

1. Old media is a great way to infuse content into new media;
2. Old school marketers aren’t nearly as dumb as everyone in new media makes them out to be

I spent some time thinking about how it got to be this way, and usage patterns around new and old media. I realized that I control pretty much everything that happens to me. So do you. Whether you laud it a seminal moment in perpetual innovation or curse it the scourge of our cold, isolated modern culture, technology has made it possible for individuals to almost completely direct how they interact with the world. Tivo, various RSS readers, TweetBeep, Digg, Google Alerts - those are my tools. In fact, I filter almost every morsel of media I ingest. 

Interest-specific communities and popular social media destinations ensure I select not only the toys I want to play with, but the sandboxes where I play with them. My iPhone lets me play what I want, where I want, whenever I want - fast. This partly explains why I literally did not know anyone, as in NOT ONE SINGLE PERSON (outside of my immediate family), that was not voting for Obama last Fall; technology has allowed me to find people who are a lot like me, and ignore the ones who aren’t (I’m an avid defriender).

It is sobering to think the technologies that were supposed to bring us all together actually further silo people, winnowing diverse physical communities into homogenous digital marketing selects. I suppose it shouldn’t be as jarring to me as it is - people still choose their friends based on commonalities in the real world, but it doesn’t feel right. It’s not that I don’t like my ivory tower, it’s just that it’s drafty.

Comments:

teala_c said:

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4/9/2009 11:37 AM

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JW_Harper10 said:

Great read Mark. I agree with you and most of the others that "new media", especially Mobile, needs "old media" to truely be successful. I would like to point out that "Old Media" is not dead, but print, mainly newspaper, does appear to be dying a slow death. Generation Y(me) is playing a key role in that! Decline in subscriptions and advertising is proof. Moving on.....One thing that really stood out to me is your comment "It is sobering to think the technologies that were supposed to bring us all together actually further silo people." It almost seems like your inferring that social media is segmenting us. Don't get me wrong, I think its great that people who have never met, and probably would never meet, can connect because of social media(i.e. IntroNetworks); but looking at the bigger picture, is there any negative to this "segregation?" Are we sifting through individuals, trying to get the "perfect match", and missing out on meaningful relationships? Thanks Mark!
1/9/2009 5:02 PM

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vsingh said:

I think the main difference between the old media and new media involves the push vs. pull aspect of communication. The new dynamic is for the old media to involve itself more in the pull part of the equation... or risk further diminishing of stature.
1/6/2009 10:15 AM

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pbarry said:

I can relate to your "New rules about old media". People often forget that innovation is the best mix of old and new, it is not about throwing all the old ways out of the window. I don't believe it is an ivory tower, I think it is a cycle of change. You have found new people to connect with and have maybe lost your connection to some others, you will continue to do that throughout life as your circumstances and interests change. Online networking has affected the way you do that but hasn't stopped the cycle. It is still a combination of the old and new ways.
1/6/2009 8:53 AM

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dmiller said:

I agree. In many ways old media is the platform on top of which new media gets to play. The most difficult thing for publishers to understand is the behavioral changes required - by both the content creator and the content consumer - to digest the new media.
1/6/2009 7:46 AM

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Ron_Duquette said:

'Traditional media' will always be around and it's important that it is. It's very hard to execute on anything 'new media' in a successful way without a traditional media buy. Enjoyed this very much!
1/5/2009 10:53 PM

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