The Enduring Popularity of Legacy Journalism: An Analysis of Online Audience Data

As news publishers continue to lose subscribers and advertising revenue, journalism practitioners and researchers have looked to newcomers to the field for ideas of how to adapt and succeed in a much more saturated and unstable media environment. Many have specifically looked to digital native news...

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Main Author: Jacob L. Nelson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2020-04-01
Series:Media and Communication
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/mediaandcommunication/article/view/2736
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author Jacob L. Nelson
author_facet Jacob L. Nelson
author_sort Jacob L. Nelson
collection DOAJ
description As news publishers continue to lose subscribers and advertising revenue, journalism practitioners and researchers have looked to newcomers to the field for ideas of how to adapt and succeed in a much more saturated and unstable media environment. Many have specifically looked to digital native news organizations to understand the ways that journalism is attempting to reinvent itself for a media landscape that is very different from the previous one. Yet what often gets lost in this focus on the newest news organizations is the resilience of many of journalism’s older ones. In this study, I analyze a year’s worth of U.S.-based online news consumption data to show that, even in a media environment increasingly saturated with digital native news outlets, legacy news brands continue to comprise a majority of the most popular news sites. Drawing on audience studies literature, I argue that these findings likely reflect audience preferences for familiar, established brands, as well as structural advantages these brands maintain due to their size and capital. I conclude that the fate of digital news organizations is not just a question of their innovativeness or nimbleness. It is also a question of their ability to combat a combination of powerful, stubborn forces: the habits of the people they hope to reach, and the deep pockets of their competitors.
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spelling doaj.art-c430e99e129946278392db91788c89852022-12-22T00:52:14ZengCogitatioMedia and Communication2183-24392020-04-0182405010.17645/mac.v8i2.27361399The Enduring Popularity of Legacy Journalism: An Analysis of Online Audience DataJacob L. Nelson0Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication, Arizona State University, USAAs news publishers continue to lose subscribers and advertising revenue, journalism practitioners and researchers have looked to newcomers to the field for ideas of how to adapt and succeed in a much more saturated and unstable media environment. Many have specifically looked to digital native news organizations to understand the ways that journalism is attempting to reinvent itself for a media landscape that is very different from the previous one. Yet what often gets lost in this focus on the newest news organizations is the resilience of many of journalism’s older ones. In this study, I analyze a year’s worth of U.S.-based online news consumption data to show that, even in a media environment increasingly saturated with digital native news outlets, legacy news brands continue to comprise a majority of the most popular news sites. Drawing on audience studies literature, I argue that these findings likely reflect audience preferences for familiar, established brands, as well as structural advantages these brands maintain due to their size and capital. I conclude that the fate of digital news organizations is not just a question of their innovativeness or nimbleness. It is also a question of their ability to combat a combination of powerful, stubborn forces: the habits of the people they hope to reach, and the deep pockets of their competitors.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/mediaandcommunication/article/view/2736audience studiesdigital native newsjournalismlegacy newsnews consumptionnews publishers
spellingShingle Jacob L. Nelson
The Enduring Popularity of Legacy Journalism: An Analysis of Online Audience Data
Media and Communication
audience studies
digital native news
journalism
legacy news
news consumption
news publishers
title The Enduring Popularity of Legacy Journalism: An Analysis of Online Audience Data
title_full The Enduring Popularity of Legacy Journalism: An Analysis of Online Audience Data
title_fullStr The Enduring Popularity of Legacy Journalism: An Analysis of Online Audience Data
title_full_unstemmed The Enduring Popularity of Legacy Journalism: An Analysis of Online Audience Data
title_short The Enduring Popularity of Legacy Journalism: An Analysis of Online Audience Data
title_sort enduring popularity of legacy journalism an analysis of online audience data
topic audience studies
digital native news
journalism
legacy news
news consumption
news publishers
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/mediaandcommunication/article/view/2736
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