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[caption id="attachment_545" align="alignnone" width="598" caption="A screengrab from the State of the News Media Report's website."]A screengrab from the State of the News Media Report's website.[/caption]

The Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism, in its own words, a "a nonpartisan 'fact tank,'" released its State of the News Media Report for 2011, an attempt to evaluate the robustness of media in the U.S.

In an overview of the report, PEJ breaks down the key findings. Some are surprising: "Local TV wins 2010 revenue race"; some are not: "Mobile has already become an important factor in news."

But one conclusion, which looks like good news at first glance, is dubious: "Online news hires may have matched newspaper cuts for the first time." Following this statement is a list of online news companies and their recent or upcoming hires: AOL/Patch.com (1,000); Bloomberg Government (150); and Yahoo ("several dozen). The summary concludes: "These hiring increases appeared to have compensated for the 1,000 to 1,500 job losses the study estimates the newspaper industry suffered in 2010."

But what does "compensated" mean, exactly? Click through to the report, and you can read about the various innovations of these news organization (aggregation, curation) and a shift towards working with local news outlets to secure original reporting.

What you won't read about is what, exactly, these new jobs offer. If anecdotal stories about what it's like to "create content" for Yahoo or Huffington Post or one of many info factories are representative of these thousands of new online news jobs, the report's claim that they are making up for those lost at newspapers across the country (a portion of them full-time jobs with benefits and security) is naive. Such claims do a disservice to journalists trying to navigate and make a living in today's media climate.

In the face of declining print subscriptions and optimistic praise for digital publications such as The Daily, Montreal daily La Presse has announced it intends to move to an online-only format within three to five years. It will be the first major daily newspaper to carry out such a transition.As part of its multi-million-dollar "iPad plan," La…
Recent stats from VIDA that showed how few women are getting their work published in literary magazines and journals had us and many others asking questions but coming up with few answers.Now, we hear from the people who decide what makes it into those publications. Elissa Strauss at The Sisterhood blog sent letters to the editors of the New…
The Washington Post Co. has reportedly invested between $5 and $10 million in developing Trove, a free personalized aggregation service that will collect news from 10,000 sources online. WaPo's senior vice president and chief digital officer, Vijay Ravindran, says it "probably won’t save journalism on its own, but it’s a start." The site…
John Stackhouse, executive editor at the Globe and Mail, has reportedly told Globe staffers they can no longer freelance for Toronto Life  and Chatelaine because the magazines are now considered “competitors.” What’s more, the same policy applies may soon apply to freelancers who contribute to the paper, most of whom don’t earn enough…
A column on Moneyville is bullish on newspapers. David Olive reports that 77% of Canadian adults read a print or online version of a newspaper at least once a week and newspaper readership has gone up by 3.7% in the last five years. Not only that, but people in the "top ten" markets spend 3.8 hours per week with printed newspapers (and a bit less…
The Wall Street Journal online is reporting that the New York Times is planning to launch a paid subscription system, likely next month, for online content. The system will allow casual surfers a certain amount of free content and targets instead the 15% of "heavy users" for a monthly sub fee. Right now, according to the report, the site generates…
The CRTC is proposing to loosen some of the only rules we have related to broadcast news content in Canada. The current rules say that broadcasters cannot air "any false or misleading news." Period. The change, scheduled to come into effect on September 1 of this year, would limit that prohibition to situations where the false or misleading news…

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