-Caveat Lector-

[See website for embedded links.]

July 12, 2001

The Wired Left Awakens

<http://ojr.usc.edu/content/story.cfm?request=607>

AlterNet leads a resurgence of progressive news sites

By J.D. Lasica, OJR Senior Columnist

Will a handful of big corporations control virtually all the news published
on the Internet? On some days it certainly appears that way, especially in
light of the report last month that four companies control half of all the
traffic on the Web.
The prospects for independent content sites seem grim today, what with
Salon running low on cash and the zines Feed and Suck closing up shop.
But one voice of grassroots independent journalism has recently begun to
thrive. More surprising still, its point of view offers a decidedly
left-of-center tilt.
The secrets of AlterNet's success? It's not out to make money. And it's
riding a wave of public anger about the Bush administration's
less-than-compassionate policies on the environment, energy, civil rights
and other issues that tend to send progressives into a frothy lather.
While the right has long ruled the Net by dominating message boards, polls
and peer-to-peer sites like FreeRepublic (see my column last fall on
conservative news sites), the political left has been comparatively silent.
That may be changing.
Don Hazen, AlterNet's executive editor, says the site's traffic has soared
500 percent since President Bush took office, in much the same way that
conservative sites and publications flourished under Clinton. The site now
attracts about 200,000 unique visitors and gets 1.6 million page views a
month  numbers akin to Suck's and higher than Feed's  compared with 40,000
visitors nine months ago.
"The conservative slant of Bush's administration has been a Godsend for us,
and for other left-leaning organizations," says Hazen, former publisher of
Mother Jones magazine.
        The left wakes up and smells the coffee
Other left-leaning news sites have also begun to make Net denizens sit up
and take notice:
TomPaine.com, funded by the non-profit Florence Fund, publishes
commentaries and stories on subjects overlooked by the mainstream media.
The site runs ads on the op-ed page of the New York Times on topics like
the drug war and welfare reform.
Workingforchange.com, a slick, left-leaning news and links site, was
launched in spring 2000. It's run by a shoe-string staff and owned by the
do-gooder long-distance telephone company Working Assets.
The CommonDreams news service offers breaking news and views for the
progressive community.
This abbreviated list doesn't include online magazines that publish
original Web content like Mother Jones, The American Prospect and The
Nation, advocacy groups like CorpWatch, publications like Grist Magazine or
The Black World Today, and organizations like the ACLU, Greenpeace and
Rainforest Action Network.
AlterNet, which launched on the Web in 1998, is a branch of the Independent
Media Institute, a not-for-profit public interest media company in San
Francisco. Originally called the Institute for Alternative Journalism, IMI
was formed in 1983 by a group of alternative-newspaper editors as a
syndication service for weeklies, and it continues to do so today, with 160
papers using stories written for the service.
Recalls Hazen: "Several years ago we realized we had all this great
content, and it just made sense to make it available to the public on the
Web."
The early versions of AlterNet had a funky design, but the site underwent a
major overhaul on May 29. The result? A more sophisticated look and
back-end functionality (discussion boards, searches, article purchases)
powered by RealImpact, a division of Seattle's RealNetworks that has
provided online technical services at cost to progressive organizations
since March 1998.
AlterNet relies on 300 different sources for its content offerings  some
from publications like Salon or The Nation, others written by staffers or
free-lancers.  Of its $600,000 annual budget, a third comes from
syndication income and much of the remainder from foundation grants.
The syndication arrangement is simple enough: Client newspapers select the
stories they want through an online selection process and pay a modest fee
(say, 10 cents a word). AlterNet shares half the revenue with the writer,
who retains all publication rights. The stories also appear on AlterNet's
Web site.
The site has an executive editor, creative director, managing editor, a
senior editor/staff writer, and two part-time writers. Last month AlterNet
reorganized its content and broadened its reach to concentrate on five
hot-button news categories: the drug war, globalization, health and the
environment, human rights in the United States and the concentration of
media ownership.
                    The death of content sites
While part of the site's success is driven by users seeking an alternative
to the conservative political headwinds, AlterNet also benefits from the
dwindling number of free-standing content sites.
"There's less and less content available as other content sites disappear,"
Hazen says. "I certainly do not dance on the graves of Feed and Suck and
others who've come before us.  It's just that there's no business model for
small, creative literary sites that I can imagine.  To succeed you need a
hybrid model of revenue and subsidies. The Nation, the New Republic  no
magazine of opinion makes money on its own. Salon's got to face the
music  they're about to run out of money."
A big spurt in traffic came in March after an article by Tim Wise in which
the writer charged white denial in the spate of school shootings,
particularly in Santee, Calif. The article exploded around the Net and drew
coverage in the Los Angeles Times, Washington Post and San Francisco
Chronicle.
"Wise's article would never have appeared in the mainstream media because
it was so in-your-face," Hazen says. "We try to let writers use language
that's as strong as they need."
Hazen points to a number of articles that he says "you wouldn't read in a
daily newspaper or weekly magazine," including:

--An article excoriating the FCC for censoring radio stations and liberally
quoting offensive song lyrics.

--Girls Will Be Boys, an account of the rising number of transsexuals at
women's colleges. "You might read about it in the New York Times a year
from now, but we're the ones put it it out there first," Hazen says.

--The 13 Scariest White Guys in America, a swipe at conservative
politicians, media moguls and other power brokers. "We tried to pitch it to
the New York Daily News and the New York Post but were told it was too
explosive," Hazen says.

--Anatomy of a Media-made Drug Scare, a look at the media's one-sided
assault on a prescription drug used to treat chronic pain.

"We look for stories that will provide a different perspective or
unorthodox opinion or a particular angle that's been overlooked by the
mainstream media," Hazen says. "We seldom break a story with our reporting.
Our strong suit is in giving the analysis and alternative perspective."
Hazen has observed the working of the media machine for well over a decade.
"I'm not from the knee-jerk paranoid school that believes big media is
censoring everyone's thoughts," he says. "You can find some great
journalism in the dailies. But I think how certain publications play
particular stories can have a big impact. You might be able to find some of
these stories in the media, but it doesn't enter the public dialogue if it
amounts to two paragraphs on page 20 of the New York Times. It's how the
story gets presented and advanced and echoed that gets it onto the TV talk
shows and radio stations and into America's living rooms."
                    A focus on issues and policy
The problem with mainstream media  including online media  is that they've
become a sort of Distraction Machine, Hazen suggests. "The media are less
about censoring stories than they are about presenting gossip and trivia,"
he says. "We prefer to focus on issues and policy and how it affects real
people's lives."
Too often newspaper and broadcast newsrooms look at the alternative press,
zines and small Web sites as irrelevant purveyors of fringe journalism. But
the truth is that they also play a significant role as the front-line shock
troops that catapult controversial or novel subjects onto the public's
radar screen.
"I think it's true that there are layers of the culture, and you may find
things in the alternative weeklies or magazines or online media that
percolate up to the surface and break through," Hazen says. "Some of the
dailies are catching on to the fact that people like to read about
controversial, in-your-face topics and subjects of interest to the younger
community. If you look in the back pages of the alternative weeklies,
you'll find this incredible world of relationships and sex that you do not
find in the mainstream dailies. The alternative culture in this country is
really about the matching up of sexual orientations and races and
lifestyles, and we're pretty alert to that."
AlterNet recently launched a turbo-charged web crawler that will search
50,000 stories from AlterNet and its content partners  including Salon, The
Nation, Mother Jones, the Village Voice, Utne Reader and others  by the
middle of this month. "It's sort of a mini-LexisNexis for the left," Hazen
says.
AlterNet has its flaws. In May the site ran a poorly labeled satirical news
report about the White House serving genetically modified food  a report
that was picked up by online and print publications, including the Nation,
which had to publish a correction. The site dismissed complaints by readers
who fired off angry e-mails about the misleading article, suggesting they
just didn't grasp satire. But Hazen now acknowledges, "I guess the labeling
was too subtle."
On the whole, however, AlterNet's brand of alternative journalism provides
a counterpoint to the increasingly corporatized media world. "The media
marketplace has become dominated by corporate conglomerates," Hazen
says.  "In the old days, newspapers came at you from all perspectives. It's
only been since the '50s and '60s that newspapers have turned away from
their roles as advocates of strong opinions and turned into these
homogenized, mealy-mouthed, info-entertainment machines."
It's unlikely anything can change that, but it's refreshing to see outfits
like AlterNet challenge the media's infotainment machine by offering a
much-needed burst of grassroots insurgency.
-------------------------
J.D. Lasica is an online journalist who maintains a site of Web journalism
resources at jdlasica.com. Visit his Weblog at jd.manilasites.com.

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/";>ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to