New media is attention

by Mathew on August 10, 2006 · Comments

While scanning the headlines at I Want Media, one of my favourite media-news aggregation sites, I came across an interview with Jared Kushner, the 25-year-old who recently bought the New York Observer. For anyone who doesn’t know, the Observer is a pink-coloured tabloid that provides a wonderful mix of politics, art, commentary and other stuff, and has a pretty great website too. Jared is the son of a prominent New York developer, and in addition to owning property himself and studying law and business, he nows runs the Observer.

Unlike many of his fellow twentysomethings, Jared says he has never really gotten into MySpace.com and that he still reads newspapers such as the Wall Street Journal and so on (although he reads many of them online) — so perhaps he’s not really representative of other media consumers in his age bracket. But he makes an important point when asked about how he thinks attitudes toward the media have changed. He says:

“I believe that when it comes to the news, my generation has shorter attention spans and greater expectations. Society and media have evolved to the point where a person has to put forth very little effort to get the news. Rather, the news comes to us. People now expect to be entertained. And if I am not going to provide them with an engaging and cutting-edge product, someone else will.”

A blogger I have come to enjoy named Chartreuse put the same concept in a slightly different (and more poetic) way recently, with this post. The bottom line is that “You have to find old media (what channel? What time? What theatre? What station?). New media finds you.” And most importantly: “Old media is begging for attention. New media is attention.”

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  • Assuming this is is true, and not just a justification for an ADD-afflicted generation, I'm not sure it's a good thing.

    First, I'm pretty sure it's not a good thing that we are getting even more media-obsessed as a society, unless our ultimate goal is to set new world records for sofa ass-marks. I have a Treo specifically to avoid push email. My choices are my own. I believe in pull. I don't really want anything pushed at me - partly because I want to control how I spend my attention, and partly because I want the privacy.

    But perhaps more importantly, I'm pretty sure that not many good things have come from short attention spans. It's kind of a charming thing to say about yourself, in a kind of self-regarding trust-fund-kid kind of way, but try to build a bridge, or a company, or a relationship, with a short-attention span. It's of a piece with the myth of multi-tasking, something I write about often, and it strikes me as a liberal, twenty-something conceit, more than a carefully formed view of the way the world really works. At least I hope so.
  • Mathew Ingram
    Thanks for the comment, Rob. I share many your concerns -- about the things you mentioned, and about the "echo chamber" effect and so on. But I don't think that the idea of new media as being equivalent to attention necessarily means short attention. To use the Observer as just one example, I've read pieces there that were thousands of words long (but then maybe I'm not typical). And the part about media "finding you" wasn't so much about push content as it was about the ability to select the things you want to watch or read or listen to, and do it when you want, instead of when the network or the newspaper wants -- in other words, RSS and podcasts and PVRs and location-free media and so on.
  • I was actually riffing off of Kushner's assertion that his generation has shorter attention spans. Though I suspect that if the Huffington Post and blogs are the future, the days of the essay may well be numbered. I hope not.
  • Mathew Ingram
    Good point -- he did say that. I think I'm suffering from short-attention-span syndrome too :-)
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