Tea

12 11 2009

Tea – it is quite possibly the world’s oldest prepared beverage and I have just recently started to truly appreciate it. I am one of those annoying morning people (at least according to my wife, who is not one) and for almost two decades I woke up with the sun and downed at least two cups of coffee. But, now I have gone almost three months without and I really don’t miss it.

Don’t get me wrong, I have not forsaken caffeine, merely switched delivery vehicles. Tea is just more… satisfying for me right now.

I buy my tea on-line because the selection of loose leaf tea is a thousand times better and loose leaf tea just tastes better. Even the local “tea shops” in the Charlotte area only stock a few different choices, and most won’t sell in bulk.

I particularly like some of the blends from The Tea Spot – plus they have great online customer service and ship quickly. In fact – it was The Boulder Blend that made me seriously think about giving up coffee for the first time. It is simply an amazing tea – dark, lots of caffeine, and just a hint of chocolate.

Okay, I am now beginning to sound like a commercial, but if coffee is just not doing it for you anymore,  you should try it.





The Decline of Accountability Journalism

3 11 2009

I am re-visiting this topic because I was inspired by a post on the Nieman Journalism Lab website from Clay Shirky.

Accountability Journalism is really what people are talking about when they call newspapers the fourth arm of the U.S. government. These are the watchdog journalists – the ones who hold government and society accountable. These are the folks who spend years working on one story and then drop a bombshell . These are also the folks who are most at risk.

Shirky explains the 20th century newspaper phenomenon in plain english:

We had ad-supported newspapers producing accountability journalism… There was a set of forces that made that possible. And they weren’t deep truths — the commercial success of newspapers and their linking of that to accountability journalism wasn’t a deep truth about reality. Best Buy was not willing to support the Baghdad bureau because Best Buy cared about news from Baghdad. They just didn’t have any other good choices.

The second characteristic of the happy state of the 20th-century newspapering was that the advertisers were not only overcharged, they were underserved. Not only did they have to deliver more money to the newspapers than they would have wanted, they didn’t even get to say: “And don’t report on my industry, please.” There was a time when Ford went to The New York Times during the rollover stories and said, “You know, if you keep going on this, we may just pull all Ford ads in The New York Times.” To which the Times said, “Okay.” And the ability to do that — to say essentially to the advertiser, “Where else are you going to go?” — was a big part of what kept newspapers from suffering from commercial capture.

The institutions harrying newspapers — Monster and Match and Craigslist — all have the logic that if you want to list a job or sell a bike, you don’t go to the place that’s printing news from Antananarivo and the crossword puzzle. You go to the place that’s good for listing jobs and selling bikes. And so if you had a good idea for a business, you wouldn’t launch it in order to give the profits to the newsroom. You’d launch it in order to give the profits to the shareholders.

[It] Turned out that when you have an advertising market that balances supply and demand efficiently, the price plummets. And so for a long time, people could say analog dollars to digital dimes as if — well, when do we get the digital dimes? The answer may be never. The answer may be that we are seeing advertising priced at its real value for the first time in history, and that value is a tiny fraction of what we had gotten used to.

I think a bad thing is going to happen, right? And it’s amazing to me how much, in a conversation conducted by adults, the possibility that maybe things are just going to get a lot worse for a while does not seem to be something people are taking seriously. But I think this falling into relative corruption of moderate-sized cities and towns — I think that’s baked into the current environment. I don’t think there’s any way we can get out of that kind of thing. So I think we are headed into a long trough of decline in accountability journalism, because the old models are breaking faster than the new models can be put into place.

These are just some excerpts to explain some points I’ve been mulling over for the past few months. Shirky just put it more eloquently than I could, but that’s what he gets paid for, right? Anyway, here’s the full video: