Monday, December 15, 2008

The Death of a Newspaper

Last week the Denver post went on sale. When I heard that I was thinking to my self "really a whole newspaper for sale?". Even more interesting is that in 2002 the Post merged with the Rocky Mountain News so that they were not competing for readership.

So really the question here is what is happening to these news papers that they can no longer stay afloat let alone thrive as they once did? The obvious answer is that people are getting their news from more convenient sources; TV, and the Internet. But TV has been around for a while now and papers were still doing well, I guess readers wanted something TV couldn't offer, like more in depth coverage of local news, human interest stories, classifieds even. But now the Internet can do all that and more in far less time, since readers can search exactly what they want to read, and for no extra charge above what they already pay for Internet service.

What does this mean for us as consumers of news in the future? I think the printed news will eventually be extinct. And if we are not careful so will the printed word all together.

Just think of how we take pictures and share them with our families and friends now. Most of us have digital cameras, we snap our pics, upload them to our computers and email away. This is so much more convenient than buying film and then going to the store to get our pictures developed and because of that convenience we all do it. But what is the down side here? Well what about the physical archive the printed pictures represent. How many times have each of us been visiting a relative or been helping mom or grandma clean out a closet or attic and ran across a box full of old photos? And sure to follow are stories that would have been long forgotten if not for that physical archive, there forgotten in a box just waiting to jar a memory to life. How will that happen now? Will our grandkids be going through our old thumb drives, flash drives, hard drives? Will they stumble upon our myspace in 40 years? Are we losing something here?

And what about other physical archives? Printing books costs a lot of money but publishing on the Internet is virtually free, I didn't pay for this blog and neither are you paying to read my drivel. How long will it be until paper publishing is extinct? And then since reading is so bothersome we will just wait until an audio book of the material is published and just listen our way to knowledge and entertainment. What will that mean for our civilization? Will we eventually become illiterate? Will we stop seeing a need to teach our children to read?

Makes one think doesn't it?

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Job Hunting In Denver

I just moved to Denver about 2 weeks ago, but I am eagerly searching for a job.

I decided on a degree on sociology so that when I entered the work force I could help people by working in social services. After considering who I would like to help, out of all those in need, I am continually drawn to teens and adolescences. I admit I am a biased party, since I have a brother that has been in contact with the authorities since he was 14 years old, who is now serving a life sentence (for a crime that I believe he did not commit). What draws me though is not that I have sympathy for my brother and his plight of being wrongly convicted and imprisoned(however sympathetic I may be). The draw for me is that I believe that if given the right tools, and skills to use them he could have moved away from the path that took him close enough to a murder to be accused of it in the first place.

Now the challenge, I am applying to the state of Colorado for a job as a youth security officer, not exactly a helping hand kind of job I know, but its a job that will give me experience and a chance to make a difference on a more personal level with the individuals that are affected by the harsh laws that send them to these facilities where they are given little or no instruction on how to cope with the situation that they are in, that is well beyond their maturity level.

What I hope to gain is insight. Insight as to how the system works and how it fails and what might be done about it. What I hope to accomplish, is a restructuring of my character from student of the social sciences to a worker in the social field. I also hope to form some relationships that will help guide me through my career, not only with co-workers and supervisors but also with the inmates/clients.

In the longer run my hope is that through whatever work I can do, small or big, I can help to bring about change that will ensure that our young people, who find themselves on the wrong side of the law when they are too young to fully realize the consequences of their actions, to ensure that they are given the second chance they deserve to re-enter society without stigma or label and to ensure that they are given the right tools and the skills to use them so that they can succeed.

Sunday, December 7, 2008

Blog numero uno

So I've been hearing about this blogging thing for a few years now and never really looked into it, never subscribed to any blog or read one with any consistence. So, of course I'm a shoe in for having the next hot blog. Or maybe I can just use this space to exercise some demons, and give you a little insight into the twisted way that I see this twisted world. It would be nice if some of you out there got some sort of inspiration or enlightenment from reading the word put to page here but if you don't I'm just going to keep writing anyway in hopes that one day I really can get Unlost.