Opinion: C-SPAN talks with Ken Auletta on new media vs. old
This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts.
Word on the street has it that there’s something out there now called new media that’s going to somehow change society in unimaginable ways. Even politics, like Obama’s $750-million campaign haul last year.
And this Internet Web thingy moves fast and doesn’t need wires (How is that possible?). And somehow all this change threatens the old media that hadn’t changed much since Johannes Gutenberg carved his first wooden letter of type about 600 years ago.
Well, that’s all silly, of course. Traditional media has changed plenty; it doesn’t use wooden type anymore, for one thing.
But Ken Auletta has gone ahead anyway and written another one of his intriguing looks at modern media. He wrote it in book form, though, one of those cursor-less collections of paper pages that you open by hand to read and then turn the pages to continue. Amazingly ancient. Called “Googled: The End of the World as We Know It.”
So tonight, C-SPAN’s Brian Lamb, who has talked very calmly with every author who’s ever written a book since Gutenberg, interviews Auletta about what he found. It’s pretty interesting, even without antacid commercials.
We’re going to watch because we’re addicted to Lamb.
So we obtained for Ticket readers a little sneak peek here of the interview. It will air on....
...the “Q&A” program at 5 and 8 p.m. Pacific tonight and again at 3 a.m. Pacific Monday. Set your TiVo, not the alarm.
-- Andrew Malcolm
Speaking of new media, click here to get Twitter alerts of each new Ticket item. Or follow us @latimestot And we’re also over here on Facebook.