Slow News and my interview with OPB
Saturday, July 28, 2018 at 8:57 PM
Logan Molen in Media, Newspapers, Peter Laufer, Slow News, University of Oregon

I recently participated in the invigorating Slow News and More Slow conference at the University of Oregon, an effort to discuss journalism alternatives to the never-endeding onslaught of 24-7 media.

I like to equate our 21st century news diets to being caught in a meteor storm. Our brains, for the first time in history, are unable to effectively absorb and process the countless streams of content pace enabled by a pace of technological change that is growing exponentially faster. More than ever, we need thoughtful journalism that offers perspective and relevance so that we can truly analyze what's important in our lives. 

"Slow news" is a term Laufer and others have coined to address the problem. Whether that is the right term is up for debate -- as it was at this conference -- but the quest to deliver more slower, more impactful journalism remains the goal. 

As part of the conference, I was interviewed from Portland live on Oregon Public Broadcasting's "Think Out Loud" program, and discussed "slow news," newspaper trends and my time leading the Register-Guard. You can listen to my segment from that link. 

UO journalism professor Peter Laufer -- the school's prestigious James Wallace chair of journalism and author of the book "Slow News: A Manifesto for the Critical News Consumer" -- organized the 2.5-day "Slow News and More Slow" conference.  Speakers included:

There are other "slow news" discussions occurring worldwide, and I'm hopeful each builds momentum toward increased support/readership for organizations that produce journalism that rewards nourishment rather than bombast.

Article originally appeared on LoganMolen.com (https://www.loganmolen.com/).
See website for complete article licensing information.