Podcasting and Shorts and newsletters, oh my…
Everybody's doing everything everywhere, as YouTube looks to podcasts and Shorts to fuel growth, and publishers start experimenting with alternative newsletter platforms.
Adam is a digital journalism lecturer, trainer and writer. He's been a blogger for over 25 years, a journalist for 30 and teaches audience strategy and engagement at City St George’s, London.
Everybody's doing everything everywhere, as YouTube looks to podcasts and Shorts to fuel growth, and publishers start experimenting with alternative newsletter platforms.
OM&HB
This site has been in continuous publication for two decades. And in that time, the “creator economy” has come full circle.
Journalism
The problem with gaming journalism from mainstream outlets lies in our rejection of video. Plus TikTok’s Canadian woes and more.
Journalism
Plus why we end up with zombie websites, YET MORE Twitter chaos, and the cancelling of Dilbert
From lessons we should learn from the coverage of Nicola Bulley’s disappearance, to AI copyright, to that weird, mysterious content on TikTok, it’s all here.
SEO
Thoughts from the lovely OM&HB community about types of search, the impact of Twitter’s changes — and a freebie Mastodon app.
magazines
In 1994, Loaded kickstarted a men's magazine revolution. It also helped shape how I see journalism.
newsletters
Rethinking how we conceptualise newsletters, why you should ignore the podcast doom-mongers and more in today’s updates.
It appears that Elon Musk really is a social media thought leader, as Mark Zuckerberg is borrowing one of his monetisation ideas… Plus, a look at the post-Google Analytics world.
X (Twitter)
Plus the growing evidence that AI chat search is far from ready for prime time, and some great reads on both how ChatGPT actually works and what’s behind “hot, lonely women” catfishing scams
Is Mastodon really tanking? Who’s making a mint from newsletters? And who are these eerie newsreaders spouting propaganda? Your weekend reading, sorted.
admin
This site has a brand new look for its 20th anniversary year. Here's what's changed — and why.