The Daily don't
Rupert Murdoch's iPad newspaper has bells, whistles and gyrating photos. But somebody forgot about the content.
Rupert Murdoch's iPad newspaper has bells, whistles and gyrating photos. But somebody forgot about the content.
It's new, it’s news but it isn’t anything new.
The Daily has certainly created a media fuss, but the experience itself is less than perfect, and I struggle to believe it will succeed as a subscription model.
The Daily is long on sports and entertainment, and short of hard news. The issue I read had guest articles from Skeptical Environmentalist Bjorn Lomborg, and the Economist’s blogger Will Wilkinson. It also had an article on candy, plenty of the latest from Hollywood and extensive coverage of the Superbowl.
That Superbowl coverage is ok – for seemingly no reason at all you won’t find The Daily on New Zealand’s iTunes store. If you really do want to have a look, then get yourself a USA iTunes account.
(Click any image to zoom.)
There were a handful of hard news articles – just three in fact. One on Egypt, including some great photos, another on the big snow dump in the East of the USA and a third on a 360 degree view of the Superbowl stadium.
No wait – that third one doesn’t count, and neither does a video that Senator Giffords starred in before she was shot, nor an article on whether Steelers Ben Roethlisberger should or shouldn’t back up his words. The final article in the news section was on the break up of the White Stripes – sad but sadly not news.
There was plenty of magazine content – fluffy articles of dubious merit including this one on schoolkids buying duty free cigarettes and selling them to their friends. Ground breaking reporting.
The Daily is graphics hungry – every page is bespoke designed, and the magazine will keep a tribe of designers employed while it operates. This was the cover page to an article on un-pasteurized milk delivered to New York by Amish. an interesting story, but something you’d expect to see in a magazine, not a newspaper.
And that’s what The Daily is – a daily magazine. There is precious little of this:
... and far too much of this – at least for my liking:
There is Sudoku, a crossword and paragraph snippets, and an article on cell phones on airplanes – a topic that has been covered before a lot. As usual the writer missed the obvious – that cell phone use is about data not voice, and that voice conversations would be kept short, as most are not oblivious to their environment.
There are embedded tweet streams, but no links – none. It’s old media, and old media thinks that each publication is a walled garden of delights. We readers beg to differ.
So would I pay for it? Not at all. The same news – in fact a lot more – is available as a web page or application from lots of other sources. Start by subscribing to daily emails from The Atlantic’s 5 best columns. It’s a great way to catch the opinions and news of the day – without the cost or the heavy graphics, requirement to use an iPad or the occasional crash.
Editorially The Daily is in a conundrum. It’s hard to appeal to the mass market in the USA when writing about hard stuff like politics and news. There always seems to be a slant to the news. My take – I think The Daily will migrate towards the Fox News crowd – less news, more entertainment and a right wing slant.
Lance Wiggs is a consultant, entrepreneur and blogger internet commentator.