What's journalism for? Helping citizens define the communities
 the live in and helping create a common language and common knowledge 
rooted in reality, as well as identifying a community's goals, heroes 
and villains.
For example, how does The State News do 
this? By covering events and happenings interesting, relevant and useful
 to MSU students, staff and faculty and East Lansing residents; by 
telling the truth so that people will have the information they need to 
act in their own best interests; and to sere society by informing the 
people.
Why do people want to be informed? It's 
because of the "awareness instinct." History shows that people crave 
news out of basic instinct. People want to know what's going on in their
 world and beyond their world. Like at MSU, people may be wondering if 
another tuition increase is brewing. Or if there's another Cedar Fest 
being planned. Or if the campus is safe to walk at night.
Knowledge
 of such unknowns help give people security (for example, you can avoid 
unsafe places). It allows them to plan and negotiate their lives (you 
can save up or get a bigger loan to blunt a tuition hike). It becomes 
the basis for creating community and making human connections ("Hey, you
 going to Cedar Fest?").
How does this help society?
 History shows the more news and information a society has, the more 
democratic it is. Knowledge truly is power, and knowledge to the people 
is power to the people.
How does a free press fit into an electronic age?
 The Internet specifically and technology in general has dissipated the 
means of mass communications to the people. People are moving from being
 passive consumers of news into active participants, with many choices 
in where to receive news.
Twenty or so years ago, 
consumer choices were limited by technology. There was not much of an 
Internet, so choices were print or broadcast or get on a plane and see 
for yourself. Today, the Internet allows people to choose local media, 
out-of-town media, social networks, alternative media, whatever.
What's the effect?
 Journalists no longer control the flow of information. The classic role
 of "gatekeeper" is irrelevant. News can go around journalism "gates" 
via the internet. Now, the role of legacy journalism is to make sense of
 the massive sea of information that's available to the audience. We 
verify what information is reliable and then order it so people can 
grasp it in a useful, meaningful way.
(In a way, it's 
the difference between going to the supermarket and trying to make a 
great meal, or going to a great restaurant and having that meal made for
 you. People don't necessarily have the time, desire or skills to sort 
through all the food choices out there to make a great dinner. In the 
same way, they don't necessarily have the time, desire or skills to sort
 through the flood of information choices now available, so they go to a
 media professional for that.)
If journalism is to 
survive, then it must become a force in empowering citizens to shape 
their own communities based on verified information. You may learn of 
something from a tweet, but you find out if it's true and what it could 
mean from a journalist. 
How does mass media stay relevant in an era of niche media?
 Before we can answer that, let's first explore the Theory of the 
Interlocking Public. It's the idea that everyone is interested and even 
expert in something. Niche media exploits this by catering to niche 
interests. For example, sports people go to ESPN. Gossip junkies go to 
TMZ. Political junkies go to Politico. MSUers go to The State News.
The
 theory implies that there are three broad levels of public engagement 
on every issue; that is, on any given issue, people are members of one 
of three groups:
The involved public: people who have a stake in an issue.
The interested public: people with no direct role in the issue but who is affectd by and responds to the issue.
The uninterested public: pays little attention and will join, if at all, after the issue has been laid out by others.
We
 are all members of one of these three groups. For example, if the issue
 was a tuition increase at MSU, the involved public would include 
students and parents of students. The interested public would include 
staff, faculty, alumni, and people who will be attending MSU in the 
future. The uninterested public would include people not in school 
and/or who don't know anybody in school.
Our challenge 
is to write stories that may be meaningful and useful to those involved 
and interested, and interesting and understandable to those who on the 
surface are uninterested; and to offer a sufficient mix of stories in 
every newspaper and on every TV newscast that every member of the 
audience would be interested in at least one of them. 
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