Online RSS newspaper

Cameron Barrett and Joe Stump have started a news service called TodaysPapers.com, that aggregates news into different categories from more than 100 web pages via RSS. The format is similiar to Google News. According to the website “TodaysPapers is the next step in personal news management and media research.” Maybe this could be something for Steve Rubel’s all-blog media diet?

Link via Mymarkup.

Coverage of blogs reach record levels

Coverage of blogs in Swedish media continue to rise and hit new record levels (irony intended, see previous post). There were a total of 28 articles in Swedish media about blogs during May, several of them reporting on Bill Gates comments about blogs. IT and technology press make up half of this number, while marketing and journalism press are still silent. Source: online publications via a Retriever search.

Major Swedish media fell for oil price myth

Breaking news. Only on Media Culpa.

Many Swedish media today fell for the oil price myth. Aftonbladet reported during the day that “today the highest oil price ever was noted on the Nymex exchange in New York”. The article headline is “Oil price reached new record level today” and states that “this afternoon the highest oil price was noted in the 21 year history of Nymex exchange” and quotes the oil price from a telegram from TT, the Swedish wire service, that says the oil price was on 42 dollar per barrel for a while.



Dagens Nyheter
and Svenska Dagbladet ran the same story tonight based on a telegram from TT, claiming that the oil price “reached its highest level ever”.

News agency Direkt reported in a telegram at 21:17 tonight that “oil once again noted a record price on Nymex New York exchange” and that the oil price was at 42:32 dollar per barrel.

Having read the article on Spinsanity earlier today, I figured I’d have to check if this was adjusted for inflation. I quote Spinsanity:

But examined fairly, it’s simply not true. This myth is based on a misunderstanding of one of the most basic of economic concepts: inflation. As the general price level of products rise, a dollar today is worth less than it was in the past. The only fair way to compare the price of a good over time is to use the inflation-adjusted price.

It took me two minutes to find this chart that clearly states that the oil price was far higher 1981, if adjusted to inflation.

Chart from Inflationdata.com. Full size chart here.

Update: The articles in Dagens Nyheter and Svenska Dagbladet were updated last night, and the phrase “the highest price ever” was removed from the first paragraph. The article now only states that the price is the highest in the 21 years since Nymex exchange started, which technically is true, but oil was traded before 1983, and to a higher price as this chart shows.

In the printed version of Svenska Dagbladet today there is an article with the headline “Many factors behind new record price for oil”. On the web there is a new article with the headline “Record expensive oil pressed the Asian stock markets”. Free commuter daily Metro has this as its top story today with the headline “Record high oil price”.

The death of broadsheet

One of the biggest dailies in Sweden, Göteborgs-Posten, turns tabloid before year end. The death of broadsheet can be studied in several articles on Editorsweblog.org today as it reports from World Editors Forum in Istanbul. For example, only two months after its launch, the Polish tabloid Fakt became the biggest newspaper in Poland.

“The biggest single threat to broadsheets comes from the fact that readers have less time to read.”, said George Brock, Managing Editor of The Times of London.

Furthermore, “tabloids are the future for Mexican papers, says El Universal editor Raymundo Riva-Palacio.

Editors’ jobs become more important with blogs

Editorsweblog.org reports about a debate during the World Editor’s Forum. According to the article, Dean Wright, Editor-in-Chief and Vice President, MSBNC.com, and Jean-Louis Cebrián, Chief Executive Officer of PRISA Group and EL PAÍS, agreed that the newspaper “editor’s role becomes more important” in a new media environment in which news can be produced and disseminated through online means such as blogs.

Oil price myth

Claims that oil prices in the US are higher than ever have frequently been reported in media. Problem is, it’s not true. Democrats are spinning this claim (and media report about it), but forget to use the inflation-adjusted price which was about 50 per cent higher in 1981. Spinsanity has the complete story today.