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The media & digital disruption – podcast interview with Rebecca Archer

November 28, 2019 7:56 am

More so than most other industries, the media industry has been subject to digital disruption since the emergence of the internet in the mid-nineties. Indeed, we learned yesterday that Channel 7 in Brisbane is axing three local programs, including Queensland Weekender. Digital disruption has had profound consequences for the financial viability of traditional media and for the job prospects of journalists. Google, Facebook, and other sites are attracting advertising revenues which once flowed to TV networks and newspapers, which now always seem to be laying off staff. No longer is the nightly TV news compulsory viewing, nor is everyone on the morning train reading the local newspaper anymore. They’re scrolling through their Facebook or Twitter feeds on their smart phones instead.

In my latest Economics Explained episode, I discuss the media in our age of digital disruption with Rebecca Archer, Director of Connect Media Training, who has worked as a journalist at the ABC in Australia and the BBC in the UK. Australian listeners may know Rebecca as Rebecca Hyam, a former ABC finance reporter. Rebecca still works on a casual basis at ABC Brisbane in addition to running her media training company. Of course, views expressed in this podcast are Rebecca’s personal views, and should not necessarily be attributed to the ABC.

Use these timestamps to jump right into Gene and Rebecca’s conversation:

Our conversation was recorded on 26 November 2019 in the Adept Economics office at the Johnson, Spring Hill, Brisbane, using a Zoom H4n Pro digital recorder and Shure SM58 microphones.

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Posted by Gene Tunny

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