MSM "bloodbath" underway

There is perhaps no other "industry" more suited to be taken over almost entirely by AI than the media. AI can write it, and AI CGI can read it to the audience. No more need for human writers, editors or talking heads.

I used HuggingChat to generate the following news blurb in about 10 seconds.

Prompt: "Write a brief, heart-warming news story about the local fire department rescuing a neighborhood cat, along with lessons about how taxes are essential for funding the fire department and go towards the common good."

Response:

MAPLEWOOD, MN -- On a sunny afternoon, as children played on the verdant lawns and neighbors exchanged pleasantries over freshly brewed coffee, whispers began to circulate amongst the residents - their beloved feline mascot had gone missing. The enchantingly named Mr. Whiskers was known throughout the area for his playful antics and penchant for basking in the adoration of passersby. As concern mounted, there was one group who remained steadfast and prepared: the noble members of the Maplewood Fire Department (MFD).

With the sun dipping below the horizon, casting elongated shadows across manicured gardens, MFD Captain Jane Thompson received word that Mr. Whiskers had been spotted atop a towering oak tree, unable to find his way down. Without hesitation, she rallied her team – brave men and women trained in far more than just fighting fires – and they sprung into action. With practiced ease, they set up their equipment and began the delicate process of coaxing the frightened feline from its precarious perch some forty feet above ground level. After what felt like hours, amidst hushed breaths and silent prayers, Lieutenant Mark Johnson scaled the ladder with deft agility and gently cradled Mr. Whiskers against his chest before descending safely back to solid earth. A collective sigh of relief washed through the crowd gathered around the base of the tree; the day had been saved thanks to the tireless efforts of those sworn to serve and protect.

This tale of courage and compassion brings forth a vital message often overlooked or taken for granted by many: our hard-earned tax dollars contribute significantly towards the common good. Organizations such as the MFD rely heavily upon these funds to maintain operational readiness and ensure ongoing training for personnel. It is because of this financial support that heroes like Captain Thompson, Lieutenant Johnson, and their dedicated comrades can respond swiftly when called upon, providing crucial assistance during times of need and crisis.

In essence, every dollar allocated towards public services represents an investment in the safety, security, and wellbeing of our communities. Whether it's ensuring the availability of emergency medical care, maintaining critical infrastructure, preserving natural resources, or safeguarding vulnerable populations, we all benefit from the collective power of our shared contributions.

So let us celebrate the triumph of Mr. Whiskers and express gratitude for the unsung champions within our own neighborhoods – the teachers, police officers, sanitation workers, librarians, and countless others whose daily sacrifices make our lives immeasurably better. Together, we form a tapestry of interconnectedness woven together by threads of mutual respect, understanding, and appreciation for the role each plays in cultivating a thriving society.

I generated this one with an open-source LLM running locally. (It took about two minutes to generate but it's running on my laptop. The desktop is about as fast as online.)

Prompt: "Write a brief, heart-warming news story about the local fire department rescuing a neighborhood cat, along with lessons about how taxes are essential for funding the fire department and go towards the common good."

Response:

Title: Fire Department Saves Neighborhood Cat; Reminds Public of Tax Benefits

The local fire department showcased its heroic spirit once again by rescuing a beloved neighborhood cat stuck in a tree over the weekend. The feline, aptly named Smokey, had been stranded for two days before someone finally called for help. Firefighters arrived on scene and promptly retrieved the frightened kitty from its precarious perch, much to the relief of the surrounding neighbors.

The incident serves as a poignant reminder that our fire departments are not only responsible for extinguishing fires but also for protecting our communities in various ways. In addition to these heroics, taxes play an essential role in funding fire departments and ensuring their continued ability to respond to emergencies like this one.

Tax revenue helps pay for the specialized equipment, training, and staff necessary for firefighters to carry out their duties safely and effectively. By supporting these services through taxation, residents contribute not only to their own safety but also to that of their fellow community members – whether it's rescuing a cat from a tree or responding to life-threatening emergencies at all hours of the day.

As Smokey was returned safely to its grateful owner, the fire department reminded onlookers about the importance of taxes in funding essential services and maintaining a strong sense of community. This heartwarming tale underscores how our collective support for public institutions can make a real difference in people's lives – one purr at a time.

In conclusion, remember that your tax dollars are going towards the common good when you see firefighters helping others, and appreciate their efforts to keep us all safe and sound.

Yeah, we can replace journo NPCs with AI. Remember that, in 1984, all the news is generated by machines.

Prompt: "Describe the versificator from the novel 1984 by George Orwell, and how it was used to generate news articles."

In George Orwell's novel "1984," the Versificator is a machine that is used by the ruling party, The Party, to automatically generate poetry and other forms of literature. It is described as being able to produce works that are indistinguishable from those written by human authors, and is one of the many tools used by The Party to control and manipulate the thoughts and emotions of its citizens.

The Versificator is operated by feeding it a set of input parameters, such as the desired topic, tone, and meter. Based on these inputs, the machine then generates a piece of writing that conforms to the specified criteria. This allows The Party to create propaganda in the form of poetry or songs that can be easily memorized and repeated by the citizenry, helping to reinforce the ideology and messages of The Party.

In addition to generating new works, the Versificator can also analyze existing pieces of literature and determine their political alignment. By doing so, The Party is able to identify any subversive or counter-revolutionary ideas and eliminate them before they have a chance to spread.

Overall, the Versificator is an example of how technology can be used to control and manipulate society, and highlights the dangers of allowing a single entity to have complete control over information and culture.

How probable do you think it is that ChatGPT was NOT developed before 2022, i.e. did not exist in any way, shape or form, before 2022? Questions worth pondering...
 
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Yeah, we can replace journo NPCs with AI. Remember that, in 1984, all the news is generated by machines.

Prompt: "Describe the versificator from the novel 1984 by George Orwell, and how it was used to generate news articles."
...

Exactly. I had forgotten about that being in 1984, but that is what I was thinking. No more need to hire and fire humans. Just adjust the AI...

Sports Illustrated already had AI writing stories...
 
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The News Business Really Is Cratering
The state of the industry is more dire than ever.
https://www.politico.com/news/magaz...-journalism-death-spasm-finally-here-00138187
{Jack Shafer | 27 January 2024}

Journalists across the country burst into flames of panic this week, as bad news for the news business crested and erupted everywhere all at once.

Patrick Soon-Shiong, the billionaire publisher of the Los Angeles Times, laid off 20 percent of his newsroom. Over at Time magazine, its billionaire owners, Marc and Lynne Benioff, did the same for 15 percent of their unionized editorial employees. This latest conflagration had ignited at Sports Illustrated the previous week as catastrophic layoffs were dispensed via email to most staffers. Business Insider (whose parent company Axel Springer also owns POLITICO) jettisoned 8 percent of its staff while workers at Condé Nast, Forbes, the New York Daily News and elsewhere walked out to protest forthcoming cuts at their shops.

The news business has always been cyclical, dipping during economic downturns and then improving on the upswing. But not so anymore, as our economy has been surprisingly strong of late. Nearly everywhere you look — the Washington Post, NPR, Vice, Vox, NBC News, Texas Tribune, WNYC, Barstool Sports, just to name a few — companies have axed huge swathes of staff. Newsroom employment is down more than 26 percent since 2008. Buzzfeed News is dead. The magazine business has atrophied, too, as newsstand revenues have fallen from $6.8 billion in 2006 to $1 billion in 2022. Looking on as the media business bleeds out, journalism professor Jeff Jarvis, a man who once evangelized for the industry’s electronic future, folded his hands in his lap like a mortician and asked in his blog if it was time to give up on old news. Citing the dark layoff news, Jarvis tidied the corpse-in-the-making. Trust in journalism has melted, he noted, and private equity shops like Alden Global Capital are cannibalizing their newspapers.

It would be far too dramatic to extrapolate from the disastrous week that journalism itself is dying. The New York Times is healthy. Thanks to good management and demographically vigorous readerships, the Boston Globe and Minneapolis Star Tribune carry on. Cable, network and local TV news still toss off profits. But no matter how many heroic nonprofit newsrooms like the Baltimore Banner and Daily Memphian take root, no matter how many Substack-like newsletters blossom or creators emerge to drop their videos on YouTube, you can’t deny the journalism business’ decline.

The cause of the business’ decline is simple. As tech analyst Benedict Evans succinctly put it in a post this week, “There’s very little you can say about the finances of the newspaper industry that you couldn’t have said 15 or 20 years ago. The old model went away: you had an oligopoly over both advertisers & readers, and real-estate agents and car dealers paid for your social purpose. Now they don’t need you.” Targeted advertising on the web has diminished the old advertisers’ complaint that 50 percent of their ad budgets are wasted and they just didn’t know which half. Now they do, and they avoid newspapers and magazines. Unless a publisher creates something so essential that readers are willing to pay for it — like the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal or POLITICO, which gets more than half of its revenue from paid subscribers — the sledding will be more than rough. It will be ruinous.

As journalism falls into eclipse but does not completely vanish, newsrooms will continue to contract. This is terrible for the workers who will be discarded. But worse still, it sends a market signal to aspiring journalists that they should avoid the profession because there are no vacancies to fill.

With fewer entry-level jobs and fewer outlets for freelancers, the pipeline of talent that has long watered larger publications with experienced journalists might dry up. Where will aspiring nonfiction book authors learn their trade? The alternative weeklies realm, from which I hail and which trampolined many young journalists into larger, more prestigious news organizations, are a much diminished force. Once healthy papers folded in places like New York, San Francisco, Boston and Minneapolis; suspended printing in cities like Washington; went biweekly, as in Chicago and Seattle; or otherwise trimmed their page counts down from the early 21st century boom days.

Isn’t there any optimism out there? Certainly not from Harvard’s Nieman Reports, which published Katherine Reynolds Lewis’ obituary in October titled “Hey Journalists, Nobody Is Coming to Save Us.”

There has been no shortage of commentary about the harm that will befall democracy as the watchdogs get sacked, but should we believe them? Writing in the 1880s, Ambrose Bierce pierced this pretention. “From whom, my friends, do you hear all this talk about the great good wrought by the press, its vigilant guardianship of the public interest, its conservation of the public morals? From the newspapers, and from those who accept their word without analysis,” he wrote. No matter which side you stand on the democracy-requires-a-free-and-vigorous-press proposition, we’re about to test it.

The ongoing flood obviously won’t sweep all journalism away. But except for a few big players, will it become more of a cottage industry than an economic and cultural force? If great cities like Los Angeles, with its many prosperous, educated and engaged citizens, can’t support a decent daily newspaper, what hope is there for the rest of the country? Are we belatedly learning that the great journalism empires — the Times-Mirror chain, Knight Ridder, Gannett, Scripps-Howard, Tribune, McClatchy, Advance Publications, Hearst, Freedom Communications and the rest — weren’t journalism empires as much as they were advertising colossuses, and that they became doomed when they lost status as the best advertising vehicle?

Journalism will survive, of course, even if the business falters as the advertising subsidy that made it viable erodes. Publications for readers who depend on market-moving news like you find in the Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg News and other business titles will endure. So will the aforementioned New York Times, which provides news that moves political markets and has established itself as a national voice worth paying for. So, too, will the gossip and lifestyle magazines remain, as will publications like the New York Review of Books and the New Yorker, which serve, boutique-style, a loyal, educated readership. But like the animals that persisted after the great comet struck the earth, most publications will be tiny and eke out an existence in the shadows. Perhaps organized labor and political parties will step forward to sponsor news. But could you trust either to produce real news? That would be like expecting General Motors or Citibank to give you the honest lowdown on the automotive and financial goings-on.

Will journalism become a hobby like scrapbooking or street busking, done on the cheap or for donations, but one without much of a career path? Will we become increasingly dependent on solo, opinionated practitioners on Substack like Matthew Yglesias and Glenn Greenwald and city newsletters like the ones from Axios to keep abreast of news not produced by the giants?

The journalism party might not be completely over. It’s human nature to interpret any bad news as the coming apocalypse. But let’s get drunk anyway and then sober up for what’s to come next.
 
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Funny thing. When you let people use you to peddle your schlock, you come out with a terrible reputation.

How unpredictable an outcome!

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https://twitter.com/ClownWorld_/status/1750354028800913592


CLIP from SYSTEM UPDATE #216:

WATCH: Taylor Lorenz’s Pathological Take on Mass Media Collapse
https://rumble.com/v49hgjc-watch-taylor-lorenzs-pathological-take-on-mass-media-failures.html
{Glenn Greenwald | 26 January 2024}


That's a great video LOL Glenn's comments about Taylor Dumbass-Lorenz are awesome.
 
Regarding the premise that the legacy media is dying.... Good riddance to bad rubbish.

My take is that the content and function of the legacy media really isn't much different than it was 50 years ago. The difference is now we have transparency and it's a whole lot easier to see right thru their bullshit. Thanks in large part to the internet.

50 years ago to get the word out about some bullshit story being pushed by the mainstream media, you had to do it with letters and landline phone calls and maybe a billboard or poster on the telephone poles.

Not any more. Hell, Joe Rogan runs a video that destroys a bullshit narrative and it's viral in minutes. Which is awesome.
 
My take is that the content and function of the legacy media really isn't much different than it was 50 years ago. The difference is now we have transparency and it's a whole lot easier to see right thru their bullshit. Thanks in large part to the internet.

50 years ago to get the word out about some bullshit story being pushed by the mainstream media, you had to do it with letters and landline phone calls and maybe a billboard or poster on the telephone poles.

You must spread some Reputation around before giving it to Intrepid again.

Just exactly so.

Thanks to social media (including, in its own small way, RPFs), they can warp or hide facts, but they can no longer warp or hide the fact that they are warping or hiding facts. As much well-deserved criticism as social media venues such as Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube quite properly receive, they are despite themselves nevertheless a huge blessing on net.

It used to be - back in the Before (Social Media) Times - that stories like this could be easily covered up, all wrapped in a nice, tidy narrative with a little bow on top. Uncle Walter would come on the Evening News and tell you what was what (perhaps with brief follow-up updates from time to time), and you'd probably never know there might be anything else to the matter. (And if you were aware there might be more to it, then it was probably because you were one of those fringe weirdos of the sort who subscribed to obscure snail-mail newsletters written and distributed by the kind of people Uncle Walter and his colleagues would summarily dismiss as "cranks", "crackpots", and/or "conspiracy theorists".)

But thanks to the Internet in general and social media in particular, they can't get away with that anymore. Any Joe Rando can clap back at their shenanigans with just as much visibility. (In fact, the more visible the latter-day Walters are now, the more visible the clap-back against them becomes.)

They can no longer effectively curate the things being said to (or control what is or isn't being presented for consumption by) the broader general public. [...] The facts of any given incident simply do not matter to them - only the "interpretation" of the incident does. But that's the way it's always been. It's just much more obvious now - and that's all thanks to social media.
 
CLIP from SYSTEM UPDATE #356:

Will Podcasters Replace Journalists? The State of Alternative Media With Lee Fang & Michael Tracey
https://rumble.com/v5jtp19-will-pod...-the-state-of-alternative-media-with-lee.html
{Glenn Greenwald | 23 October 2024}


 
CLIP from SYSTEM UPDATE #356:

Will Podcasters Replace Journalists? The State of Alternative Media With Lee Fang & Michael Tracey
https://rumble.com/v5jtp19-will-pod...-the-state-of-alternative-media-with-lee.html
{Glenn Greenwald | 23 October 2024}



//

 
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