The Slow Food movement began in the 1980s when a group of Italians protested the opening of a McDonald’s near the Spanish Steps. Today, the official Slow Food organization boasts more than 100,000 members in 132 countries.
The Slow Food mantra is “good, clean and fair.” Proponents believe food should taste good, production should minimize harm to the environment and health, and that workers should be paid fairly for their labor. They also hold that we are all co-producers of food, not merely consumers, based on the choices we make.
So why am I writing about Slow Food on a journalism blog? Recently I’ve stumbled across numerous references to the phrase “Slow Journalism” and people who are calling for a similar movement in the news industry.
In a 2007 article in Prospect magazine, Susan Greenberg defined Slow Journalism as:
“…essays, reportage and other non-fiction writing that takes its time to find things out, notices stories that others miss, and communicates it all to the highest standards.”
In a 2007 lecture at the City University in London, David Leigh of The Guardian said:
“Slow Journalism would show greater respect for the craft of the reporter – a patient assembler of facts. A skilled tradesman who is independent and professionally reputable. And who can get paid the rate for the job. A disentangler of lies and weasel words.”
Last fall, the University of Southern California’s Getty Arts Journalism program held a forum on the topic (watch a video here), which it defined as:
“…a growing practice of journalists sharing resources and caring less about beating their competition to the big story than about practicing social justice.”
In June, Paul Bradshaw, publisher of the Online Journalism Blog, used the term Slow Journalism to describe his crowd sourcing reporting project called Help Me Investigate:
“Investigative journalism is about more than just ‘telling a story’; it is about enlightening, empowering and making a positive difference. And the web offers enormous potential here – but users must be involved in the process and have ownership of the agenda.”
I’ve read articles by those who think that the decline in the newspaper and magazine industries is killing any hope of a Slow Journalism movement, and articles by those who believe the Web is the ideal place for a media revolution to take place.
Still, it hasn’t reached anything approaching a movement. At a forum on the topic, one proponent joked that it was the first time he’d been sober when talking about Slow Journalism in public.
What is Slow Journalism?
I haven’t found a coherent definition of Slow Journalism. If you have, let me know. People seem to be using the term in various ways as they struggle to figure out what the future of journalism might look like and what they imagine it could be.
Here is a run at a working definition given what I’ve read and heard.
Slow Journalism…
- Gives up the fetish of beating the competition.
- Values accuracy, quality, and context, not just being fast and first.
- Avoids celebrity, sensation, and events covered by a herd of reporters.
- Takes time to find things out.
- Seeks out untold stories.
- Relies on the power of narrative.
- Sees the audience as collaborators.
What Does Slow Journalism Look Like?
Naka Nathaniel, a former New York Times reporter, has talked about his work with Nick Kristof as one example for the future journalism. For several years, Nathaniel and Kristof traveled the globe covering stories of famine, conflict, war, and environmental destruction. Nathaniel shot photos and video to accompany Kristof’s columns, but they didn’t see their work as the end product.
After a 2006 reporting trip to Chad to cover the genocide in Darfur, Nathaniel and Kristof posted their reporting – articles, columns, photographs, video, blog posts, reports, background material, and links to Human Rights organizations — on NYTimes.com. Then they invited readers to use their reporting to continue to tell the story in new ways. They received essays, poems, letters and works of fiction from readers. In addition, Winter Miller, an assistant to Kristof, wrote a play based on her travels in Sudan.
In other words, the reporters picked a story that mattered, covered it in depth, and then turned it over to readers and others to make it better.
But using the definition and example above, I don’t think Slow Journalism is only for the New York Times or large news organizations.
There are many wonderful examples of smaller projects with similar approaches; things like the Common Language Project, StoryCorp and 6 Billion Others are ones that quickly come to mind.
Can It Happen?
Despite the funny name, none of this seems particularly radical. The values of Slow Journalism sound a lot like the advice I received from my journalism teachers and editors. It is the kind of work many of my students aspire to, but fear they might never get a chance to do.
For me, the question isn’t if we need Slow Journalism, but how — given the realities of the news industry — we can make it happen.
Producing journalism that is “good, clean, and fair” takes time and effort. Seeing the audience as co-producers requires a new mindset and a willingness to experiment. And perhaps it requires a rethinking of the definition of news.
Brian Storm, founder of the multimedia company MediaStorm, (who hasn’t used the term Slow Journalism as far as I know) has argued that if news organizations gave up on producing “day-to-day, perishable content” then it could open up the possibility of doing “more in-depth, more investigative, and more robust” journalism.
“People are asked to do less with more and not given the time,” Storm said in an interview. “Time is the greatest luxury in journalism.”
Maybe the media jouro’s could get it right instead of adding their own creative license to stories and we could start beleiving in what the papers say. They could also do away with all the voilent stories if they could spend a bit more time on the good content.
As a journalist and a member of Slow Food I find the idea appealing.
But
I’m a freelancer. i have a couple of kids a mortgage and I do like to eat. Who pays for this Slow Journalism? So often I’m confronted with stories I’d love to do and I just can’t because,as a freelancer, I’m not paid to fossick. I’m paid to produce “Time is the greatest luxury et cetera”).
On the other hand, Brian Storm’s suggestion that if news organisations gave up on producing ‘day-to-day perishable content’ and offered in-depth investigative journalism is an idea I’ve been thinking about for some time.
I read The Guardian Weekly. Its size, its content and its scope supplies me with most of the news I need in an attractive and useable package – surely the days of the broadsheet have to be numbered?
The rest local – could be done by the parish pump papers which, here in Sydney, are so appalling (with the exception of a few of the giveaways) they could only get better.
But our dailies just don’t get it, and they shrink and shrink and are fast running out of puff.
I do not see a lot of creative thinking coming out of either the Fairfax or News Ltd camps.
Hi everyone! It’s great to see this discussion. I’m the person who wrote the 2007 article for Prospect, with the term “Slow Journalism”. A former journalist myself, I now teach nonfiction writing at Roehampton University, in London. Just thought you’d all be interested to know that the kind of issues you raise here are often discussed under the heading of “literary journalism”. There is an international association for the study of literary journalism, which includes practitioners and educators: you can check it out at: http://www.ialjs.org
I’d never heard of slow journalism before this. Excellent concept, even if not yet tightly defined. Like John Newton, I’m a freelancer facing a mountain of debt, so I have to take whatever writing jobs I can get, and turn them in on the client’s deadline, not my own. Still, the concept deserves a lot more airing; hopefully it will take root.
As one of the co-founders of The Common Language Project (referenced in the above article), I’m thrilled to be associated with this idea of “slow journalism” In many ways it offers a future oriented, positive and recognizable brand to what I’ve been clumsily calling “a loss of investigative/in-depth/social justice oriented/thoughtful/trustworthy reporting.” It also directly challenges the current fetish of new media projects to be fast furious and superficial and unseats the assumption that online journalism can’t be in-depth. Now to educate audiences and readers so they can articulate that they want and should demand “organic, sustainably grown, journalism instead of McDonald’s media!”
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Once again, we are honored to have been included in this discussion of “slow journalism.” Not only has it served as a message to the folks here at The Common Language Project that we are doing something right – but it also inspired us to put together a fun video on the topic. Check it out on our YouTube channel and while your there feel free to watch our other, more serious news items.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=deDxZKz5Ctw
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