Showing posts with label Klein. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Klein. Show all posts

Monday, March 10, 2014

Ezra Klein: Let"s Make Media Vegetables More Appealing

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Ezra Klein: Let"s Make Media Vegetables More Appealing

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Ezra Klein vs. Nate Silver: The Wonk Super Bowl


Ezra Klein and Nate Silver are pictured. | AP Photos

POLITICO provides a look at the two journalists and their differing projects. | AP Photos





Ezra Klein and Nate Silver have some things in common: They’re both smart, young, innovative and analytical journalists with devoted followings who, when offered the chance to launch their own ventures, left the nation’s leading newspapers to do so.


The similarities pretty much end there.







When Klein announced he would be departing The Washington Post for a new venture with Vox Media, it was heralded as just the latest example of a brand-name star outgrowing a legacy media institution. Klein’s name was immediately lumped in with the likes of Silver, who took his popular FiveThirtyEight blog from The New York Times to ESPN, and Kara Swisher and Walt Mossberg, who moved their tech news vertical from The Wall Street Journal to NBC Universal.


But Ezra Klein is not Nate Silver, and Vox Media is not ESPN. And sweeping generalizations about the new wave of personal-brand journalism ignore the unique circumstances each of these journalists face when striking out on their own.


(Also on POLITICO: Why the Post passed on Ezra Klein)


The two men are friends and mutual fans — “Ezra and I have had several great conversations over the years. I consider him a friend, but I’m sure we’d hang out more often if we lived in the same city,” Silver told POLITICO. Silver, who came to political forecasting from baseball metrics, described himself as “a huge admirer of Ezra’s journalism.” Klein, who declined to comment for this piece, once praised Silver’s “innovations” as a journalist.


Here’s a look at the two and their differing projects:


The name


Klein, 29, and his wife, Annie Lowrey, of the Times, are, for a younger generation of Beltway insiders, Washington royalty. So when his intentions to leave the Post became known, it was all D.C. media types could talk about. And, to be sure, there was a devoted national following who knew Klein’s work — from the Post, from MSNBC, from Bloomberg View, or from his occasional New Yorker article — who were probably shocked to see a writer they loved leaving for a digital media company they’d probably never heard of. But outside those bubbles — what you might call Washington and greater Washington — few people cared.


(Also on POLITICO: Ezra Klein joins Vox Media)


Compare that with Silver, 36, who has become a household name in some quarters and is synonymous with the political forecasting industry. (Silver, who is gay — in 2012 he was named “Person of the Year” by Out Magazine — is not married.) In the 24 hours that followed the 2012 presidential election, sales of his book skyrocketed by 850-percent on Amazon.com. One week later, The Hollywood Reporter revealed that he was being courted by Tinseltown for “everything from box-office analysis to a correspondent gig on a television news program, not to mention radio shows and public speaking.” A week after that, President Obama dropped his name in a joke at the annual Thanksgiving turkey pardoning.


With his move to ESPN, a ratings giant, Silver’s star status only grows. He has and will continue to appear across the network’s programming. He’s been promised a role in the Oscars, which will air on ABC through at least 2020. Online, he will add to his reputation for political and sports forecasting by expanding into areas as diverse as economics, science, education and weather. (“I think people will be surprised at how small a percentage of our content is in the politics and policy realm. We’re still going to be forecasting elections,” he told POLITICO, “[b]ut politics might represent something like 20 or 25 percent of our total bandwidth.”)


The traffic


Klein was a big traffic-driver for the Post. In 2011, “Wonkblog” was the most-read blog on the paper’s website. In recent years, he’s generated what one Post staffer described to The New Republic as “enough traffic to end any argument with the senior editors.” (Sources put the number at well over 4 million pageviews a month, though that figure is disputed). Still, it’s a pittance compared to the numbers that Silver has put on the board. In the week before the 2012 presidential election, 71 percent of visitors to the Times’ politics section visited his “FiveThirtyEight” blog, according to The New Republic. On the day of the election, one-in-every-five readers on The Times site visited the blog. “What’s interesting is a lot of the traffic is coming just for Nate,” Jill Abramson, the executive editor of the Times, told TNR. (Neither Silver nor Klein will share their traffic numbers.)


(Also on POLITICO: 10 journalists to watch in 2014)


No matter how outsize one journalist becomes, he still benefits from his platform: Klein and Silver drove traffic to the Post and the Times, but the Post and the Times also drove traffic to Klein and Silver. At ESPN, Silver will be the beneficiary of a robust readership of sports fans. At Vox, Klein will largely be responsible for generating his own traffic. And it’s worth remembering that while Klein has many readers who follow him on Twitter and Facebook, there are others who will lose sight of him — much the way many of Frank Rich’s loyal readers stopped reading his columns when he jumped from the Times’ opinion pages to New York Magazine. (Still, it’s worth remembering that Klein is building an entirely new news venture — not just a larger version of Wonkblog — which means that past statistics aren’t necessarily the best indicator of future success.)




POLITICO – TOP Stories



Ezra Klein vs. Nate Silver: The Wonk Super Bowl

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Is Ezra Klein the Next Roger Ailes?

Andrew Sullivan today:


I have to say it’s been amazing to see Washington get almost giddy about the Ezra Klein story. Well, maybe only Washington journalists … but, still….All the stories about these ventures rightly take a wait-and-see approach as to whether we are witnessing a realignment in which those old big media companies accelerate their decline by being unable to accommodate their new media stars … or whether these new ventures will eventually founder in a grim business climate for journalism. These new models may be evanescent or central to the future. We just don’t know yet.



This is true: we don’t know yet. At the same time, no one should feel like this is something new and unprecedented. It’s the same thing that’s been happening to popular media for over a century. When radio was invented, it attracted young entrepreneurs like William Paley (using family money) and Richard Sarnoff (working his way up the ranks at RCA). The burgeoning market for middle-class reading material attracted young entrepreneurs like Henry Luce (magazines), William Randolph Hearst (newspapers), and Simon & Schuster (books). The film industry attracted young entrepreneurs like Walt Disney and Howard Hughes. Cheap four-color printing prompted Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson to start up the company that would later become DC Comics. Car culture produced car magazines. Computers produced computer magazines. Gaming produced gaming magazines. The rise of cable TV brought us CNN, Fox News, and MSNBC. When politics collided with the rise of the internet, we got websites like Drudge Report, Talking Points Memo, the Huffington Post, and Politico.


Will Ezra Klein’s new venture succeed? Who knows. But I think it’s safe to say that some of these ventures will succeed, and they will indeed produce a realignment in the political media universe. They already have, after all: Fox News and Politico are probably more influential already than the entire old-guard newspaper industry combined.


Young (and some not-so-young) entrepreneurs have been reshaping popular media forever. It’s no surprise that this is continuing. What else would you expect, after all?



MoJo Blogs and Articles | Mother Jones



Is Ezra Klein the Next Roger Ailes?

Friday, November 15, 2013

Ezra Klein: WH Trying To Buy Time Until People Realize Obamacare Offers Better Insurance





LAWRENCE O’DONNELL: What you heard from today from the White House about how the president hopes to fix this situation. What’s your reading of how that will work?


EZRA KLEIN: It isn’t a fix. And part it’s not a fix because the situation actually isn’t that broken. What’s broken is another part of the law. So, what he said today, the new policy he’s got coming out, you’re basically dealing with an optional opportunity for insurers to keep putting forward plans that are not going to be profitable for them any longer. And the president really rolled over on insurance today and then fundamentally they are responding to a new set of rules that the Affordable Care Act brings out.


The idea that it’s kind of up to them now, I don’t think is actually all that accurate. I mean, some of them will take the opportunity to extended the plan for an extra year, but for a lot of them it’s not going all that profitable to do so because they simply would have to send out the cancelation notices a year later. They would have to reconstruct infrastructure around the plans in the meantime.


The problem, ultimately, is that the fundamental machinery of the law, mainly Healthcare.gov and the digital architecture it stands atop, is that it is still not working. It is that fundamental problem where people having their plans being canceled, if they can see, often times that they could get better insurance, they can’t see that now. I think fundamentally the White House is trying to buy time until those people can see that.




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Ezra Klein: WH Trying To Buy Time Until People Realize Obamacare Offers Better Insurance

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Joan Walsh, Ezra Klein Spar Over Liberal Obamacare Critiques


Joan Walsh, Ezra Klein Spar Over Liberal Obamacare Critiques


Chris Hayes talks with Salon.com editor Joan Walsh and Washington Post editor Ezra Klein about how liberals should criticize Obamacare.




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Joan Walsh, Ezra Klein Spar Over Liberal Obamacare Critiques