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Cold Water
On the other hand, Norman Pearlstine, editor-in-chief
of Time Inc., in his keynote address, was a bucket of cold water on the
future of such nonfiction writing in magazines: “Our audience seems
to be deserting us.” Worse, “long-form journalism is at odds
with a lot of the demands of the marketplace.”

This doesn’t bode well for biographies, true crime books, travel
memoirs and other literary journalism because the best of those books
have often started as features in places such as the New Yorker or Atlantic
Monthly. Plus, many book authors make their real money as magazine writers.
So while the book marketplace has been gobbling up the
best-selling likes of Blink and Flyboys, magazines have been splitting
themselves into ever smaller markets (soon to come: Hey, Leo!, the monthly
just for Leonardo DiCaprio). Or they’ve aimed themselves at covering
the same super-rich, super-famous divinities whose every stylish purchase
we wish to mimic (soon to come: Leonardo DiCaprio’s Utility Bills).
As Mr. Pearlstine put it, today’s niche periodicals
and
service magazines “ are about anything but
literary nonfiction.”
In response, bloggers have trumpeted themselves as the
cure-all for such media woes. But the Internet itself has two huge weaknesses:
So far, it doesn’t pay. And there’s little evidence we’ll
read long fiction or nonfiction online.
Blogs vs. vlogs
In fact, Mr. Pearlstine predicted that broadband
service was likely to make the Internet a video medium -- with documentary
filmmakers, not nonfiction writers, the primary news producers. Two days
later, The New York Times promptly ran a story about how vlogs (video
logs) are replacing blogs as the hot sites online.

Not surpisingly, even as Mr. Pearlstine cited nonfiction writers he admired,
he sounded more like a bottom-line businessman than a journalist. His
speech seemed like a justification for cutting back more on longer features
in magazines. It’s a common media strategy today: To get those desirable
18-year-olds who don’t read, we’ll give them even less to
read.
I’m convinced, however, that narrative reporting
will still exist someplace outside of books. Many readers will not settle
for a diet of blurbs touting trendy shoes and health drinks. Mr. Pearlstine
argued that such readers are now a niche market. True, but the same holds
for chopper owners, and bookstore shelves sag with periodicals on those
gleaming hawgs. Explanatory depth, vivid accuracy and a compelling story:
They may be the closest thing nonfiction has to the perfect beast.
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