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Movie Critics Are Not News

May 9, 2008 - 5:02pm

Dear NPR,

In the past week, I've heard two stories from you about the recent layoffs of movie critics from a number of papers (here and here). I realize that you think this is news and requires multiple segments of coverage, but it's not. It's navel gazing. You and the entire news industry needs to get over yourself. The tide is turning and while it freaks you out a lot, it doesn't bother me. Because I've found something better. It's called the Internet.

I've never (ever! ever!) cared what a movie critic in the paper has said. And as harsh as this sounds, I don't care that 28 of them have been laid off recently. I care about them as people and I feel horrible that they suddenly can't pay their bills. But I don't care about their jobs. It's basic business. It's the law of supply and demand. If there's no demand for your services, then you're out of business.

So as scary as this is to you and the entire news industry, remember this is how the world works. You have to keep providing valuable services that people demand. When you stop doing it, you're toast. While that's truth and interesting to those of us in business, it's not news. So please find something better to report on.

I promise that if you give me one more segment about movie critics losing their jobs, I swear I will never (ever!) give you another dollar. Which is a shame becuase normally I think you use my money well and provide a very, very valuable service.

Yours truly.
Erica

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Comments

Wow...such passion...! Unfortunately, I do know some of the local critics here in Dallas, and while you may not care for their work, they do serve a purpose. I, like you, don't go to a movie based solely on a review, and yes, (as you state) they do add to the general conversation and marketplace of ideas; Roger Ebert is one such critic, as was Philip Wuntch here in Dallas.
What you find on the internet is written for the paper version before it finds its way online; even "Rotten Tomatoes" carries reviews from print sources and trade publications.
I have not heard the NPR pieces you link to, but if the capsule is accurate, I suspect the online "criticism" it refers to are very "celeb" and gossip driven (Ain't It Cool News being one such site, along with its many imitators.)
Unfortunately, legitimate online criticism not culled from the written page is the exception rather than the rule.

Posted by Nat on May 10, 2008 - 4:39am

I agree totally. I'm sorry that they're holding on to an ever less-relevant medium, but I'm more sorry that they can't see the forest spite the trees.

Noone's crying anymore for the last great buggy-whip manufacturer.

Posted by Chris Altman on May 10, 2008 - 4:24pm

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