Available Formats
All the News Thats Fit to Click: How Metrics Are Transforming the Work of Journalists
By (Author) Caitlin Petre
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
27th February 2024
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
News media and journalism
Media studies: journalism
Sociology
Social and cultural anthropology
Communication studies
Algorithms and data structures
Data mining
070.430285
Paperback
280
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
Journalists today are inundated with data about which stories attract the most clicks, likes, comments, and shares. These metrics influence what stories are written, how news is promoted, and even which journalists get hired and fired. Do metrics make journalists more accountable to the public Or are these data tools the contemporary equivalent of a stopwatch wielded by a factory boss, worsening newsroom working conditions and journalism quality In All the News That's Fit to Click, Caitlin Petre takes readers behind the scenes at the New York Times, Gawker, and the prominent news analytics company Chartbeat to explore how performance metrics are transforming the work of journalism.
Petre describes how digital metrics are a powerful but insidious new form of managerial surveillance and discipline. Real-time analytics tools are designed to win the trust and loyalty of wary journalists by mimicking key features of addictive games, including immersive displays, instant feedback, and constantly updated scores and rankings. Many journalists get hooked on metrics and pressure themselves to work ever harder to boost their numbers.
Yet this is not a simple story of managerial domination. Contrary to the typical perception of metrics as inevitably disempowering, Petre shows how some journalists leverage metrics to their advantage, using them to advocate for their professional worth and autonomy.
An eye-opening account of data-driven journalism, All the News That's Fit to Click is also an important preview of how the metrics revolution may transform other professions.
"A rare look at the day-to-day operations of contemporary newsrooms, where reporters' expertise and editorial discretion are increasingly usurped by the revenue-maximizing metrics of audience analytics and data dashboards. Essential reading for anyone concerned with how news gets made in today's attention economy."--Natasha Schll, author of Addiction by Design: Machine Gambling in Las Vegas
"Content may be king, but to determine what content is produced, media businesses are increasingly turning to metrics. Caitlin Petre is a keen and incisive observer of the way metrics-driven systems, surveillance, and analysis have infiltrated newsrooms, and what the effects have been for workers, journalism, and democracy."--Eli Pariser, New York Times bestselling author of The Filter Bubble: How the New Personalized Web Is Changing What We Read and How We Think
"Petre's beautifully written book provides an in-depth look at how and why metrics triumphed in America's newsrooms. This book will challenge everything you think you thought you knew about how news media operates."--Meredith Broussard, author of Artificial Unintelligence: How Computers Misunderstand the World
Caitlin Petre is assistant professor of journalism and media studies at Rutgers University. She lives in New York City. Twitter @cbpetre