Park School: New Center for Indie Media
Maureen Forrest, 5/3/2008
Respected media watchdog and critic Jeff Cohen is the center’s first director.
Renowned media critic Jeff Cohen leads venture. by Karin Fleming ’09
“Journalism is not [just found in] newspapers,” says Dianne Lynch, dean of the Roy H. Park
School of Communications. “If we were starting journalism today and deciding the best way to
deliver dynamic, interactive, breaking information relevant to communities, we wouldn’t put it on
paper and drop it off on somebody’s porch once a day.”
The media landscape is undeniably changing -- constantly. Corporate-owned media are no longer the sole
gatekeepers of information, as more and more journalists produce their own content and distribute it
directly through the Internet.
This new environment prompted the creation of the Park Center for Independent Media, which Lynch
hopes will become a national think tank on the changing media ecology and its potential implications
for students. “The most important public service the academy can provide,” notes Lynch,
“is the opportunity for people to come together to develop new visions.” Besides providing
a place for national discourse, the center will help the Park School tailor its curricula, internships,
and events. “This is not a substitute for [mainstream media],” says Lynch, “but an
addition to it. I don’t expect mass media to go away. We just have another option we should be
exploring.” The Park School’s longstanding relationships with media corporations, such as
ESPN, Disney, and Clear Channel, will remain intact.
The center was launched with a speaker series kicked off by filmmaker Rory Kennedy (see online special). After a nationwide search, Jeff Cohen,
founder of the media watchdog group FAIR (Fairness and Accuracy
in Reporting) and a prominent media critic and author, was named the center’s inaugural
director and associate professor of journalism. “I come,” says Cohen, “as someone who
has been inside the corporate media structure and who saw its inadequacies.” For example, Cohen
says, that the invasion and occupation of Iraq “will go down as one of the low points in the
history of mainstream media” at the same time indie media were getting a lot of things right.
Although independent media don’t yet have the clout to help prevent foreign policy disasters,
their influence, he believes, is rising.
“It’s an exciting time for independent media and maverick journalists,” Cohen points
out. “And it’s thrilling that a communications school will be giving independent media
their due.”
Originally published in IC View: Park School: New Center for Indie Media.