There was some flap a couple of weeks ago when news/gossip site Gawker suggested that newspapers stop allowing comments.
The points made are pretty valid: commenters are often rude, off-topic or both. Newspapers would never publish much of what’s said in comments on their editorial pages, and people are allowed to hide behind pseudonyms.
The writer makes the argument that newspapers should be in the news business and blogs should be in the business of trafficking in comments. But that misses the point. Comments, no matter how nasty, are a useful addition to newspaper stories.
Comments are not a conversation. That doesn’t mean they’re useless, though. There are lots of ways to have conversations on the Internet, and newspapers are looking to add more all the time. But the gut-level reaction that stories provoke is worth giving its own forum.
Take our recent live coverage of Barack Obama’s visit to Cedar Rapids.
One person wants to know why we’re bothering, when people could just read about the visit in the next day’s paper. I’ll leave you to absorb the irony of making such a comment on a Web site.
Others spend a lot of time arguing about Obama’s merits, in sometimes crude terms. But they’d be doing that anyway. We’re just letting those comments take place out in the open.
That’s part of the new mission of the media. We’re not just telling people what’s happening anymore, we need to listen to what they have to say, as well.
We need to do more to foster real conversations and to make sure the trolls don’t take over. But that doesn’t mean we should stop letting people comment on our stories.
Responses to “Commenting on comments”
October 13th, 2008 at 12:43 pm
[...] been thinking about comments a lot lately. I’ve written about them twice on my personal blog, here and here. To save you the reading, I talk about why it’s important to have comments and am [...]
October 12th, 2008 at 8:08 pm
[...] ha, but there’s a a sad truth in the joke. I’ve written about comments before, but one thing I’ve been trying to figure out is what expectations we should have for [...]