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Friday, February 19, 2010

Hey, Dave Eggers: Panorama is Like Candlelight Dinner. We Wanted Apple Dippers.

Posted By on Fri, Feb 19, 2010 at 10:45 AM

Page 2 of 2

But

no, McSweeney's, the world doesn't work that way. We don't have the

time, or the money. Thanks for dinner, but this does not solve the

problem in our lives.

What we really need is not a magnificent sit-down meal, but the journalism equivalent of Apple Dippers: You know, one of those "healthy options" McDonald's introduced after the shaming it got from Supersize Me and that obsese children lawsuit.

True, I've never actually ordered the Apple Dippers at McDonald's, but I

feel the world is a little bit healthier just because they're there.

I'll probably feel the same way when Perez Hilton pulls a HuffPo and creates an investigative fund

dedicated to more worthy media causes. Ten years ago, the idea of

embarrassing McDonald's into serving more salads would have been

ludicrous. But if it can be done in fast food, maybe it can be done in

journalism.

I don't want to go too far with this "Apple

Dippers of journalism" metaphor, but I do think the place to focus our

attention is in this category. Not reporting for gourmands, but how we

create better everyday media options for the average American. In a

world of I Can Haz Cheezeburgers, we want something with a little more substance, but we still need to get it fast.

The Bay Area is a great place to make this metaphor, because fast-and-delicious food is a huge part of the culture here. Think Little Skillet or Bake Sale Betty or Gregoire.

These are local places that only serve a couple of things, but they

don't charge a lot and they make them supremely well. With the right

target group, small, high-quality fast food outlets can thrive, which

bodes well for hyper-local news sites like MissionLoc@l or Voice of San Diego.

Of

course, not every town supports this kind of food culture, and that's

why we have to go back to Apple Dippers, even though they're kind of

gross. It figures the reason McDonald's didn't used to serve many fruits

or vegetables was because they were harder to keep fresh, and because

they didn't think anyone wanted them. But when McDonald's started

offering marginally healthier options, it turned out people would buy

them after all. People would even pay five or six bucks for a McDonald's

Premium salad instead of two or three bucks for a burger. Find a

journalism equivalent for that kind of

willingness-to-pay-a-little-more, and we'll definitely be on the right

track.

Which doesn't exclude the occasional candlelit dinner, of

course. But the priority needs to be on creating the kind of journalism

we can consume every day. 

***
I should note again that Panorama's partly community-funded Bay Bridge

investigation (a collaboration with SF Public Press and Spot.Us) is an

exception to my general criticisms of the paper. This is exactly the

kind of journalistic experimentation that we need. And they just beat out traditional newspapers to win a local journalism prize.  

Want to check out our previous Dave Eggers/Panorama coverage?

Panorama Writers Aren't Retiring on Their Paychecks

Purported Newspaper Lover Dave Eggers Coy About Newspapering Past
 

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Lois Beckett

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