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This has the feel of a big week. The headlines that clicked by on Bloomberg today captured a different zeitgeist than last week, a sense of a logjam of rhetoric and disconnection break open.

Commentators will have a field day, but it’s worth taking a look at how the rhythm of the news shifted.

1-21 hed 11 go 1.pngHere’s the summary of the day.

  • The activity that drives jobs and the economy — manufacturing and services — is gearing up, albeit slowly.
  • The employment market continues to stabilize.
  • Obama, faced with a strategic defeat in Massachusetts, quickly tunes into popular opinion, backs off health care and goes straight after the Wall Street titans.
  • Consumers are beginning to spend more, and the biggest Wall Street giant of them all bows to popular opinion to cut back its bonus pool, after using a Federal subsidy to post its highest earning year ever.
  • In the midst of this sudden shift in momentum, the market slides, unclear what the implications are and in a hurry to hedge its downside risk.

Here’s the highlights from Bloomberg:

U.S. Economy: Leading Index Rises More Than Forecast

The New York-based Conference Board’s gauge of the outlook for the next three to six months climbed 1.1 percent, the most in three months, after increasing 1 percent in November. The gain exceeded the median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey for a 0.7 percent rise. Another report showed Philadelphia-area manufacturing expanded in January for a fifth straight month.

Factories in Philadelphia Fed Region Grew in January

Increases in exports and business investment, combined with a need to stabilize inventories, may promote further gains in manufacturing in early 2010. The report corroborates figures issued by the Fed Bank of New York last week that showed factories in that region accelerated, indicating the rebound is broad-based.

Jobless Claims in U.S. Unexpectedly Rise on Backlog

The jump was due to an “administrative” accumulation from late December and early January holidays, and did not reflect “economic” reasons, a Labor Department spokesman said.

Obama, Democrats Signal Willingness to Scale Back Health Bill

President Barack Obama and House Democratic lawmakers signaled a willingness to scale back legislation overhauling the U.S. health-care system after the party suffered a defeat in a key Senate race.

Obama Calls for Limiting Size, Risk-Taking of Banks

President Barack Obama, tapping into voter anger over bank bailouts, called for limiting the size and trading activities of financial institutions as a way to reduce risk-taking and prevent another financial crisis.

American Express Profit Surges as Spending Rebounds

“We still face the challenge of high unemployment levels, depressed real estate values, and shrunken household balance sheets, but the overall economy and our company are in stronger shape than they were a year ago,” Chenault said in the statement. “While the economic recovery now under way is likely to be modest, we expect it to continue and have begun to shift our focus to growing American Express for the longer term.”

Goldman Sachs Posts Record Profit on Bonus Pool Cuts

“The big story is the compensation,” said Keith Davis, an analyst at Farr, Miller & Washington LLC in Washington, which manages about $650 million, including Goldman Sachs shares. “They got the message that politically they can’t be paying out close to 50 percent of revenues anymore, at least for the time being. Obviously, that’s the primary reason for the beat.”

Stocks, Commodities Slide, Treasuries Gain on Obama Bank Reform

“Financials are selling off and dragging down the market,” said Michael Nasto, the senior trader at U.S. Global Investors Inc., which manages about $2.5 billion in San Antonio. “There’s concern about an overhaul of financial services companies, with increased regulation, hurting the bottom-line of banks.”

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Content has to find its way to us, not rely on us to find our way to it. That’s the new way of the world.

It’s no secret that news isn’t dying. Traditional news business models are. As I’ve pointed out before, this matters for two reasons: first, a lot of people care about the independence and integrity of news and information; and second, even more people make their living by producing content. They don’t really care about the big-picture business model stuff: they care about making a living, having a career and doing work that they can feel good about.

In the debate about “information wants to be free,” the emotional crux isn’t whether traditional institutions will continue to survive the revolution of information proliferation. It is whether people who love to create the information that gets consumed will be able to get paid.

Steve Shuler at Compete turned to the analytics to get derive some insight into what the changing pattern of information consumption looks like.

I know that I’m exposed to more information because of social news services. For example, as political debates rage in Washington this fall, I’m often learning about events from my Facebook News Feed. I have a very liberal friend and a very conservative friend that post articles, with dueling points of view, from sources like Forbes or the New Yorker that I never visit on my own.

As people like me migrate to online news sources, what are the trends worth noting? Compete.com has a set of news categories that can help us examine this question.

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So, are newspapers really dying? No doubt media companies must address social factors, like American’s busier lifestyles, and improve their business plans, but the audience for news is not evaporating; we are simply finding other methods to get the same information. The stories are even written by traditional sources, but the delivery methods suit our changing needs bette

The shift is in the way information is moving around, with individuals sharing and commenting in a real-time soup. Does this ultimately benefit an information hegemony or cripple it?

Jeff Jarvis took a break from his Google ruminations to write a very good summary of how “the web site” is a anachronistic concept, and that true media distribution will be a constant stream referencing an archival foundation.

(As an aside, this post is a reminder of how solid and perceptive a thinker Jarvis is.)

If a page (and a site) become anything, it will be a repository, an archive, a collecting pool in which to gather permalinks and Googlejuice: an article plus links plus streams of comments and updates and tweets and collaboration via tools like Wave. Content will insinuate itself into streams and streams will insinuate themselves back into content. The great Mandala…

..So imagine this future without pages and sites, this future that’s all built on process over product. If you’re what used to be a content-creation – if you’re Stephen Fry, post-media – you’re all about insinuating yourself into that stream. If you’re about content curation – formerly known as editing – then you’re all about prioritizing streams for people; that’s how you add value now.

This is a future that we can embrace: a media universe that rewards focus, engagement and expertise. Content flows from multiple sources, through human and machine filters that sift and prioritize in terms of relevance, quality and timeliness. The filtering process enriches the content, creating annotations and enhancements by virtue of the intelligence and perspective of each gating event. Brands can be anchoring elements in this ecosphere, aggregating the financial wherewithal to reward the content creators and curators.

There will be one of three payments made: a payment by a marketer to incorporate their selling message into the media stream; a payment by a consumer to consume parts of the media stream; or a payment by a consumer for applications that facilitate the delivery or organization of the media stream.

As in the old media world, the economic future of the stream will rely on support and investment of marketers.

Just as we’re beginning to conceive of content creators, curators and consumers in the media stream, we’ll need to envision the opportunities for marketers to participate in a way that drives their financial returns.

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Thinking about the short-term direction of the housing market

September 9, 2009

I’ve been musing the last couple of days over the trajectory of the economy and the housing market, wondering what the recent trends portend. One by-product of the economic decline, neatly summed up in Paul Krugman’s New York Times piece this past Sunday, is that no expert is reliable. The future is unknowable [...]

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The potent message of the Education divide in employment

August 8, 2009

The employment news on Friday was heartening and assorted media outlets are heralding the beginning of the end for the recession. The New York Times on its front cover this morning made the first stab at a hagiography of the Great Recession, lauding the Washington brains that have pulled our country back from the [...]

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Who will know what the news is when the newspapermen are gone?

May 10, 2009

A couple of op-ed pieces in the NY Times looks at a future without news gathering organizations.

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