This is how I found out that the New York Times Company was issuing a cut $20 million in 30 days, or we’ll shut you down ultamatium to the Globe . I was courtside at the Celtics-Hawks game Friday night when I saw Bruce Allen’s Twitter feed linking to the Herald’s online story . Working backward, I went to Dan Kennedy’s Media Nation site and Adam Reilly’s Dont Quote Me blog on the Phoenix’s site. To review: While writing for a website , I got the news in an arena with Wi-Fi access from a social-networking feed, and because I was curious about the story, I went to two other websites for (free) instantaneous analysis and information. That’s how a lot of people consume news these days. To be sure, several of the scribes in what used to be known as press row heard about it the old-fashioned way: By hitting refresh on boston.com. But by the time my Saturday Globe hit my front step I had read almost everything there was to know . There’s a lot that’s wrong with that scenario as it relates to the future of newspapers, not the least of which is that the Globe got scooped on its own story. (It’s worth noting that the Globies at the Garden also learned about their fate from reading boston.com). There seems to be some discrepancy over who actually

View original here:
I Read the News Online (Oh Boy)