Writing about the launch of Dan Abrams' new site, Mediaite, which boasts a new Power Grid rating the popularity of journalists, Will Leitch at Deadspin provides some much-needed truth-telling:
From my experience, 27 percent of the people who work in media (and I'm using the Mediaite definition of media, which is pretty much “anyone who gets paid for typing, talking or figuring out how to fire people who type or talk”) are journalists in the truest sense, out to enlighten the public for common good, altruistic believers in the fourth estate and its power to invoke change. The other 73 percent are pretending to be that 27 percent and really just trying to promote their own personal brand. In the past, this has always been an inside joke, something for media folk to snicker about in private. Mediaite breaks with the pretense and just states what everyone already knew: This is really what it's all about. It's not about informing the public. It's not about being good at your job. It's about being known, and being recognized.
(h/t Gawker)