Carl Natale

Revenge of the online news editors

by Carl Natale on February 23, 2013

I’ve been publishing online since 1997. And one of the consistent criticisms that never went away is that the online newspaper operations were never profitable. And this came from journalists — not the business side of newspapers. These stalwarts of the left-wing media conspiracy (you do see the sarcasm here?) became rabid capitalists. My answer […]

Why reader comments aren’t what you want them to be

by Carl Natale on January 6, 2013

I’m thinking the problem is that we expect too much out of reader comment systems. The flaws are inherent in the system. What if journalism used reader conversation systems?   Gawker’s new comment system Will it help or hurt the site’s young writers?

How to survive the office holiday party

by Carl Natale on December 14, 2012

You have to love the company holiday party. Really. You have to love it or it can affect your career. Employers want their kindness and genorousity appreciated. Kind of like “The floggings will continue until morale improves.” So before you take a shot of liquid courage at the next holiday party, read this guide to […]

Has Mashable jumped the shark?

by Carl Natale on August 27, 2012

Mashable used to be one of my daily must read blogs. It kept up with the fast-paced world of social media. Now I’m skipping it because I already know “Neil Armstrong, First Man on the Moon, Dead at 82.” Or how Twitter reacts to a news event. It feels like the editors are dumping everything […]

Why kids are ‘wasting time’ on computers

by Carl Natale on June 3, 2012

When left to their own devices, they’re going to find something to do that parents or teachers don’t appreciate.

Journalists and publishers aren’t devoting enough attention to their business models.

Are amateurs the experts on innovation?

by Carl Natale on May 19, 2012

This sounds like a handbook for innovation. According to Jack Hitt, amateurs aren’t afraid of making mistakes or failing. And that freedom leads to progress. Americans: A ‘Bunch Of Amateurs,’ And Proud Of It : NPR In his new book, journalist Jack Hitt says America’s amateur spirit goes back to the nation’s origins — and […]

Felix Salmon of Reuters has an idea for Big Journalism

Why we want to build forts

by Carl Natale on April 21, 2012

Forts aren’t just for kids. We all want someplace cozy and safe.

Self publishing redefines children’s books

by Carl Natale on April 1, 2012

Parents are financing their teenagers’ – and sometimes younger – self-published books.