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Stand Up! with Pete Dominick

889 Jeff Jarvis is Back! The Gutenberg Parenthesis The Age of Print and Its Lessons for the Age of the Internet

Stand Up! with Pete Dominick

Pete Dominick

Racialjustice, Comedian, Democracy, Comedy, Environmentaljustice, Politics, News, Organizedlabor, Standupcomic, Covid, Petedominick, Trump

4.91.2K Ratings

🗓️ 14 July 2023

⏱️ 43 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Stand Up is a daily podcast. I book,host,edit, post and promote new episodes with brilliant guests every day.

Please subscribe now for as little as 5$ and gain access to a community of over 740 awesome, curious, kind, funny, brilliant, generous souls

Get Jeff's new book The Gutenberg Parenthesis The Age of Print and Its Lessons for the Age of the Internet

Jeff Jarvis is a national leader in the development of online news, blogging, the investigation of new business models for news, and the teaching of entrepreneurial journalism. He writes an influential media blog, Buzzmachine.com.

He is author of “Geeks Bearing Gifts: Imagining New Futures for News” (CUNY Journalism Press, 2014); “Public Parts: How Sharing in the Digital Age Improves the Way We Work and Live” (Simon & Schuster, 2011); “What Would Google Do?” (HarperCollins 2009), and the Kindle Single “Gutenberg the Geek.”

He has consulted for media companies including The Guardian, Digital First Media, Postmedia, Sky.com, Burda, Advance Publications, and The New York Times company at About.com.

Prior to joining the Newmark J-School, Jarvis was president of Advance.net, the online arm of Advance Publications, which includes Condé Nast magazines and newspapers across America.

He was the creator and founding managing editor of Entertainment Weekly magazine and has worked as a columnist, associate publisher, editor, and writer for a number of publications, including TV Guide, People, the San Francisco Examiner, the Chicago Tribune, and the New York Daily News.

His freelance articles have appeared in newspapers and magazines across the country, including the Guardian, The New York Times, the New York Post, The Nation, Rolling Stone, and BusinessWeek.

Jarvis holds a B.S.J. from Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism. He was named one of the 100 most influential media leaders by the World Economic Forum at Davos.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. There he is. More than two people were like, where is Jeff Jarvispin?

0:06.3

I am sorry, ladies and gentlemen. He's here. I'm sure you find two people to say that

0:10.1

even if you paid them. They were both last name Jarvis. I will say that they emailed me.

0:14.3

No, like I love that. I love when listeners, you know, tell me who they like and why they

0:18.9

miss somebody. And yeah, it's been way too long since you and I have been too long.

0:22.9

It's good to see you, my friend. It's good to see you. I'm happy to have you here. And

0:25.8

most importantly, congratulations, my friend on your new book. Hold it up for people to

0:31.2

see. You've got it there. I don't have to play my copy. The Gutenberg parenthesis.

0:36.6

The Gutenberg parenthesis. And it's lessons for the age of the internet. I had a look

0:41.9

to cheat here. Well, you have, you read the own, your own subtitle. I was supposed to

0:46.0

do that. Very exciting and very important. And let's talk about, you know, why you've

0:52.5

just a book that you've kind of always wanted to write and know a lot about. You're the

0:56.5

guy to write about it. But why is history so important here now? Because I think we have

1:04.0

lessons to learn from the entry into the age of print as we now leave it. And by the way,

1:08.8

I'm not saying the print's going to die and books are going to die. I'm not saying

1:11.4

that, but we have the opportunity to kind of recapture what we lost in the age of print,

1:17.0

especially the age of mechanized mass media print. Right. And so I want to look back

1:22.0

and I was always fascinated by Gutenberg as the proto or entrepreneur and technologist. And

1:29.8

then there were these three academics in the University of Southern Denmark who came up with

1:34.1

this theory. They called the Gutenberg parenthesis, which is to say that the age of print is an

1:38.0

exception in history. And that we are returning now to things as they were to some extent before

1:44.9

print. That is to say more conversational society. There's less sense of owning content

...

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