The Syndication Nail in the Mainstream Media Coffin

Mike Catherall
I have been writing a daily blog called Enlightening Ideas for the agency I work for, Creative Wonders, for almost a year now. Yesterday, I discovered it is possible to achieve syndication through the American Chronicle.

It is an interesting phenomenon.

What does it mean for the future of journalism as a paid profession and the accuracy and validity of the news as the blog slowly replaces the mainstream press?

As one entertainment medium that acts as a vessel for advertisers replaces another will the line between news and advertising be completely disintegrated at last?

Is this a good or bad thing?

As advertisers begin to create their own entertainment mediums, the need for traditional vessels manufactured for commercial investment will become obsolete. Why invest in art or entertainment to sponsor with ad revenue when you already have on staff everything you need to create your own?

With the Internet, this is becoming easier and easier. Some examples of this are Channel101 and Rocket Boom where videologs (Vlogs) are replacing traditional news and TV sources.

Why? Because people are getting sick of traditional, mainstream television that is basically terrible commercial kak.

And with the heft carried by commercial advertisers with a strong investment in the religious right and the status quo (namely Wal-Mart, McDonalds and Hobby Lobby) the media will do anything in their power to keep it that way.


The viral email, personalized website, blog and vlog may have started as underground phenomenon - but they are slowly replacing the traditional means in which we seek information and see the world. And ironically enough, while the gateway and accessibility may be reckless (anyone can post) reputation becomes currency more than ever before. This is a welcome return to traditional media, before they compromised their reputation for fairness and objectivity to the acquiescence of major sponsors.

It reminds me of a conundrum faced by a television channel in the Infinite Jest written by David Foster Wallace. In the book, an advertising agency creates an ad for a migraine pain reliever that is so effective that it induces pain on all of those who witness it (the ad features self-portrait impressionistic paintings of people suffering from acute migraine pain - featuring violent images such as nails hammered into their heads and so on) the result upon viewing is so disturbing that it causes people to immediately get an intense migraine. Sales for the migraine medicine go through the roof. The migraine medicine company is now able to spend so much on advertising that they own all of the adspace on the major networks. As a result the public ceases to watch network television and the stations crumble, until people become interested in underground stations and the process repeats itself…
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Mike Catherall

Mike Catherall is the founder of Immersion Creative. 



The idea behind this Vancouver advertising agency is that the best solutions are often found by completely immersing the writer in a client's environment, to get a true feel of the business.

Working from within, Mike can produce everything from TV ads, to websites, to brochures, radio and ambient, all the while creating an online presence that will keep you on the first page of Google.

Mike is an award-winning English copywriter and columnist as well as a former Native English teacher. He has worked for some of the world's most prestigious agencies, including Ogilvy & Mather and Publicis on clients such as Disneyland, Mercedes-Benz, Citibank and Western Union.

For years, Mike worked as a copywriter in Hong Kong. He has also written novels, radio plays, children's books, screenplays, and more than ten blogs. He makes smartphone auto apps as well.

His adventures as an English copywriter can be found here. In his American Chronicle columns, Mike's focus is on sustainability advertising.

His current clients include mattress Victoria retailer, Mattress Choice, as well as CRNE prep course instructors - Primed Educational Associates and the best Vancouver mattress store, Simmons Mattress Gallery.

Immersion's other clients are: Vancouver West End Real Estate Agent, Anthea Poon, Mountain bike armour for Iron Mountain Wear, Vancouver Baby Photographer, Petite Reverie and Gibsons Bed and Breakfast A Warehouse Hide-A-Way.

To find out more, visit Immersion Creative, or call 604 537 1874.

Mike supports the Earth Rising Foundation and cancer-fighting Radiochemistry as performed by the Lapi Lab.

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