Summarised by Centrist
David Harvey of The Halfling’s View notes that NZME’s restructuring of the New Zealand Herald will prioritise engagement metrics over traditional journalistic values.
Editor-in-chief Murray Kirkness confirmed that the newsroom will publish fewer stories, cutting those that fail to “resonate” with audiences. According to Harvey, this means newsworthiness will take a backseat to digital metrics such as page views and video engagement.
Production roles—copy editors, layout staff, and graphic artists—will be hit hardest, with automation tools replacing much of their work.
If a newsroom is governed by audience preference rather than editorial judgment, does it still serve the watchdog function of the Fourth Estate? NZME’s new model risks turning news into a popularity contest.
Veteran journalist Fran O’Sullivan recently observed that New Zealand’s press corps often prefers sensationalism over understanding policy. This, she argues, is why Prime Minister Christopher Luxon relies on social media platforms like X and TikTok to communicate without media “bias.”
With NZME leaning further into audience-driven content, the line between journalism and entertainment blurs even more.