I remember being young in my 20s and disregarding the entire profession of marketing and PR work as unnecessary. Those of us who considered ourselves true journalists considered this the “dark side.” Anyone who moved on from a journalism role, particularly print newspapers, were deemed as going to the dark side. We were so young then. Only after I grew up, into my 30s, did I realize that marketing and PR work was necessary. Even in journalism. You can’t have one without the other. Journalism needs branding, marketing, PR to sell itself. You can’t have one without the other. But even then, good journalism - even the best, whether it’s hyper-local, national, or global - isn’t guaranteed to succeed or survive. Only in the most recent years, did it dawn on me that the line between marketing and journalism really doesn’t matter as much as I thought - particularly in the context of existing in this world. People need the ability to afford to live, pay their bills, pay their taxes, pay mortga...
A digital portfolio of journalism, writing, and editing work by Michael W. Hoskins.