The Times' UK newsroom set to ring with the sounds of typewriters
again
Almost as if the digital revolution never happened, the newsroom of
The Times once again resounds to the clatter of the old-fashioned
typewriter.
Nearly three decades after Rupert Murdoch's UK newspaper publisher
revolutionised the industry by moving to Wapping and ending the "hot
metal" era, his flagship title has reintroduced the distinctive sound of
old Fleet Street.
To the surprise of Times journalists, a tall speaker on a stand has
been erected in the newsroom to pump out typewriter sounds, to increase
energy levels and help reporters to hit deadlines.
The audio begins with the gentle patter of a single typewriter and
slowly builds to a crescendo, with the keys of ranks of machines
hammering down as the paper's print edition is due to go to press.
The development, which was described as a "trial" by publisher News
UK, has caused some bemusement among journalists, one of whom tried
unsuccessfully to turn the sound off. The idea is one of a series of
experiments introduced as The Times and other News UK titles have
departed Wapping for new offices in the Baby Shard, London Bridge, South
London.
The Times's initiative coincides with a revival of interest in the
typewriter, a trend which the newspaper reflected on Page 3, with a
report on how the actor Tom Hanks has developed the Hanx Writer app,
which simulates the sound of an old-fashioned typewriter and has gone to
the top of the iTunes app store in the US. Hanks, it noted, can tell the
difference between the sounds of an Olivetti, a Remington and a Royal
typewriter model..
Whether journalists on The Times feel a similar sense of nostalgia is
unclear. George Brock, a former Times journalist, and professor of
journalism at City University, London, said the sound was unlikely to
rekindle memories among current staff.
"Typewriters disappeared from newsrooms in the late 1980s. There will
be very few people there who remember the noise of massed bands of
typewriters in the newsroom," he said.
"They will have to find out whether a crescendo of noise will make
reporters work better or faster."
Michael Williams, who began his newspaper career at The Times's old
offices in London's Gray's Inn Road in 1973, and is now a senior
lecturer in journalism at the University of Central Lancashire, saw
merit in the idea. "People feel to some extent disengaged from the
thrill of producing a newspaper, which is galvanising", he said,
referring to the relative quiet of modern newsrooms, where interviews
might be conducted by email or instant messaging rather than phone, and
where digital publishing is continuous.
The introduction of the typewriter speaker was "a playful idea", said
Lucia Adams, deputy head of digital for The Times and Sunday Times.
"Technology has always been an important part of what The Times has done
and the typewriter might be an old technology but it's still a
technology."
The new Times newsroom on the 11th floor of the Baby Shard also
features large digital display boards reflecting the public response to
stories published online.
News UK is set to stage Newseum, an exhibition of newspaper
technologies which will be hosted by the Saatchi Gallery in London next
month.
- The Independent
|