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Web-only readers expand US regionals’ reach

Posted by Martin Stabe on 25 August 2006 at 11:32
Tags: Journalism, Newspapers, Regionals, United States

Web-only readers account for between two and 15 per cent of readers in the top 25 US regional newspaper markets and are helping papers expand their reach to sought-after upmarket audiences, according to a new study by Scarborough research (PDF).

The study, reported by PaidContent.org, suggests US regional papers have been able to use their websites to attract new audiences, particularly among the young and affluent who have been assumed not be be reading newspaper content.

Scarborough concludes that its study shows that “newspaper websites have undergone an important transition in the minds of media executives as well as readers. They are no longer a footnote in the story of a newspaper’s success; they have become a headline.”

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NY Times columnist hates subscription wall

Posted by Martin Stabe on 13 June 2006 at 18:22
Tags: Journalism, Online, United States

New York Times star columnist Thomas Friedman hates having his columns behind the TimesSelect subscription wall, which makes his newspapers’ comment pages accessible to paying subscribers only.

“It pains me enomrously because it’s cut me off from a lot, a lot of people, espeically because I have a lot of people who reading me overseas, like in India and whatnot, and so I hate it,” Friedman said in an interview conducted at last night’s Webby awards by MediaBistro, posted on YouTube, and highlighted on the blog of US new media columnist Steve Outing.

But the columnist also acknowledged that someone had to pay for his jetsetting approach to reporting on globalisation: “On the other hand, we have to make money somehow and the traditional dead-tree way of doing it doesn’t really provide enough to go forward, and the bits and bytes aren’t there yet either, so that’s our problem.”

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Editor bans puns from headlines

Posted by Martin Stabe on 11 May 2006 at 09:36
Tags: Journalism, United States

In a move that would, if replicated here, put most British subs out of work, the editor of an American newspaper has banned the use of puns in headlines.

As noted in A Capitol Idea, an blog Nicole Stockdale, a sub copy-editor on the Dallas Morning News, the editor of the San Antonio Express-News, Robert Rivard, e-mailed an edict to staff banning puns after a shocking nine of them appeared in the paper’s 20 April edition. Among the offending headers were: “Mumps outbreak swells” and
“Bell’s name doesn’t have a familiar ring for many voters”.

Good heavens. Of course we can’t allow that.
Apparently, punning is some sort of huge controversy amongst US subs. They even discussed it at their recent conference. Stockdale’s view is this:

Much of the time, puns end up in our headlines because we feel lazy if they don’t. We can read a story and throw a headline on top of it. We’ll do some work to make it fit and strengthen the verb. And that’s good enough. But with 15 minutes left before the story needs to go, maybe we can do something better, something to show that we tried.

Who are we showing? Our colleagues, our bosses, maybe even a headline judge. But readers? Seldom do they care. They’re looking for news, and a clever headline doesn’t tell the story any better. It may even distract them from the news.

Online, where users come to an individual story via search engines and RSS feeds that display little more than headlines, this is unquestionably true. Puns, especially culturally-specific ones that some readers won’t understand, will reduce traffic to a story, no matter how good the content. With this in mind, clever online subs are tailoring heads to the unique needs of news web sites.
Print, though, has its own medium-specific requirements. On a printed page, the object of the headline is to attract readers at the newstand or to draw attention accross a spread. In print, pictures and story placement provide additional cues to the reader about stories’ content and provide context to illuminate the meaning to the most obsure innuendo or the most tortured pun. Surely, in that context, a little wit and humour is likely to raise a reader’s interest, not detract from it.

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Harold Evans in New York wall spat

Posted by Jeffrey Blyth on 2 May 2006 at 13:18
Tags: Journalism, Sunday Times, United States

It’s not quite the Berlin Wall, but Sir Harry Evans is having problems with a wall that divides his New York apartment from his next-door neighbour. It’s is only a foot thick, but it does – at the moment – provide the former Sunday Times editor and his wife Tina Brown some privacy when they hold a garden party.

Now a developer has bought the adjacent property and, according to the New York Post, is planning to tear down the property and replace it with a 15-storey apartment complex.

And that – according to Sir Harry, who claims ownership to six inches of the wall - could mean the end to their privacy. As he put it: “This guy comes in like Ronald Reagan and says ‘Tear down the wall’? – a reference to former American president’s famous 1987 speech in Berlin.

It’s expected the battle over the wall will end up in a New York court.

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Explosive news in LA

Posted by Jeffrey Blyth on 2 May 2006 at 11:17
Tags: Journalism, United States

In these security-minded days, when anything suspicious can be part of a terrorist plot, a simple newspaper stunt can have a serious backlash.

That’s what happened when the Los Angeles Times dreamed up an idea to promote the new movie Mission Impossible III. It involved just a simple idea of playing the movie’s theme song whenever anyone opened one of the paper’s kerbside sales boxes.

No, the newspapers didn’t self-destruct after five seconds. But close.

Unfortunately some people thought the little red box inside the vending box, with wires protruding, seemed suspicious and summoned the local bomb squad, which promptly blew up the newspaper box.

“We were not expecting anything like this” admitted a spokesman for the Los Angeles Times.

Altogether, the paper had placed the electronic devices in 4,500 news boxes around the city. Fortunately not all of them were detonated.

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New York gossip glossy goes ahead despite scandal

Posted by Jeffrey Blyth on 25 April 2006 at 13:45
Tags: Journalism, United States

Despite the scandal still swirling over its “Page Six” gossip page, th New York Post is pushing ahead with its plan to produce a second issue of a  glossy magazine spinoff of the column.

The second issue of Page Six Magazine is due out later this year, but will feature one big difference: Its editor will not be Jared Paul Stern, the fastidiously-dressed freelance who has been accused of trying to shake down California billionaire Ron Burkle for keeping stories about him out of the column.

Since the scandal broke, Stern and three other freelance gossips have been let go. So the next issue of Page Six Magazine will be edited by Richard Johnson, who has for long edited the column. (more…)

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Al Jazeera International gets US carrier

Posted by Martin Stabe on 24 April 2006 at 15:40
Tags: Al Jazeera, Journalism, United States

One stumbling block for Al Jazeera International’s global launch may have been overcome: the Qatar-based network has finally signed up a satellite operator to carry its new English-language rolling news channel in the United States, according to the Rocky Mountain News in Denver.

AJI had been struggling to find a US carrier, allegedly because of the companies’ concerns about Al Jazeera’s image in the United States.

Speaking to the Observer this weekend, however, AJI’s British managing director, Nigel Parsons, said: “America has been one of our most difficult markets, but the problems haven’t been political, they’ve been hard-nosed business negotiations with cable operators who have limited space and may not want to carry another news channel.”

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Everything must go

Posted by Lou Thomas on 24 April 2006 at 10:49
Tags: Journalism, Regionals, United States

US regionals have felt the heat as much as their UK counterparts when it comes to declining ad revenue but on the other side of the pond they it look’s like the St Paul Pioneer Press doesn’t demand the 30 per cent profit margin expected by some British regional groups.

And hats off to the PP for being so up-front about the sale:

time is running out to submit a bid for the St. Paul Pioneer Press, if there’s still a chance at all.

What a line!

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The cat and the correspondents’ caterer

Posted by Jeffrey Blyth on 19 April 2006 at 11:04
Tags: Journalism, United States

The media frenzy garnered by Molly, an 11-month old moggie that was trapped for two weeks in a hole in the wall of a food store in New York’s Greenwich Village, may in part be attributed to the fact that the owner of both the cat and the store is an Englishman from Keswick who for years has been a friend of many news people in New York.

Since his arrival in the US almost 20 years ago, Peter Myers has been providing British ex-pats with many of the delicacies they miss: veal and ham pies, Cornish pasties, Scotch eggs and Cumberland sausages.

He was a regular patron, from the start, of such newspaper hangouts as Costello’s, many of which served his home-made specialities. He also hand-delivered to journalists hankering after a taste of home.

The efforts to free Molly from her hole in the basement wall of Myers’ food shop attracted scores of journalists and resulted in stories, according to the New York Times, in papers all around the world including the Sun, plus papers in France, South Africa and Australia.
In some papers, Molly got as much space as Iraq. After her release from her hole in the wall, unharmed by her ordeal it seemed, Molly was treated to a meal of lean pork and sardines in olive oil. No black pudding for her.

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Former Times correspondent will edit Marie Claire

Posted by Jeffrey Blyth on 19 April 2006 at 09:38
Tags: Journalism, Marie Claire, Times, United States

A former New York bureau chief for The Times has been appointed editor-in chief-of Marie Claire, the Hearst-owned American version of the French beauty and fashion magazine.

Joanna Coles replaces Lesley Jane Seymour, who has been editor for almost five years.

Coles, after leaving The Times in 2001, worked for New York Magazine, first as articles editor and then features editor. Eighteen months ago she joined More, the Meredith magazine for women over 50, as executive editor. She was a popular and respected editor.

Coles will take up her new job in May. Hearst has made no official comment except to announce Seymour is leaving the company.

One of the oddities of the unexpected change is that Marie Claire was recently nominated for an award at next month’s National Magazine Awards, its first nomination for at least five years. Also Marie Claire’s circulation, under Seymour, grew thre per cent in the second half of last year to a total of just under 1 million, plus another half million newsstand sales.

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