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Will the MEN giveaway work?

Posted by Martin Stabe on 25 April 2006 at 13:21
Tags: Guardian Media Group, Journalism

Stephen Newton thinks the Manchester Evening News’ strategy of giving away 50,000 copies in the city centre won’t halt circulation decline:

… the real problem for the Manchester Evening News is editorial. The paper has simply failed to engage with the city, is out of touch and hates what Manchester has become. The MEN is terribly curmudgeonly, loathes public art and ignores the city’s popular culture; something others would die for. The letters page is dominated by those who simply sign themselves ‘pensioner’ (‘I’m poor’; ‘where’s my pension gone?’; ‘we’re all poor’; ‘oh my back’.)

But tomorrow’s pensioners will not be like todays and if the Manchester Evening News doesn’t do something to connect with those under 65, it will deserve to die.

Ouch.

He also argues a similar circulation-boosting strategy wouldn’t work online, where giving away editorial content is also increasingly the dominant business model.

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‘Incompetent egomaniacs’ or ‘pitiful slaves’?

Posted by Martin Stabe on 25 April 2006 at 12:40
Tags: BBC, Guardian Media Group, Journalism

If you ask Chris Dillow, young, poorly-paid journalists are “irrational incompetent egomaniacs” who have entered a high-risk career tournament in the hopes of one day commanding seven-figure pay packets (not to mention fame and influence over public debate) like Jeremy Paxman.

Writing in the Times, however, Libby Purvis has a more conventional analysis of “the pitiful slaves of showbiz” toiling in the creative industries, including journalism.

Purvis has two striking examples: BBC researchers who still earning well under the national average male full-time earnings of £31,500 two decades into their careers — and Guardian Media Group regional newspaper trainees who were on £10,486 in 2002.

For Purvis, unlike Dillow, “to opt for poverty and a buzzy job is a reasonable thing to do, and it is not unreasonable to proffer your services free, at least until disillusion or a real job intervenes.”

The real problem with the recent outrage over BBC salaries, Purvis suggests, is that the entry fee for the journalism tournament is becoming prohibitive to all but those wiuth wealthy families who can subsidise long stints of low- or no-pay work.

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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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Weekend paper roundup

Posted by Martin Stabe on 18 April 2006 at 10:54
Tags: Blogs, Five, Guardian, Independent, Journalism, Metro, Observer, People, Times

The continuing fake sheikh brouhaha wasn’t the only meta-news item this extended weekend.

Columnist and documentary-maker Dominik Diamond did not go through with his planned Easter crucifixtion in the Philippines, the Scotsman reported. The Scotsman also reported that the Scottish Information Commissioner will be naming and shaming public authorities that are failing to comply with the Freedom of Information Act.

Friday’s Guardian says former Sun editor Kelvin Mackenzie is exploring the possibility of launching an upmarket sports magazine and had a profile of Seymour Hersh, the legendary American investigative journalist who has been making waves again about his stories about the US military’s plans for Iran.

The Sunday Times says Swedish tycoon Pelle Tornberg is planning to bid for the new free afternoon commuter paper in London, the one major European city where his Metro group does not own the commuter title of that name.

In the Independent, Peter Cole argued that newspapers are vacillating between panic and complacency over bird flu. There’s also a profile of Trinity Mirror boss Sly Bailey, on the occasion of her 12.9 per cent pay rise.

The Observer says racism is rife in British newspapers, according to the Commisson for Racial Equality. In a story laden with martial metaphors, the Observer also suggests that the recent newspaper acquisitions in Germany, the Netherlands and Scandinavia by David Montgomery’s Mecom group is just a warmup for an assault on British newspapers. Peter Preston says the latest ABC figures show the People is in big trouble, but that this is part of a bigger transformation of the tabloid universe:

We know the ancient redtop order of things is crumbling. Lads have their boob-filled mags; cable TV runs gossip shows; websites peddle porn unlimited. The target arena, in sum, is a lot more crowded than it used to be, and the working-class audience may be Polish or Pakistani now - so not much into seaside humour and Union Jackery.

Preston also has some interesting views on the success of the newly-compact quality papers. Contrary to conventional wisdom, the Independent, Times, and Guardian titles don’t owe their recent success to sardine-tinned commuters enjoying the new tabloid or Berliner format. Most of their gains, after all, seem to be coming on Saturdays.

It was also busy weekend in the blogosphere. Those who were not obsessing over the ‘Euston manifesto’ published in the New Statesman noticed some interesting things, as well. Regret the Error caught the Gloucestershire Echo naming the wrong man as a convicted criminal.

Chicken Yoghurt has some pointed questions about the Independent’s commitment to environmentalism. Why are they giving away free flights on the same front pages that fret about global warming, Justin McKeating wants to know.

On the Huffington Post, Larisa Alexandrovna accuses the Associated Press of plagairising a story she wrote for the news web site Raw Story. But the AP was independently contacted by some of Alexandrovna’s sources, so it’s all a bit of a storm in a teacup about the wire not attributing the story to her investigation. But it does speak volumes about big news organisations’ attitudes to online-only upstarts like Raw Story. Alexandrovna says an AP spokesman told her that the agency’s policy is that information gleaned from blogs does not require attribution.

Finally, forget the well-known traffic-boosting effect of a link from Slashdot or Digg. Among blogging journalists in the United States, the major traffic-driver is Jim Romenesko’s blog at the Poynter Institute. Just about every American journalist reads it, and a link from Romenesko can drive a small blog’s traffic through the roof in an instant, as one journalism lecturer in Florida discovered last week.

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Where’s Boorman’s coat?

Posted by Martin Stabe on 12 April 2006 at 15:19
Tags: Journalism, Kent Messenger

Edwin Boorman appears to have picked up a fellow passenger’s overcoat when he alighted at Staplehurt on the train from London on Monday.

Luckily the president of the Kent Messenger Group president has a newspaper to advertise for a coat-swap.

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Al Jazeera’s Gizbert recounts Merseyside start

Posted by Martin Stabe on 7 April 2006 at 17:46
Tags: ABC, Al Jazeera, Iraq, Journalism, Regionals

The Liverpool Daily Post has a lengthy interview with Richard Gizbert, the TV reporter who won an Employment Tribunal hearing his dismissal from American network ABC News and will now be presenting a media programme for Al Jazeera International.

Before returning to Canada and eventually becoming an experienced war correspondent, Gizbert lived on Merseyside. He notched his first foreign news story at 16 while on a work experience stint on the Birkenhead News:

“I used to go to the chippie near the office for lunch because I was too young to go to the pub with the others. It was run by a Greek Cypriot family and their daughter kinda caught my attention. She went away and when I asked when would she be back her Dad said that they didn’t know - because she’d gone back to Cyprus for a visit and got caught up in the conflict between the Greeks and the Turks there at the time.

“And that’s when I got my first real story which had the headline WIRRAL GIRL CAUGHT ON WAR-TORN ISLAND. It was a very good local story. I kept it and still have it along with the ribbon-cutting photo captions and stuff.”

Gizbert was in Liverpool recently for the National Union of Journalists conference last month. At the conference, the NUJ decided to support Gizbert’s defense fund for ABC’s expected appeal agains the Employmnet Tribunal ruling. As we reported at the time, the escalating costs of the case have left Gizbert in debt.

“I’m worse than skint. In fact skint’s looking pretty good to me right now,” Gizbert told the Daily Post.

The NUJ is backing Gizbert’s defence because of the precident his case could set. If Gizbert prevails, journalists would be safe from being forced to accept dangerous assignments.

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Inside this week’s Press Gazette

Posted by Martin Stabe on 30 March 2006 at 13:23
Tags: ABC, BBC, Citizen journalism, Daily Telegraph, Economist, Guardian, Journalism, Mirror, Mobile Phones, NUJ, New Media, News of the World, Online, Regionals, Spectator, Sunday Telegraph, Times, War reporting

Some highlights from tomorrow’s Press Gazette:

The owners of the Daily Telegraph, the Barclay Brothers, have discovered that their ploy bringing libel cases under French criminal law — a tactic most recently deployed against the Times — cuts both ways. The Sunday Telegraph has paid out to the estranged father of comedian Jimmy Carr after his lawyers threatened drag the paper before a French tribunbal.

George Galloway has threatened to publish pictures of Mazher Mahmood after the News of the World’s “fake sheikh” attempted one of his famous sting operations on the controvertial Respect MP. (The Guardian’s Duncan Campbell today has more on the foiled “sheikh-down”.)

A former Times fashion journalist, Emily Davies, is at the heart of a plagiarism row after an American publisher gave her a £515,000 advance on a book. In a statement to us, Davies admits “genuinely accidental misattribution” of parts of the book proposal — but says there is “a dirty tricks campaign” to discredit her. Lawyers have stopped us from publishing Davies’s publicity photograph.

Regular Dog readers already know this, but the Guardian’s web site will make £1 million profit this year. This emerged at the MediaGuardian Changing Media Summit, where Channel 4 News presenter Jon Snow enthused about citizen journalism.

Roy Greenslade told a Newspaper Society conference that regional newspapers need to challenge to the online competition from the BBC. His most recent Daily Telegraph column is adapted from the speech. We hear that Greenslade, who recently resigned from the Telegraph, has some super-secret online project for the Guardian up his sleeve.

Multichannel television on mobile phones set to be launched by mobile network O2 within a fortnight, and if the results of a recent pilot of the service in Oxford is anything to go by, news is set to be one of the most popular offerings.

New Economist editor John Micklethwait says he wants to double the magazine’s circulation to 2 million readers worldwide over the next 10 years. Speaking of new magazine editors, we also have an interview with Matthew D’Ancona of the Spectator — he’s into punk rock, apparently.

The National Union of Journalists is backing Richard Gizbert, a London-based correspondent for ABC News, who was sacked after he refused to go to Iraq. The American television network is appealing against an Employment Tribunal ruling that Gizbert was unfairly dismissed.

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Enquirer website confusion

Posted by Lou Thomas on 24 March 2006 at 16:37
Tags: Journalism, North West Enquirer, Online, Regionals

The North West Enquirer, the major new regional due to laucnh next month (as revealed exclusively by Press Gazette) has hit a bump.

Anyone hoping to access a website for the title at www.northwestenquirer.co.uk may be surprised to find the domain name has been snapped up by Insider Media

Meanwhile the newspaper’s website is www.nw-enquirer.co.uk although it’s a work in progress.

Although quite why a business publisher has interest in taking the potential website name of a new newspaper is hard to fathom, unless they’ve had it for years and the whole thing is a crazy accident.

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More Northcliffe titles on the block?

Posted by Martin Stabe on 15 March 2006 at 12:39
Tags: Aberdeen Press & Journal, Archant, Johnston Press, Kent and Sussex Courier, Newsquest, Northcliffe, Trinity Mirror

Daily Mail and General Trust may be looking to sell more of its Northcliffe regional newspapers, the Daily Telegraph reports.

The Kent and Sussex Courier is reported to be on the block, with possible suitors including Trinity Mirror and Gannett the American parent of the Newsquest group.

After pulling the entire Northcliffe group off the market last month after attracting lower-than-expected bids, DMGT is also rumoured to be flogging the Press & Journal in Aberdeen, stoking the idea that it is looking to break up its regional newspaper group.

Johnston Press, Gannett, Trinity Mirror and Archant are all reported to be interested in the Scottish broadsheet.

Across the Northcliffe group, advertising revenue was down 7 per cent in the five months to February, according to a DMGT trading update released today.

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DMGT digital revenues soar while print ads slump

Posted by Martin Stabe on 15 March 2006 at 12:23
Tags: Associated Newspapers, Daily Mail, Evening Standard, Mail on Sunday, Metro, Northcliffe, Online, Teletext

Increased digital advertising revenue was the silver lining in a trading update released by Daily Mail and General Trust today showing slumping ad revenue at both Northcliffe and Associated Newspapers.

Over the five months to February, digital advertising revenues at DMGT’s regional newspaper group, Northcliffe, soared by 17 per cent compared with the same period last year, while advertising overall slumped by 7 per cent.

At Associated Newspapers, which includes the Daily Mail Mail on Sunday, London’s Evening Standard and Metro, there was a similar pattern. The papers’ display advertising revenues fell by 10 per cent; classified advertising revenues were down 11 per cent — but digital advertising revenue was up 43 per cent. That includes revenue from Associated New Media’s online classified advertising sites Jobsite, Find a Property and the recently-acquired Prime Location.

Bring on Craig Newmark’s tanks.

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