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Johnston Press rights issue raises nearly £170m

Posted by Martin Stabe on 24 June 2008 at 08:56
Tags: Media Business, Regional Newspapers

Johnston Press has raised nearly £170 million in its rights issue.

The regional newspaper publisher sold over 311 million new shares at 53p, a figure representing 97.25 per cent of the total number announced on 14 May. Underwriters Deutsche Bank are now seeking buyers for the 8.8m shares that remained at the deadline for subscriptions at 11am yesterday.

Update: Johnston Press said this morning that Deutsche Bank has found subscribers for the remaining shares at 72p per share.

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Telegraph introduces widgets, BBC Sport to follow

Posted by Martin Stabe on 19 June 2008 at 17:34
Tags: Broadcast, National Newspapers, New Media

Telegraph Media Group has today unveiled a series of widgets to allow users to receive Telegraph news and sport content on mobiles, computer desktops, social networking sites and other web pages.

Widgets are small applications that can be embedded into other platforms. The Telegraph’s suite of widgets include tools that push out the Telegraph news, Euro 2008 football stories, and six Telegraph TV offerings. Cricket, Premier League football and business news widgets are slated to be added later this month, the company said in a press release. (more…)

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English-language newspaper in Russia shut down

Posted by Martin Stabe on 19 June 2008 at 10:33
Tags: Journalism

The Exile, a Moscow-based, free English-language newspaper has shut down after it came under scrutiny from a media regulator and investors withdrew support.

The closure of the paper, known for its pranks and criticism of both Russian and western officials and journalists, is is a sign of the homogenisation of Russia’s media, the Wall Street Journal suggests.

(more…)

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Campaign cost put Kelvin MacKenzie off by-election

Posted by Martin Stabe on 19 June 2008 at 10:02
Tags: National Newspapers

Kelvin MacKenzie uses his Sun column today to explain some of reasons that he cut short his plan to stand against David Davis in the upcoming Haltemprice and Howden by-election.

Besides his gaffe about Hull being an “absolute shocker” and some unflattering poll results, the former Sun editor says the major sticking point was the cost of the campaign.

(more…)

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UBM withdraws from Informa merger talks

Posted by Martin Stabe on 18 June 2008 at 08:58
Tags: Magazines

Merger talks between CMPi parent company United Business Media and Lloyd’s List Informa collapsed yesterday after a third party approached Informa.

The Telegraph reports that the new bidder is believed to be private equity firm Providence Equity Partners. The FT suggests Apax and Carlyle as possible partners for a bid with Providence. The Times, similarly, suggests that several other private equity groups are interested in Informa. (more…)

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IHT to publish business section in Indian paper

Posted by Martin Stabe on 17 June 2008 at 08:13
Tags: National Newspapers

The International Herald Tribune is to begin providing a World Business section to the Financial Chronicle, the new Indian business paper published by the Deccan Chronicle Group on Friday, 20 June.

The news follows reports from India that the New York Times Company, which publishes the IHT, will be buying a 5 per cent stake in Deccan.

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South African paper using Reuters’ sematic tags on online archive

Posted by Martin Stabe on 16 June 2008 at 15:55
Tags: New Media

The Mail & Guardian in South Africa is using Reuters’ semantic tagging tool Open Calais to structure its archives back to 1994 as part of a planned online relaunch.

Matthew Buckland, the general manager of Mail & Guardian Online, noted the move on his blog.

“It’s allowed us to group stories by country or city, as well as by people or company names, and serve related data — all automatically. We can also use the Calais data to generate tag clouds for each section of the site,” he wrote.

Open Calais allows online publishers to automatically identify and add tags for the people, places and organisations mentioned in their copy. A new version of the service, along with tools to integrate it into several content management systems, was recently released.

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Trinity Mirror renames Wales news site

Posted by Martin Stabe on 16 June 2008 at 15:32
Tags: New Media, Regional Newspapers

Trinity Mirror’s has today renamed IcWales.co.uk to WalesOnline.co.uk.

The new name for the site — which includes content from the the group’s newspapers in south Wales including the Western Mail, South Wales Echo, and Wales on Sunday — is intended to reflect the company’s ambition to provide the leading site for and about Wales, a Trinity Mirror press release said.

The group, citing Omniture figures, says the site has an audience of over 788,000 unique users per month.

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Newsquest web traffic up to 5.1 million unique users

Posted by Martin Stabe on 16 June 2008 at 13:31
Tags: New Media, Regional Newspapers

Regional newspaper group Newsquest’s network of 164 local websites attracted 5.1 million unique users and 53.7m page impressions in April, in an ABCe audit to be published later this week.

“It’s more than just growing numbers: we have broadened our reach to more local audiences by attracting a younger, more affluent crowd from higher-income households than are typical for newspaper readers,” Newsquest Digital Media managing director Roger Green said in a press release.

The figure is up from its May 2007 ABCe figure of 4.5 million unique users and 49 million page impressions. In February, Newsquest’s parent company Gannett said the UK network of sites had attracted 4.8 million monthly unique users in 2007.

Without indicating any specifics, Green also indicated that the group plans to unveil enhancements to the sites this summer which will increase interaction in print, online and mobile.

One of Newsquest’s titles, the Lancashire Telegraph, has been sending text-message breaking news alerts to mobile phones. Last wee, the paper began charging 10-12p per text message for the TLalerts service, which was initially free. The paper said the “seer popularity” of the SMS service had made the charge necessary.

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Regional Press Awards: Videos from the ceremony

Posted by Martin Stabe on 16 June 2008 at 10:30
Tags: Journalism, Regional Newspapers

The emotional standing ovation journalists gave to Huddersfield Examiner journalist Adrian Sudbury when he was announced the winner of the new Multimedia Journalist of the Year category at the Regional Press Awards is among the videos from Friday’s ceremony now available on the Regional Press Awards website.

Sudbury, who has terminal cancer and has been campaigning for sixth-from students to receive a compulsory lesson about donating organs, blood and bone-marrow, could not be at the ceremony at the Lancaster Hotel Hotel on Friday afternoon and sent a video message instead. His parents collected the award on his behalf.

Writing on Baldy’s Blog, the site he has been running to chronicle his battle against the illness for th past two years, Sudbury later dedicated the award to his sister.

The full list of winners can be found on the Press Gazette website.

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Minister drops libel case against Dewsbury Press

Posted by Martin Stabe on 28 May 2008 at 14:25
Tags: Law, Regional Newspapers

International Development Minister Shahid Malik has dropped his libel case against The Press in Dewsbury following an out-of court settlement, the Dewsbury Reporter notes.

Details of the settlement were not disclosed.

The MP had sued the publisher of the Press, its former editor Danny Lockwood, and a local councillor over a letter published in the paper during the 2006 election.

A jury failed to reach a verdict following a two-week trial late last year, and Lockwood was set to defend himself in a retrial. Costs of the first trial are thought to have been upwards of £300,000.

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Belgian newspapers seek copyright damages from Google

Posted by Martin Stabe on 28 May 2008 at 08:37
Tags: National Newspapers, Online, Regional Newspapers

Newspapers in Belgium are seeking €49 million in damages from Google in a copyright case, the Guardian reports today.

Copiepress, an organsiation that represents the copyright interests of the country’s French- and German-language press is seeking the damages, equivalent to £39 million, over the use of news stories in Google News since 2001 and has summoned the search giant to a court hearing in September.

The same organsiation won a copyright lawsuit against Google News last year (PDF of the decision). Google says it is still appealing that case.

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Freedom of Information bill for Isle of Man

Posted by Martin Stabe on 27 May 2008 at 14:29
Tags: Freedom of Information, Regional Newspapers

The Isle of Man could get its own Freedom of Information Act.

The chief minister, Tony Brown, told the island’s parliament, the Tynwald, that an Access to Information bill was being drafted and would be introduced to its lower house, the House of Keys, in as part of the 2008-09 legislative programme.

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Northern and Shell profits up despite losses at OK! in US

Posted by Martin Stabe on 27 May 2008 at 13:47
Tags: Magazines, National Newspapers

Pre-tax profits at Northern & Shell have ballooned from £5.16m to £54.9m, the Financial Times is reporting today.

The company owned by Richard Desmond publishes the Express and Star newspaper titles and celebrity magazine OK! in addition to its adult pay-TV services and publications. The group’s full-year figures are filed with Companies House today. They show turnover up 5.3 per cent at £485m, the FT reports. The company’s UK publishing arm, largely consisting of the Express Newspapers titles, increased its operating profits 8.2 per cent to £58.8m.

The increased profits came in spite of mounting losses at the US edition of OK, which were largely offset by the sale of the group’s share in the Australian version of the title. The figures were helped by Desmond taking a £40 million cut in his own pay and pension contributions.

The company, however, approve the purchase of a £17 million corporate jet, which the company said was necessary because of its growing international operations.

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Regional publishers renew criticism of BBC local web plans

Posted by Martin Stabe on 27 May 2008 at 13:02
Tags: Broadcast, Regional Newspapers

Regional newspapers have criticised the version of BBC plans to roll out 60 regional news websites.

Last week, the BBC revealed plans to spend £68 million over five years, in a local video news scheme that could create 300 jobs and put 150 new BBC cameras in the field. The plans are set to be given to the BBC Trust this week ahead of the first public consultations next month.

David Holdsworth, deputy controller of BBC English regions, told Press Gazette last week that the proposed local sites would link extensively to local press news stories, and that the corporation would establish a fund to buy video content from regional press publishers.

But speaking to Journalism.co.uk, both Ian Davies of Archant and the Newspaper Society’s Santha Rasaiah, criticised the plans, reiterating the regional press’ concerns that the BBC;s licence-fee funded plan would undermine their efforts to create local video news on a commercial basis.

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MP: Publishing expenses receipts could be ‘grubby and salacious’

Posted by Martin Stabe on 23 May 2008 at 12:36
Tags: Freedom of Information, National Newspapers, Regional Newspapers

Conservative MP David MacLean, who last year sponsored a controversial private member’s bill to exempt Parliament from the Freedom of Information Act, is interviewed today in the Cumberland News.

Asked whether MPs’ shouldn’t be more accountable to the electorate about how they spend their allowances, MacLean said: “Yes, but not to that extent. It becomes grubby and salacious. People do have a right to know ‘Did I use taxpayers’ money improperly?’ but getting down to individual receipt items to see where you bought your pillowcases is just a bit silly. If we publish whether we bought pizza or fish and chips it won’t improve our standing.”

Maclean’s comments come on the day when receipts for 14 past and present MPs expenses are expected to be published following a High Court victory by three journalists who had requested them under the Freedom of Information Act.

According to the Telegraph, the Commons members Estimate Committee has also agreed to publish about 1 million receipts covering claims from all 646 MPs.

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Exhibition of Stoke Sentinel photographs set to open in June

Posted by Martin Stabe on 23 May 2008 at 10:19
Tags: Photography, Regional Newspapers

An exhibition of more than 80 years of pictures by photographers at The Sentinel, Stoke, is is to be opened next month.

The Potteries Museum and Art Gallery in Stoke-on-Trent will display the photographs for three months, beginning on 27 June.

The exhibition, entitled ‘Dear Happy Ghosts’, will be opened by former Guardian Picture Editor Eamonn McCabe. It will feature 120 large photographs and 100 smaller images taken by Sentinel photojournalists over eight decades.

Sentinel Picture Editor Martin Elliott, selected the images along with long-serving photographer Steve Bould.

Elliott said: “This is an exciting opportunity for the public to view some of the archetypical images which have helped convey The Sentinel’s coverage of events which have shaped the history of the Potteries over the last 80 or so years.

“It is a socio-documentary covering not only international events such as the affects of war, but a record of the everyday lives of the men and women of the area in the true tradition of regional photojournalism.”

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Police PR spending up 13 per cent, FOI survey reveals

Posted by Martin Stabe on 23 May 2008 at 09:45
Tags: Broadcast, Freedom of Information, Journalism, Law, Magazines, National Newspapers, New Media, PR, Regional Newspapers

Police forces are spending nearly £40 million a year on public relations, a figure that has gone up 13 per cent over the past two years.

The figures where compiled by using Freedom of Information Act requests to all police forces in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. Four forces failed to reply.

Heather Brooke, one of the journalists who last week won the high court vicotry forcing Parliament to hand over details of MPs’ expenses, supervised the three-month investigation.

In analysis piece run with the report, she writes: “Many forces now see it as their business not just to cut crime but to manage the public’s perception of crime. This is wrong. The police are paid to do one job: enforce the law. They have no business being in the PR racket.”

The Times notes concerns that as part of their PR efforts, some police forces are withholding information about serious crime in an effort to manipulate the news agenda.

Once of the police forces mentioned in the Times report is Northumbria Police, which has increased its PR spend by 55 per cent in two years. Freelance journalist Nigel Green has lodged an official complaint after finding that the force had failed to release details of many crimes to the media.

Update: A complete spreadsheet of the police spending figures is available on the website of freelance James Ball, who wrote the story (and who is a a frequent contributor to Press Gazette).

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Latest Trinity Mirror relaunch includes hyperlocal community feature

Posted by Martin Stabe on 22 May 2008 at 17:59
Tags: New Media, Regional Newspapers

The latest Trinity Mirror website relaunch is the Hounslow Chronicle in west London.

The new site was launched this week along with a redesigned masthead for the Middlesex Chronicle series newspapers, during a visit by the group’s chief executive Sly Bailey.

The site, which is being run by a new dedicated web editor, Lucy Proctor, includes the hyperlocal community blog feature pioneered by the Evening Gazette in Teesside. The feature includes local sites for Hounslow, Feltham, Isleworth and Brentford, and the publication says it intends to use the sites to reverse publish stories supplied by local bloggers back into print products.

The site launched as the Middlesex Chronicle series celebrated 150 years serving local communities. Last week, the Chronicle appeared for the first time in many years with three dedicated editions for Hounslow & Heston, Feltham, Bedfont & Hanworth and Brentford & Isleworth.

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Are journalists today molly-coddled?

Posted by Martin Stabe on 22 May 2008 at 15:50
Tags: Broadcast, Journalism, Magazines, National Newspapers, New Media, Regional Newspapers

Paul Callan of the Daily Express was not impressed with a short item in the Knowledge section of last week’s Press Gazette magazine that highlighted the work of Mark Brayne and the Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma, which helps journalists who have experienced addiction, depression, or even post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) as a result of stories they have covered.

Here’s the letter he sent in and which is published in this week’s magazine:

Would that some of the great war correspondents of Fleet Street – men like James Cameron, Noel Barber, Rene McColl, Alan Moorehead and the BBC’s Wynford Vaughan-Thomas – had been around to read Rebecca Hardy’s astonishing feature on dealing with trauma “suffered” by reporters.

Doubtless, they would have laughed all the way to El Vino at this latest example of molly-coddling. According to Ms Hardy and Mark Brayne, an “ex-foreign correspondent”-turned-psychotherapist, reporters at the hard end can suffer “emotional wounding” and trauma.

The answer to that is simple: If they do, they are not doing their job properly and the newsdesk should not have assigned them in the first place. Reporters on tough assignments – anything from war zones and toddlers’ funerals to horrendous inquests and “death knocks” – should possess a dispassionate ability to handle the work. If not, they can ask to work on the diary, write soft features or become royal correspondent. No chance of trauma in any of those.

Either I am particularly insensitive or just (I hope) a good professional, but in a 40-year-plus Fleet Street career, I have never suffered from “emotional wounding”, trauma, depression, or even bed wetting, after covering a particularly tough story. Like many colleagues over the years, I just got on with the job (however unspeakable the details) wrote it, sent it over – and then switched off, went to the pub, or returned home and slept easily.

For the record, I have covered some real stomach-churners, particularly in Northern Ireland where I frequently saw what a bomb does to the human body. But I, and all the others covering such horrors, simply observed and then filed our copy. It was, of course, extremely tragic. But we would not have been covering the story properly and, I stress again, professionally, if we allowed our personal feelings to intrude.

Quite frankly, any shakiness experienced by what we saw was soon soothed by a few large whiskies.

And I can easily imagine the reaction of some of my old news editors – Arthur Brennard and Bob McWilliams on the Sunday Express, Ronnie Hyde of the Evening Standard, and Dan Ferrari and Al Shillum on The Daily Mirror – if I had returned from a tough job and whinged about suffering from trauma. They would, quite rightly, have told me where to stick my trauma.

Journalism is damaged by the likes of Ms Hardy and Mr Brayne with their softly softly, unprotected approach to what should, by its very nature, be strong reporting. Good reporters are not inhuman, but they should be in charge of their own emotions – and know when to switch off.

Incidentally, the only time I ever saw a fellow hack traumatised was when my old friend, John Edwards of the Daily Mail, lost a blank bill when it was blown out his hand by a stiff breeze. Oh dear – talk about “emotional wounding”!

Paul Callan
Daily Express

Brayne, a former correspondent with the BBC and Reuters, is probably very familiar with this point of view.

His Master’s thesis in transpersonal psychotherapy, which was written in 2000 and is available online (PDF), begins with the observation that “the wider emotional culture within English-language journalism is one of what might be termed macho self-sufficiency.”

Unlike other professions, journalism had not yet abandoned the taboo of talking about emotional distress, he noted before mentioning research that had found cases of “reporters who have covered gruesome stories fear that admitting to any mental distress may be viewed as weakness”. He goes on to write that there is “a deep-seated scepticism among most in the profession towards psychotherapy and counselling”.

He goes on to argue that “a journalist who is not self-aware risks misrepresenting what he or she observes”.

So what is it? “Macho self-sufficiency” or “a dispassionate ability to handle the work”? Molly-coddling or self-aware emotional consciousness?

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