Archive for the ‘Newspaper’ Category

Football Friday nights light up Erie newsrooms

“In Virginia, high school football is a way of life. It’s bigger than Christmas Day.” ~ Sheryl Yoast, Remember The Titans

This fall, replace “In Virginia” with “For Erie media.”

Erie’s newspaper, television and radio stations are attacking tonight’s launch of the high school football season with an unprecedented investment of resources.

District 10 Kickoff 2010

Cover of District 10 Kickoff 2010 published by the Erie Times-News

Actually, the work started months ago, as the Erie Times-News sports and special project divisions joined forces on the 112-page Kickoff magazine. Billed as “packed with information on each team in D-10 and McDowell, the first-of-its-kind publication promises to fulfill every District 10 football junkie’s needs!” Ingeniously, the magazine is being distributed far beyond the newspaper’s normal delivery footprint at Country Fair stores and costs $5.00. There is even a Facebook fan page of the mag.

So that regular subscribers don’t feel left out, the ETN on Thursday published their special high school football preview issue of the weekly Varsity tabloid, with another 48 pages of schedules, rankings and predictions. All of this data is also available on GoErie.com, where they will again provide ongoing scores and commentary Friday nights via their live blog, on the Varsity page of the site.

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ETN joined by PIT papers with no comment policy

A Press and Tower survey of major metro dailies in the Tri-state area shows that of the seven newspaper websites reviewed, four allow comments and just three do not. GoErie.com/Erie Times-News is joined by the websites of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, and Pittsburgh Tribune-Review with a moratorium on reader comments.

However, the newspapers we looked at outside of the Commonwealth of  Pennsylvania all allowed reader comments. The breakdown:

  • Erie: Erie Times-NewsGoErie.com
  • Akron: Akron Beacon JournalOhio.com
    • Comments by registered users
    • Share story tools by AddThis.com
  • Buffalo: Buffalo NewsBuffalonews.com
    • Comments by registered users
    • Story ratings by registered users
    • Share story tools by AddThis.com
  • Cleveland: The Plain DealerCleveland.com
    • Comments by registered users
    • Story recommendations by registered users
    • Custom share story tools
    • Extensive social networking tools that allow you to create a profile with likes, recommendations, etc.
  • Pittsburgh: Pittsburgh Post-GazettePost-gazette.com
    • No comments
    • Custom share story tools
  • Pittsburgh: Pittsburgh Tribune-ReviewPittsburghlive.com
    • No comments
    • Custom share story tools
  • Youngstown: Youngstown VindicatorVindy.com
    • Comments by registered users
    • Share story tools by AddThis.com

Finally, I think its funny that some of the sites don’t include Twitter as a top sharing tool. To me, Facebook and Twitter are the two social networking sites where I’ll find out about a story, as opposed to StumbleUpon or Digg.

Post columnist Dionne visits Erie

Due to a series of unfortunate events, I was not able to attend the concluding lecture at the Global Futures summit conducted by the Jefferson Educational Society last night.

E. J. Dionne

E. J. Dionne

Washington Post and syndicated columnist E.J. Dionne was the speaker on the topic “How Will American Politics Change in the Future?” I wanted the chance to hear Dionne as he came under fire from the right during last year’s campaign, being portrayed as an Obama-apologist.

The Erie Times-News’ David Bruce did make it to the lecture and in his report in Saturday’s paper, he quoted Dionne as making a comparison between the election of President Obama and that of Ronald Reagan some 28 years earlier.

Bruce wrote:

“In each case, the country was ready to move in a new direction,” said Dionne, the featured and final speaker of the inaugural Global Futures Summit at Congregation Brith Shalom, 3207 State St. “In 1980, Reagan stole optimism from the Democratic Party. … You could say he promised ‘Change you can believe in.’”

From the report I’m not sure how much Dionne talked about the political landscape for the future, other than giving warnings to both Democrats and Republicans for the 2010 mid-term elections regarding energizing their bases.

It had to be a little disappointing to the event organizers that only 170 people came out to see a name that appears on TV, radio and the newspapers daily. Perhaps for next year they should shoot for another Post standard-bearer: George Will.

Columbia J-school: Federal funding for local news

Columbia Journalism Review

Columbia Journalism Review

A new report from a professor from the Columbia School of Journalism and the former executive editor of the Washington Post calls for a federal loan program to support the generation of local news. The report, appearing in the Columbia Journalism Review, calls to question whether “independent news reporting is a public good whose diminution requires urgent attention.” To further quote The Reconstruction of American Journalism:

What is under threat is independent reporting that provides information, investigation, analysis, and community knowledge, particularly in the coverage of local affairs.

Howard Kurtz of the Washington Post provides some good analysis of the scholarly report, punctuated by many “green shoots” of entrepreneurship by professional journalists.

Considering the massive layoffs throughout the local media community, would easier access to credit benefit those journalists remaining to continue strong independent reporting?

Times-News: PA Newspaper of the Year

The Erie Times-News is the overall winner of the Newspaper of the Year award by the Pennsylvania Newspaper Association. Officials will be presented with the award at the Association’s annual convention in Hershey in November.

Here’s the full release by the PNA:

PNA announces 2009 G. Richard Dew, Public Service and Newspaper of the Year award winners

The Pennsylvania Newspaper Association is pleased to announce the winners of the 2009 G. Richard Dew Award, the 2009 Public Service Award and the 2009 Newspaper of the Year Award. These awards are presented at the Annual Convention, which this year will be held Nov. 11 to 13 at The Hotel Hershey.

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ETN’s weekend press problems

It’s not a weekend off for the mechanics, technicians, and pressmen at the Erie Times-News.

A breakdown of their press system has led them to produce part of Saturday’s,  Sunday’s and Monday’s newspapers off-site. Here’s their note to readers from Saturday afternoon:

Your Erie Times-News should be delivered at the usual time on Sunday and Monday, but the newspaper will continue to look different for the next two days because it is being printed off-site. Some late sports scores and other information will not appear in the print editions. You can find updated news and sports on GoErie.com.. We appreciate your patience and apologize for any inconvenience this press breakdown has caused.

The plan is for Tuesday’s edition to be produced back at the West 12th Street plant.

ETN’s Breakfast Series: not exactly a Katharine Graham salon

The Washington Post’s publisher, Katharine Weymouth had to wipe off a significant number of figurative egg yolks off her face last month when she cancelled a series of “salon” meetings. They were proposed informal gatherings of reporters, editors, and US Congressmen, along well-heeled private company executives and lobbyists who paid tens of thousands of dollars for the right to join the party. The Post was trying to recreate (while shoring up some profits in the meantime) a bygone era when the hottest invitation inside the beltway was one to the late WP owner Katharine Graham’s home, where the elites would argue politics and policy in a causal off-the-record fashion. Needless to say, the newsroom went in an uproar and the whole deal was nixed.

Well, there will be no high-paying corporate types, or even gourmet fixin’s, but you now have the opportunity to have a informal sit-down with the reporters, editors, photographers and other staff members who bring your daily newspaper to you in a series of breakfast meetings beginning Thursday, from 7:30-8:30 AM. The Erie Times-News is holding these chats as a kind of salon, Erie-style, so that readers can connect with the content creators. First in line is Gerry Weiss, who was doing dirty jobs around Erie before Mike Rowe made it famous nationally. To go, call the paper at 814-870-1824 by end of business Wednesday to reserve your place.

No roast duck, fancy wine, or White House staffers, but you might get coffee and a danish and a chance to learn about what it takes to keep up with the things happening in our town. Meanwhile, the paper builds a more person-to-person connection with readers, allowing for vulnerability while creating loyalty, and building their social network.

And that’s what it takes to survive in today’s media culture.