Posts Tagged ‘GoErie.com’

Three years of Press and Tower

Press and Tower Screen Shot

First Press and Tower Post - Sept. 1, 2008

Three years ago today Press and Tower was born.

Since our humble beginnings on Sept. 1, 2008, we’ve generated 488 posts, received 3,362 approved comments, and almost 160,000 visits to the site, including almost 18,000 different visitors in the past year. Our Facebook page for Erie radio old-timers called “We Rocked Erie in the 20th Century” has over 220 group members from across the country engaged in lively conversation about their days in the Flagship City.

This was a year of celebration and sadness; great improvements and unfortunate setbacks.

We mourned the passing of Frank, Chris, Al, and Bob. Rupolo went to Florida, Nat The Hat to Texas, Cassie to NYC, and Joey to OneCarribeanWeather.com. Even the Jennings rejoined the South.

Sadly, GlobalErie fell off the face of the earth, and we lost 40 skilled workers and about 12 column inches per page when the newspaper outsourced the actual newspaper part of their business south of the border; the Venango County border that is.

But we also gained, especially in the area of a rebounding advertising climate, the embracing of social media and new technology, and some strong investment in the product that the Erie media consumer can benefit from. We now have a fun old-time TV Low Power TV digtial trio, and are getting at least one new FM station, while a couple AM’s simulcast on FM translators now. And the GoErie iPad app is coming.

Don’t forget, as Sean and Kim remind us consistently, we can “Like” them on Facebook or follow them on Twitter!

Let me just say that I “Like!” and appreciate each of you for reading, commenting, encouraging and supporting this effort. I am always open to ideas for improving this special community of consumers and producers and would love your feedback. Thank you for being gracious when my editing gets heavy handed, and for understanding that in the end we all want excellent, responsive, interactive media that improves our community and quality of life. We are all “for Erie.”

That makes this little “two cans and a string” of a media voice worth all of the effort. Thank you…and on to year four!

Poll: did media overhype Irene?

Right after the GoErie.com paywall went up we asked our Press and Tower readers if they would be willing to pay for site access. Close to 75% of respondents, including non-subscribers and partial week delivery subscribers said that they would not be willing to pay even $2.95 for monthly access to the portal. We will see how this changes in a few months.

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Hurricane Irene is history and now the Monday Morning Quarterbacking has commenced. Some in the media, with their defensive thin skins clearly showing, are asking whether there was too much hype around the storm, and will it hurt next time if people don’t heed the warnings about a more ferocious tropical storm.

Can you over-hype a named hurricane in the post-Katrina era?

Did the media overhype its coverage of Hurricane Irene?

  • No...based on the path and intensity they gave appropriate warning (59%, 16 Votes)
  • Yes...it was much ado about little (41%, 11 Votes)
  • I don't know...I'm ambivalent (0%, 0 Votes)

Total Voters: 27

Loading ... Loading ...

ETN presses stop Sunday night

goss Press

Example of Goss press

Barring some last minute second thoughts or major technology glitch, the big Goss presses at West 12th and Sassafras will go silent late Sunday night as the Times Publishing Co. outsources the printing and packaging of the daily newspaper to the Butler Eagle, effective Monday.

If Friday morning’s (8/19) edition is any indication, get ready for stale news on your doorstep or vending machine. The printing arrangement with presses two hours away forces an early deadline in the news room. This really hurts when it comes to sports. Forget about missing west coast scores, the ETN will have a hard time covering any game past 10:30 or 11:00 PM.

Case in point is Thursday night’s Eagles vs. Steelers preseason contest; the battle for Pennsylvania bragging rights. The game was over and the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette had a full story up on their website by 11:14 PM, ten minutes before the late night TV sportscasts. Hours later, when you picked up the Friday morning Erie paper, a scan of the sports section resulted in only this:

Thursday’s Eagles-Steelers game did not finish before press time. For a game report, go to GoErie.com/sports.

Really? Quarter after 11 is past deadline?

Ugh. I know newspapers across the country are in pain, and the Erie paper has been doing better than most through innovative and creative ideas, but this outsourcing of the presses and the consequential diminishing  of the ink-on-paper product is a significant step backwards.

Of course the real tragedy lies in the loss of 40 family sustaining skilled-labor jobs. The irony remains that the Erie Times was created by pressmen involved in a labor dispute with their former employer. Now, at the end of a five-year labor contract with today’s pressmen no renewal was offered. They’ll hit the big red button on the Goss for the final time this weekend then hit the streets.

Yes, indeed, the future is in the digital online streams. We talk about it everyday. But for now, don’t the 52,000 daily paying purchasers of the NEWSPAPER and all those advertisers deserve better than this sad state of affairs?

California dreamings

Just got back from a whirlwind week in mostly southern California with my family. We put on 1100 miles on the rental, visited 6 media markets, read the USA Today and Orange County Register…and are glad to be home. Let me share some media randomness with you based on the trip:

    •  Add KFI/Los Angeles to my Top 10 radio stations in America. They have captured how to make talk radio move quickly and sound current for young audiences. Local bumpers all sounded like we were listening to Z102.3 instead of a sleepy talk station. Breaks were heavily caffeinated: fast news, weather, traffic, getting back into a syndicated show like Rush right at the last second, maximizing local sales opportunities. Exciting to hear, and right on the money with what Randy Michaels is trying to pull off with the new Merlin stations in NY and Chicago
    • Why doesn’t PennDOT offer traffic cams in our District 1? Having those CalTrans cameras all over the local news lead-in to the TODAY show and throughout really help commuters
    • Erie holds it’s own when it comes to smaller market TV news. Fresno news was pretty unfortunate.
    • Not to be mean, but some of the news personalities on LA TV are starting to look like that Bill Hader character on SNL, Herb Welsh, the old news reporter. Got to be tough for a young person to break into mega-market TV these days.

  • Love how the Orange County Register’s website has breakouts by local towns. I was able to find out crime info, latest news, features based on the individual towns were were visiting in the OC. Given the Erie Times-News heritage with the Brown-Thompson community papers of old, I’m surprised that localism hasn’t been built into GoErie since the beginning.
  • Time for Yosemite National Park to get cellular service. My GPS is on my smartphone and only works if it can ping both to the GPS satellites and to the wireless network. No wireless…no GPS, so I was nearly clueless during my 70+ mile trip in the dark leaving the park on terribly-winding roads toward Merced. No radio available either. Considering there are 3 million visitors a year to that beautiful wilderness, certainly they can hide the towers among the Sequoias.
  • When it comes to a comprehensive branding experience, no one holds a candle to Disney.

When I visit large markets anymore, I don’t drool and say “We should totally do this in Erie,” but I look for aspects of excellence that are scalable and sell-able and wonder, “What if?”

Poll: will you pay for GoErie access?

When we last polled our P&T readers, we asked how media-ready you were in the event of a major storm. The highest vote getters were those that had portable radios and smart phones. Few had portable DTV’s that could receive the weather broadcasters forecasts and radar in their basement.

Over the past few days, the GoErie.com paywall has gone into effect. By now regular readers of the site are running into limited access and decisions are being made. What’s yours?

Will you pay for GoErie.com?

  • I will NOT pay for GoErie access (64%, 47 Votes)
  • I am a seven-day a week home delivery subscriber to the Times-News and get free GoErie access (23%, 17 Votes)
  • I am a part-week home delivery subscriber to the Times News but will NOT pay for GoErie access (10%, 7 Votes)
  • I will pay $6.95 a month for GoErie access (3%, 2 Votes)
  • I am a part-week home delivery subscriber to the Times News and will pay $2.95 for GoErie access (0%, 0 Votes)

Total Voters: 73

Loading ... Loading ...

Cheeseman: paywall, iPhone app coming

UPDATED: More details on the paywall for GoErie.com: “The cost for non-newspaper subscribers will be $6.95 per month, and Sunday-only customers and others who subscribe in increments less than the full seven days will be offered a discounted price of $2.95 per month.”

The paper is putting the “whoa!” on GoErie.com.

In a publisher’s column in Sunday’s Erie Times-News, President and Publisher Rosanne Cheeseman dropped the other shoe in her realignment of the Erie area’s largest news operation from a “ink and paper” based outlet to a multi-stream digital enterprise that is fighting to find a model where consumers will help subsidize the work of professional producers.

The first shoe of course is getting the Times Publishing Co. out of the newsprint publishing business. The transition to outsourcing the production of the newsprint version of their content to the Butler Eagle is expected to occur in the next few weeks, along with the loss of 40 jobs. Now the paper has their sights on the thousands of readers who consume it’s product without plunking down the obligatory six bits. Cheeseman explains:

GoErie.com will also soon launch a digital subscription program. Print subscribers will continue to have unlimited access to our website. However, nonsubscribers will be required to pay a fee for extended access to what we consider premium content — notably most of the bylined work of our professional reporters.

She goes on to say that GoErie.com will remain the community’s portal, with breaking news, obits, and blogs still free. If you take the Monday, July 25th morning version of GoErie as an example, on the five featured posts on the image rotator, one was a bylined news story, one a bylined sports story, one a link to a photo gallery (which would be free), and two were internal promos.

In her post Cheeseman announced that an GoErie app for the iPhone and iPad has been submitted for approval by Apple. It will allow the reader to view stories as if published on paper or in a story list, along with layers of video and additional content, including a voice function that will read the paper to you.

Several questions remain, with the biggest being will people who gladly fork over $80 per month for cable TV pay for a digital subscription of $8, $10 or $12 $7 or $3 a month? How will the inevitable loss of eyeballs affect display ad rates at GoErie? If print subscribers get unlimited access to GoErie, then why aren’t they getting automatic GoErie “Insider” subscriptions and the ability to make comments on stories right now (ETN circulation and GoErie are currently totally separate profit centers)?

And what about the aggregators?

Why Lawrence Park FM wants to go to Zuck Park

Ed Palattella has the lead story on the City & Region section of Tuesday’s Erie Times-News about the tower location for the new 92.7 Lawrence Park, owned by First Channel Communications. First Channel’s application was accepted for filing last Thursday, and in the technical section of the application, shows that a 91 meter (298.6 foot) tower is called for in the southwestern corner of Zuck Park, owned by Millcreek Township.

Palattella quotes First Channel principal Rick Rambaldo as to the appropriateness of the site:

“Zuck Park is an excellent location to put a city-grade signal to serve the entire market,” Rambaldo said.

The following map that accompanies the application shows us why:

Lawrence Park 224A Contour Map

The “bow tie” contour of the directional signal will cover the population areas surrounding the city of Erie, provide a 70 dBu signal over the community of license of Lawrence Park, from a tower partially hidden by woods, paying rent to a township where every dollar counts. Meanwhile, as we covered before, because of the directional nature of the license, the antenna farm up on Peach Street won’t work for 92.7.

See the tower location and 60 dBu contour on Google Maps.