Posts Tagged ‘Washington Post’

Erie winter chronicled in Wash Post

They are not your typical Chamber of Commerce photos, but the typical land and lake-scape of an Erie, PA winter intrigued a Washington Post travel writer so much that she came to town twice in 2011 and wrote a photo-laden feature that landed in Sunday’s Post.

Robin Soslow, the Impulsive Traveler, ventured to Erie to experience the ice dunes of Presque Isle State Park last January (a more typical winter than what we are having), and says

And the adjacent town of Erie is so rich in man-made spectacles that I made a second visit last month.

Now that’s something the Chamber can crow about. Read her quite flattering portrayal of our town here.

Poll: more TV spectrum for wireless broadband?

A couple weeks ago the Erie Times-News and P&T’s comments pages were flooded with angry readers responding to sports writer John Dudley’s column taking to task Indianapolis Colts star and Erie native Bob Sanders over his lack of “media savvy.” When we asked if you agreed or not with Dudley in a Press and Tower poll, just over half said “No.” However, a strong minority noted that Dudley at least made some good points in his calling out of Sanders.

Last week a huge announcement out of Washington: the Federal Communications Commission rolled out their National Broadband Plan. You might remember that Chairman Julius Genachowski was in Wattsburg along with Vice President Biden back in July touting the efforts to reach out to rural and poor areas of the country to bring broadband Internet to every home. One of the goals embedded in the plan is  100 mbps download speed and 50 mbps of upload speed for 100 million households by 2020.

The FCC says to make that happen they will need much more wireless spectrum. They have unabashedly targeted broadcast television for 120 MHz of that spectrum. You might recall that the TV industry gave up channels 52+ when the industry converted from analog to digital. Now the FCC is asking for at least channels 46-51, and may require stations to begin sharing 6 Mhz channels. I’m working on a story regarding any local impact.

On the other side, the proliferation of smartphones means that a spectrum crisis is looming unless something is done. What do you think?

Should broadcasters be required to give up television spectrum for the National Broadband Plan?

  • Yes: the future of wireless connectivity depends on it (35%, 12 Votes)
  • No: broadcasters have suffered enough with the DTV conversion and the economy (35%, 12 Votes)
  • I don't know/I don't care (30%, 10 Votes)

Total Voters: 34

Loading ... Loading ...

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?

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.

The Feed for the Weekend of Feb. 21st & 22nd

Editor’s Note: don’t forget that you can always share your insights on any topic of media in Erie and elsewhere on our open comment forum, Deep Background.

  • Kanzius’s passing noted world wide: The news of the death of Erie broadcaster and cancer-fighting inventor John Kanzius has been reported around the world, including on Facebook. Here in Erie, news organizations are covering both the immediate angle of the reaction to his passing and the memorial services, but also the long-term impact of Kanzius’s death on the ongoing research and potential local economic impact of the possible cancer-killing device he invented. The latest on the viewing and funeral can be found on GoErie.com.
  • (more…)