AAN News

Pasadena Weekly Contributor Co-Authors Humor Book

The satirical advice book that Weekly writer Carl Kozlowski wrote with Chicago-based standup comic Tim Joyce was actually originally published in August 2001. Back then, it was titled Life: The Final Frontier, and it was gaining steam as the authors made the press rounds to promote it, according to Kozlowski. Then came 9/11, and "book companies panicked and dumped on writers like us," he tells AAN News. The duo stuck with it, though, determined to have their book be a success. They wrote about 80 new pages of material on life amidst the war on terror and created a new version of the book, Seize the Day Job! The Humor Book Al Qaeda Kept You From Reading, which was released this May. For more, visit Kozlowski's website.
AAN News  |  09-24-2008  1:24 pm  |  Industry News

Dallas Morning News' Free Youth Tabloid Is Going Weeklynew

"Starting Oct. 30, Quick will become focused exclusively on entertainment and nightlife rather than its current offering of news summaries and entertainment-related stories," the Morning News reports. "It also will become a weekly appearing Thursdays, rather than publishing five days a week."
Dallas Morning News  |  09-24-2008  12:32 pm  |  Industry News

Former Boston Phoenix Editor Diesnew

P.J. Corkery, who was editor of the Phoenix in the early 1970s, died Saturday at Stanford Hospital in California after fighting non-Hodgkins lymphoma for two years, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. He was 61. After the Phoenix, Corkery went on to have a long and fruitful journalism career -- he was a columnist for the San Francisco Examiner, the author of the best-selling Carson: The Unauthorized Biography, and wrote for numerous newspapers and magazines. He also served as a judge for 2001's AltWeekly Awards.
San Francisco Chronicle  |  09-24-2008  12:18 pm  |  Industry News

Ad Spending Falls At Steepest Rate Since 2001new

Spending across the major U.S. media fell 3.7 percent during the second quarter of 2008, and 1.6 percent during the first half of the year, according to new data released this morning by ad tracking service TNS Media Intelligence. Media Daily News reports the decline, the steepest since 2001, reflects the worsening of the U.S. economy, and a slackening of demand from major marketers for most major media. TNS senior vice president for research Jon Swallen notes that spending in 2008's second half is likely to be "bolstered by the Summer Olympics and political elections," but warns that "sustained improvement will most likely depend on a turnaround in consumer spending that rejuvenates corporate profits and encourages marketers to expand their advertising efforts." The newspaper sector was the hardest hit, with total newspaper ad spending down 7.4 percent year-over-year, and local newspapers down 7.1 percent.
Media Daily News  |  09-24-2008  8:47 am  |  Industry News

Google's G1 Takes On iPhone and Mobile Webnew

Online Media Daily  |  09-24-2008  8:48 am  |  Industry News

Washington City Paper Has a 'New-Found Promotional Intensity'new

That's according to managing editor Andrew Beaujon, who notes that the paper recently produced new promotional magnets and pens, on top of making promo hats earlier in the month. "As you may have read, we are facing budget cuts," Beaujon writes. "So I guess I'm wondering whether the hats are a tactic to comfort or maybe confuse us -- perhaps if our heads are warm, we may not worry so much about our newsroom possibly going kablooey?"
Washington City Paper  |  09-23-2008  8:37 am  |  Industry News

Gambit Weekly Food Columnist Pens Katrina Memoir

Ian McNulty's A Season of Night: New Orleans Life After Katrina "certainly ranks as one of the better Katrina memoirs," according to John Sledge, a columnist for the Alabama daily Press-Register. "McNulty's approach is defiantly, if quietly, personal," notes Gambit Weekly's Caroline Goyette. "It's this tight focus, combined with the author's fine eye for detail and his honest, introspective narration, that gives the book its considerable power."
AAN News  |  09-22-2008  12:55 pm  |  Industry News

iRex Technologies Releases a New E-Reader Modelnew

The New York Times  |  09-22-2008  2:10 pm  |  Industry News

Media Owners Brace for Tougher '09new

Advertising Age  |  09-22-2008  11:26 am  |  Industry News

Convicted Teen Freed After Independent Weekly Investigation

As a result of an Independent Weekly investigation, a Durham County Superior Court Judge dismissed all charges today against Erick Daniels, who was falsely convicted of robbery in 2001, when he was 15. The May 2007 story by Mosi Secret, "Stolen Youth," which won the the Casey Medal for Meritorious Journalism, detailed abundant evidence to to support Daniels' claims of innocence, and revealed the contradictions and problems in the case to constitute reasonable doubt. Daniels, who has served seven years in prison, is due to be released this afternoon. (FULL STORY)
Independent Weekly Press Release  |  09-19-2008  12:59 pm  |  Industry News  |  Comments (1)

New Tom Tomorrow Book is Out

The cartoonist behind "This Modern World" says on his blog that his new compilation, The Future's So Bright I Can't Bear to Look, is now in stock at Amazon.com. The book, which he calls "a cartoon chronicle of the end of the Bush era," is officially set for release Sept. 29 by Nation Books.
AAN News  |  09-19-2008  8:24 am  |  Industry News

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