AAN News
Creative Loafing (Sarasota) Debuts Weekly Radio Shownew
Starting tomorrow, the paper will have a show every Thursday on WSRQ-AM. Editors will take to the air to talk about what's in the current issue of the paper and preview upcoming events and stories.
Creative Loafing (Sarasota) |
03-04-2009 8:42 am |
Industry News
Two Alt-Weekly Writers Receive NEA Fellowshipsnew
Two freelancers "affiliated" with AAN members are among the 23 journalists selected to participate in the fifth National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) Arts Journalism Institute in Theater and Musical Theater at the USC Annenberg School for Communication. LEO Weekly's Rebecca Haithcoat and Washington City Paper's Glen Weldon will participate in the 10-day program this August.
USC Annenberg School for Communication |
03-04-2009 8:24 am |
Honors & Achievements
How Anthony Bourdain Almost Launched His Career in an Alt-Weeklynew

At an event in Santa Barbara last week, the host of the Travel Channel program No Reservations touched on his early brush with journalism in New York City. Bourdain said that the first piece he ever sold was to the New York Press, but it was never published. "Week after week after week I kept getting bumped," he said. "And in some moment of drunken hubris I called up [the Press] and was like, 'Fuck you man! I'm pulling the article. I'm going to the New Yorker.'" The New Yorker ran the piece, and as the Santa Barbara Independent puts it, "from there, it was a quick hop to best seller list status and worldwide fame."
Santa Barbara Independent |
03-03-2009 9:35 am |
Industry News
Matt Groening's Comic Dropped by L.A. Weeklynew

The Simpsons creator and longtime alt-weekly cartoonist tells CNN that, after 22 years, "Life in Hell" is being dropped by its flagship paper. The cut is part of Village Voice Media's suspension of all syndicated cartoons. Groening hints he's thinking of discontinuing the cartoon. "I'm still in a bunch of other papers, so I may continue to do my strip," he says, "but it doesn't look good."
CNN |
03-03-2009 8:52 am |
Industry News
Research Firm: Smartphones To Be Mainstream By 2013new
Online Media Daily |
03-03-2009 8:53 am |
Industry News
Copyright Holders Challenge Sites That Excerpt Contentnew
Some media executives are growing concerned that web curators like the Huffington Post are taking away potential readers and profiting from content paid for by others. The New York Times reports that lawsuits in this area are on the rise, and interested parties say the government hasn't clearly delineated how copyright law applies. "New modes of creation, reuse, mixing and mash-ups made possible by digital technologies and the internet have made it even more clear that Congress's attempt to define fair use is woefully inadequate," the director of the Citizen Media Law Project tells the Times.
The New York Times |
03-02-2009 10:26 am |
Industry News
Despite Downturn, Local News Sites Are Doing OKnew
David Westphal checks in with eight local news websites across the country to see how they're doing financially. "So far they're hanging tough. Business hasn't fallen much, if at all, and most are instituting expansion plans," he writes. "If they're a barometer, community news sites have some resiliency to them."
Online Journalism Review |
03-02-2009 10:00 am |
Industry News
Salt Lake City Weekly Editor Departsnew
Holly Mullen left on Wednesday after nearly two years at the alt-weekly, the Salt Lake Tribune reports. Neither Mullen nor publisher Jim Rizzi would disclose the reason for Mullen's departure, which she described as a "mutual decision to part ways." Rizzi says Mullen has been replaced by Jerre Wroble, who joined the paper as a copy editor in 2002 and has been managing editor since April 2005.
The Salt Lake Tribune |
02-27-2009 9:23 am |
Industry News
Isthmus Editor's 'Jeopardy!' Run Ends on Second Daynew

Kenneth Burns, the arts and entertainment editor of the Madison, Wisc., alt-weekly, finished second on yesterday's episode of the syndicated quiz show and will not return today. On Monday, Burns took home $21,600 by coming in first place.
Isthmus |
02-25-2009 4:32 pm |
Honors & Achievements
Prediction: Mobile Ad Revenues To Hit $3.1 Billion By 2013new
According to the Kelsey Group, revenues from mobile advertising will jump to $3.1 billion in five years. Currently, mobile advertising sits at $160 million in 2008. The group also says expected revenues from local search will increase more than 130 percent per year to $1.3 billion by 2013.
Media Daily News |
02-25-2009 10:59 am |
Industry News
Isthmus Editor Wins on First Day of 'Jeopardy!'new

On Monday's episode of Jeopardy!, Isthmus arts and entertainment editor Kenneth Burns finished in first place with $21,600. He will take on two new challengers on the syndicated game show tonight. Burns tells 77 Square that his episodes were taped in California in January -- in fact, he happened to have a taping on the day Barack Obama was inaugurated. "I remember at about noon, (a Jeopardy! staffer) looked at her watch and said, 'Oh, we have a new president,'" Burns says. "It was a tense group of people, as you can imagine, but that was a tension breaker."
Isthmus |
02-24-2009 3:56 pm |
Honors & Achievements
City Pages Will Run Daily Webcast from Local Radio Legendnew
Last week, City Pages announced that it was bringing longtime local radio host TD Mischke on to host a webcast streaming live on its website for two hours every weekday. Along with the daily web broadcast, Mischke -- who brought his own advertisers into the deal -- will screen original videos on citypages.com and publish a weekly column in the paper. MinnPost's David Brauer says the deal "show[s] how old and new media can be woven together."
City Pages |
02-24-2009 1:16 pm |
Industry News
Willamette Week Critic Wins New York Times Oscar Ballotingnew
Aaron Mesh guessed correctly the winners in 22 of the 24 Academy Award categories, missing only on best foreign-language film and original score. That put him ahead of "tens of thousands" of other people and made him the winner of the Times' interactive Oscar prediction ballot.
Willamette Week | The New York Times |
02-24-2009 9:44 am |
Honors & Achievements
Former Washington City Paper Music Critic Diesnew

Rickey Wright passed away on Feb. 19 in Seattle after suffering from a series of small strokes. "He was a save-your-ass kind of writer," recalls former City Paper arts editor Glenn Dixon. "If someone didn't come through, and there were constantly people who didn't come through, Rickey would do the job. He'd write it well. He'd get it in on time -- always. He was never without ideas and he could cover any kind of music. I can't tell you how rare that is."
Washington City Paper |
02-24-2009 9:34 am |
Industry News
AAN's Executive Director Defends Ad-Only Revenue Modelnew
In a recent TIME cover story on the crisis facing journalism, former CNN CEO Walter Isaacson argued that newspapers that relied only on advertising for revenue were somehow more beholden to advertisers than readers. "It is telling that on the subject of the advertising-only revenue model, which Isaacson says is 'completely beholden' to advertisers, he turns to the opinions of Henry Luce, who has been dead for more than 40 years," Richard Karpel writes in a letter to the editor. He goes on to say that AAN's members "have generally written more critically of business -- and sometimes their own clients -- than most paid publications."
TIME |
02-23-2009 1:50 pm |
Industry News