AAN News

Alt-Weekly Explains Why it Held Photos ... Then Publishes Them Allnew

As we reported last week, the California Supreme Court squelched the Santa Barbara Independent's last legal hope in a long fight over turning over some unpublished crime scene photographs. With the court declining to hear an appeal, the paper and staff photographer Paul Wellman faced criminal punishment -- including possible jail time -- if they continued to hold the photos. So the Independent, rather than give the photos to the district attorney, decided to publish all 334 of them on its website this week. "We did make a point of dragging this case out to the bitter end," explains news editor Nick Welsh. "This was in part inspired by the assault on the media that's been taking place for the past eight years, and the utter contempt for the public's right to know -- anything -- displayed by the Bush Administration."
Santa Barbara Independent  |  03-20-2008  8:46 am  |  Legal News

State of the News Media: Mixed Forecast for Alt-Weekliesnew

The annual report issued by the Project for Excellence in Journalism finds the alt-weekly industry still struggling with an aging readership, stalled circulation, and increased competition, especially online. However, the report notes that the overall reader migration from print to web might eventually benefit alt-weeklies, since online is "a platform well suited for a sector that specializes in niche, intensely local content." Also noted: small and mid-market papers are seeing the most growth in revenue; and alt-weekly readers are "perfect" media users, with "a tendency to be avid consumers of other media, more so than the public overall."
The Project for Excellence in Journalism  |  03-18-2008  11:50 am  |  Industry News

Federal Court Says Craigslist Isn't Subject to Fair Housing Lawsnew

A federal appeals court ruled Friday that Craigslist should not be held liable for discriminatory housing ads posted on the site, the Associated Press reports. The decision upholds a Nov. 2006 ruling by the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division, which ruled that Craigslist serves as an intermediary party, not a publisher, and that the federal Communications Decency Act protects sites that allow users to post unedited messages and communicate freely in forums.
The Associated Press via the San Francisco Chronicle  |  03-18-2008  9:12 am  |  Legal News

AOL to Buy Bebo, the No. 3 Social Networking Sitenew

The New York Times  |  03-14-2008  9:01 am  |  Industry News

How to Overcome the Stigma of In-Text Adsnew

MediaPost's Kory Kredit recently did an informal survey to gauge internet users' and publishers' attitudes about in-text advertising, and reports, not surprisingly, that "it didn't take long to discover that there was a predominantly negative stigma." According to Kredit, the primary reason was "the invasiveness of in-text ad technology. More specifically, they 'hate' the fact that the ad automatically launches on a mouse-over (when their cursor moves over a highlighted word)." Kredit suggests two simple solutions to work towards reversing the negative attitude: change from mouse-over activation to click activation and provide contextually relevant content in the in-text window.
MediaPost's Online Publishing Insider  |  03-13-2008  10:29 am  |  Industry News

Santa Fe Reporter Launches New Muckraker's Guide Websitenew

In honor of Sunshine Week, which is March 16-22 this year, the Reporter has launched "version 2.0" of MuckrakersGuide.com, "a toolshed of links and resources for digging up public records." The website began with a January cover story by Dave Maass and now features more than 200 links to databases and search engines that will help citizen watchdogs. The Reporter plans to continue growing the site, and welcomes all questions and additional links.
Santa Fe Reporter  |  03-12-2008  12:36 pm  |  Industry News

AAN Hires New Director of Sales and Marketing

Rick Mundy has joined the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies as director of sales and marketing. He has a more than a decade of experience in newspapers, in sales, marketing, and publishing at various community newspapers, and also as federation manager at the Newspaper Association of America. Mundy's immediate focus will be on revitalizing the AAN CAN classified program. His first day on staff was March 4. (FULL STORY)
AAN  |  03-12-2008  8:56 am  |  Association News

More on the Bay Guardian/VVM Verdict

"There's more to the Bay Guardian-VVM fight than ill will and purple prose," writes Boston Phoenix media reporter Adam Reilly. "The two sides have predictably divergent takes on the merits of the outcome. But they agree that its legal ramifications go far beyond the Bay Area and the alt-weekly universe." Guardian publisher and editor Bruce Brugmann tells the Phoenix that the suit sets an example for small businesses everywhere. "Everyone can use our suit as a model and template for any big chain that's coming in and trying to predatory-price them," he says. But SF Weekly attorney Jim Wagstaffe thinks that if the judge grants the Guardian's request for an injunction for the Weekly to stop all below-cost sales as the case winds its way through the courts, "the result here could dramatically harm consumers. If every one of [a publication's] ad sales is scrutinized to make sure it's not, quote-unquote, too low, then what'll happen is, publications will raise their prices to avoid getting sued." The Guardian notes that interest will accrue on the judgment at a rate of 10 percent a year. "That means the Weekly and VVM will be paying $4,000 a day in interest for as long as they seek to dispute and appeal the jury decision," the Guardian reports.
Boston Phoenix | San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  03-12-2008  8:35 am  |  Industry News

IAB Makes Headway In Online Video Industry Standardsnew

Late last year, the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) put together a Digital Video Committee to try to "establish industry standards so agencies could compare apples to apples on a network by network basis," MediaPost reports. The committee presented findings from its first white paper last month in New York, and made the initial steps of defining some key terms and creating two working groups to further study ad format standards and core metrics. MediaPost reports that 120 companies are involved with the committee.
MediaPost  |  03-11-2008  11:08 am  |  Industry News

Traditional Media Lag Far Behind Web Companies in Data Collectionnew

The New York Times had the research firm comScore conduct an analysis of the amount of consumer data that is transmitted to internet companies, and finds magazine and newspaper publishers comparatively collect very little, making them "increasingly at a disadvantage when they compete for ad dollars" online. "Some advertising executives say media companies will have little choice but to outsource their ad sales to companies like Microsoft and Yahoo to benefit from their data," the Times reports.
The New York Times  |  03-10-2008  12:32 pm  |  Industry News

Alt-Weeklies Win Handful of South Carolina Press Awardsnew

The South Carolina Press Association announced the winners of its 2007 news excellence competition Friday, and two AAN members were among the papers that were honored. Columbia Free Times finished first in three categories, including Mixed Media Illustration in the competition division open to all papers. In the weeklies division, Free Times swept the Illustrations category, placing first, second, and third; and took home a first-place award in Sports Column Writing. It also took home one additional second-place and one third-place award. The Charleston City Paper placed first in two categories -- Best Beat Reporting and General News Photo. City Paper also won one second-place and one third-place award.
The Associated Press via the Star-News  |  03-10-2008  8:57 am  |  Honors & Achievements

Metro Newspapers & Boulevards Launch Virtual Valley Network

Metro and Boulevards are joining forces with a Bay Area NBC affiliate, two leading local citizen journalism sites, and the news aggregator Topix to create "a wide-ranging community-based news initiative ... that will span print, web, citizen journalism and broadcasting." Stories from Metro will be available for the broadcast partners to use, and stories from the citizen journalism sites and the TV network will be excerpted in a new section called "Mashup!" in Metro's print edition. "We are concerned about the consolidation, layoffs and disinvestment in local publishing and want to make sure that communities here are well covered," Dan Pulcrano, executive editor of Metro and CEO of Boulevards, says in a statement. "We will be expanding our news coverage and adding resources." (FULL STORY)
Boulevards Press Release  |  03-07-2008  8:34 am  |  Press Releases

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