AAN News
Google Ends Print Ads Programnew
Google |
01-21-2009 9:08 am |
Industry News
AAN Office Closed for MLK Day and Inauguration
AAN headquarters will be closed Monday and Tuesday in observance of the Federal holidays.
AAN |
01-19-2009 8:16 am |
Association News
Tulsa's Daily Sues the City's Alt-Weeklynew
The Tulsa World sued AAN member Urban Tulsa Weekly and columnist Michael Bates for libel yesterday, citing what it says was Bates' false claim that the World misled advertisers about the newspaper's circulation. In a Jan. 15 column, Bates alleged that a 2006 report by the Audit Bureau of Circulation "suggests the World was inflating its circulation by as much as 20 percent." Editor and publisher Keith Skrzypczak tells AAN News that the Weekly hasn't seen the suit yet. "We understand a lawsuit was filed yesterday afternoon, but as of right now, we have not seen a copy of the complaint, and we simply cannot comment on something we haven't seen," he says. "We will be happy to comment on the suit after we have had the chance to review the allegations. In the meantime, Urban Tulsa will be taking steps to talk to the Tulsa World to try to work toward
a resolution of the matter." MORE: Slate columnist Jack Shafer says the World will regret the suit.
The Tulsa World |
01-16-2009 5:28 pm |
Legal News
Washington City Paper Capitalizes on Inauguration Fever
Washington's only alt-weekly is putting on a full-court press as the presidential inauguration of Barack Obama draws closer. The City Paper released a 120-page special inauguration issue this week that also featured "The Obama Reader," a 16-page insert from sister paper the Chicago Reader, which has been covering Obama since 1995. (The insert was also published in the Windy City.) Publisher Amy Austin says City Paper will be doing extensive online reporting over the next several days on its inauguration aggregation page. AAN members who want a web icon to link to the ongoing inaugural coverage should email Austin at aaustin (at) washingtoncitypaper.com.
(FULL STORY)
AAN News |
01-16-2009 12:08 pm |
Industry News
Attorney General-Designate Backs Shield Lawnew
At his confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee yesterday, Eric Holder said he supports the idea of a shield law that would allow journalists to protect secret sources by refusing to testify before courts and grand juries. The legislation has been stalled due to protests from the Bush administration Justice Department. Holder also said he would work to reverse the Bush administration policy of withholding federal records from the public if there is any plausible reason to do so. He said he favors a Clinton administration policy to release documents unless there is evidence that disclosure would harm a government agency or the public.
The San Francisco Chronicle |
01-16-2009 12:02 pm |
Legal News
Tags: Editorial, Management
Report: Online Video Ad Rates Fell 25 Percent In Q4new
Average pre-roll ad rates for online video in the fourth quarter dropped 25 percent from the year-earlier period and 12.5 percent from the prior quarter, according to a report from ad network BrightRoll. But the report notes that the drop in prices isn't all bad. "Fundamentally, online video ad inventory has been (and continues to be) overpriced," the report says. "There has been significant pressure (and success) in pushing online video CPMs to converge with rates paid on television. We believe this is good for the category, as it will bring significantly more total dollars into the medium."
Online Media Daily |
01-16-2009 11:13 am |
Industry News
Alt-Weekly Cartoonists Losing Clients
Matt Bors and Tom Tomorrow both report that they have lost several papers in the last few months.
Bors Blog | This Modern World |
01-16-2009 11:09 am |
Industry News
L.A.'s Alt-Weeklies Suffer Additional Layoffs
The LA Weekly has eliminated its theater editor position and laid off film critic Ella Taylor, while LA CityBeat also axed its film critic, Andy Klein. MORE: Current and former staffers from both papers weigh in on the situation.
LA Weekly | LA Observed |
01-16-2009 10:19 am |
Industry News
Survey: Independent Retailers Outperformed Chains Over Holidays
A survey of 1,142 independent retailers by the Institute for Local Self-Reliance found that holiday sales among the indies declined by an average of five percent in 2008, far less than the loss of holiday business suffered by chain stores. The survey also found that independent retailers in cities with active "Buy Local" campaigns, such as the organized efforts that more than 70 AAN members took part in this year, reported much stronger holiday sales than indies in non-"Buy Local" cities.
(FULL STORY)
Institute for Local Self-Reliance Press Release |
01-15-2009 1:02 pm |
Press Releases
Arrests Raise Questions About Newspapers Running 'Prostitution' Adsnew
Editor & Publisher |
01-15-2009 2:03 pm |
Industry News
Creative Loafing (Tampa) Unveils Redesigned Homepagenew
Creative Loafing (Tampa) |
01-15-2009 1:05 pm |
Industry News
Las Vegas CityLife Office Moves Downtownnew
Las Vegas CityLife |
01-15-2009 1:04 pm |
Industry News
Tags: Management, Las Vegas CityLife
Metro Pulse Scribe Reflects on 18 Months of Corporate Ownershipnew
"For the first time we don't have an owner who's making story suggestions and occasionally writing a column about a favorite cause. But it's understood, more than ever before, that we'd better make a living with this," associate editor Jack Neely says of life under EW Scripps. "I don't mean to suggest that corporate ownership is better. I do miss boasting that we're locally owned, even when it seemed mainly a theoretical thing. But it's good, for the first time, to have dental insurance."
Metro Pulse |
01-14-2009 11:57 am |
Industry News
Former Miami New Times Reporter Enters Political Worldnew
Rebecca Wakefield, who worked at the paper earlier in the decade, has signed on as manager for Maria "Beba" Sardina Mann's campaign for Miami city commissioner. "The journalism world is dying a horrible, hacking death," Wakefield says. "No one's paying me any more to snarkily opine on the local circus, so when Beba asked me to consider running her campaign, I thought I might as well grab a cigar and find out what's really going on in the smoke-filled rooms."
Miami New Times |
01-14-2009 11:51 am |
Industry News
Mountain XPress Editorial Consultant Diesnew

C.B. "Chick" Squire, who had been working with the weekly since the mid-1990s, died on Jan. 4 of natural causes. He was 88 years old. "Chick was the last of the old guard who stood by and believed in this publication," writes XPress publisher Jeff Fobes, "all the way from its inception as Green Line many years ago to the current weekly print and online avatars of Mountain Xpress." More from the News & Observer.
Mountain XPress |
01-14-2009 9:20 am |
Industry News