AAN News

Will Real Estate Ads Return to Newspapers After Housing Slump?new

It's an open question, reports Associated Press, after talking to several real estate executives who say they are moving more of their advertising online. "For our agents, newspapers are an old standby," says Abby Lee, director of regional advertising for a major real estate franchisor. "With younger agents, there’s a trend of going online. There’s a realization that’s where they need to be." Newspaper publishers need to move more aggressively to hold on to real estate advertising, argues Charlie Diederich, the director of marketing and advertising at the Newspaper Association of America. "We’ve got to improve both our print but especially our online products ... so consumers will continue to come to us first so we can deliver that audience to the professional realtor," Diederich tells AP.
AP via Editor & Publisher  |  07-30-2007  3:45 pm  |  Industry News

Former Editor Returns to Take Reins at Metro Pulsenew

Coury Turczyn, who was a "principal editor" of the Knoxville alt-weekly for most of its first nine years before he left in 2000, will return to the paper on Aug. 13 as editor-in-chief, according to an editorial posted on the Metro Pulse website. "More than any other individual, he shaped the paper's appealingly snotty personality and irreverent course," reports the anonymous editorialist. After living in several different states, Turczyn returned to Knoxville in 2005 to serve as an editor for E.W. Scripp's HGTV website. Scripps, which also owns the daily paper in Knoxville, acquired Metro Pulse late last month. Current editor Leslie Wylie announced two months ago that she would be leaving the paper to become a professional competitive equestrian.
Metro Pulse  |  07-30-2007  3:16 pm  |  Industry News

Reader Editor Says CL Acquisition Not a Sad Day for Chicago

In a staff message sent Friday, Alison True admits there "are reasons to be distressed by a change this big," but claims there are also "reasons to be optimistic" about the sale to Creative Loafing, including the new owners' pledge to maintain editorial independence and enhance the paper's business operations. MORE FROM CHICAGO: In an anonymous post on a Reader blog, a recently hired salesperson remembers why s/he took a large pay cut to take a job at the paper: "I did it because I love the Reader, and I have loved it since I was 15 years old sneaking away from the burbs and into the city searching for the comforting yellow newspaper dispenser. ... I wanted to be around people that keenly observed the world and cared about the people living in it, the people other than themselves with stories to tell. And I found that. Here at the Chicago Reader." (FULL STORY)
Alison True  |  07-30-2007  2:11 pm  |  Industry News

Opera Inspired by Alt-Weekly Cartoon Hits Comic-Connew

This weekend marks the first performances of Shannon Wheeler's "Too Much Coffee Man Opera" outside of his hometown of Portland, Ore., where it premiered last year. Wheeler, who received an honorable mention in this year's AltWeekly Awards, says after being prodded to turn his comic strip into a opera by a friend, it was a dream in which a character sang an aria that sealed the deal. "I woke up and thought, Why am I fighting this?," he tells the San Diego Union-Tribune. "It's an opportunity to learn new things." Thus far, response to the opera has been overwhelmingly positive, and Wheeler is already planning an as-yet-untitled sequel to hit the stage next year in Portland.
San Diego Union-Tribune  |  07-27-2007  8:20 am  |  Industry News

Verizon Consolidates Local Marketing Dutiesnew

Advertising Age  |  07-27-2007  10:23 am  |  Industry News

Today is Early Registration Deadline for Medill Conferencenew

Friday, July 27 is the deadline for early registration and hotel rates for the Alternative Journalism Workshop for Writers and Designers to be held Aug. 10-11 in Evanston, Ill. Speakers include Poynter writing coach Chip Scanlan, journalist-author Alex Kotlowitz and Visual Editors' Robb Montgomery, and for the first time ever, the conference will include a separate program for design staff. Lunch and dinner on Saturday are included in the $75 AAN member early-registration rate.
AAN  |  07-26-2007  7:20 pm  |  Association News

Who Will the New Creative Loafing Turn to For National Ads?new

CEO Ben Eason tells Editor & Publisher he's not sure if the now-six paper chain will continue to use the Alternative Weekly Network (AWN) for national ad sales or switch over to the competing Ruxton Group, which currently handles ad sales for the Chicago Reader and Washington City Paper. "We have been longtime AWN folks," he says. Ruxton, which was founded by the Reader, is now owned by Village Voice Media. Eason says figuring this out is one of his top priorities. He also tells E&P that strength in the national ad market is a key aspect of this week's deal. "Now with Chicago and D.C., all of the sudden you have enough critical mass and it becomes a go-to place for ad agencies on Madison Avenue," he says.
Editor & Publisher  |  07-26-2007  12:22 pm  |  Industry News

Creative Loafing CEO Meets With Chicago Reader Staffnew

The Reader's Michael Miner reports that Ben Eason didn't focus on editorial matters in Wednesday's meeting, but rather on "web opportunities, regaining ground lost to Craiglist in classified advertising, and the efficiencies of centralizing the design work in Atlanta," a change Miner notes "is likely to cost a dozen or so Reader employees their jobs." After the meeting, when Miner asked Eason about editorial, he said "it's everything" -- but Miner isn't so sure that's Creative Loafing's approach. He thinks the Creative Loafing papers' design "doesn't respect the stories it ought to serve. If the centralized design staff makes this the look of the Reader ... I think readers will judge it as antithetical to what they've understood the Reader to be." According to Miner, Creative Loafing will turn the Reader into a one-section tabloid, a change the old owners were also planning.
Chicago Reader  |  07-26-2007  11:01 am  |  Industry News

Arkansas Times & Others File Suit Against Arkansas Prisons Chiefnew

The alt-weekly joins local chapters of the ACLU and the Society for Professional Journalists in suing the director of the Arkansas Department of Corrections for full access to executions, the AP reports. Arkansas only allows media or the public to watch the period of the execution after the inmate is already strapped to the gurney until right after (s)he dies, not as intravenous tubes are inserted and removed from the inmate. "The public has a First Amendment right to view executions from the moment the condemned is escorted into the execution chamber," the lawsuit, filed Wednesday in federal court, reads.
Associated Press via the International Herald Tribune  |  07-26-2007  9:26 am  |  Legal News

Print Help-Wanted Index Tumbles to 49-Year Lownew

Editor & Publisher  |  07-26-2007  4:30 pm  |  Industry News

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