AAN News
Does Your Brand Have Portability Potential?new
Advertising Age |
07-24-2007 8:59 am |
Industry News
AAN Adds 'Members Only' Content to Website
The little red "A" logo you see next to today's AAN News story on the Austin Chronicle means the full text of that story is available only to AAN members. Every so often, we'll use that designation to highlight features we've developed specifically for AAN members that you won't find anywhere else.
AAN Staff |
07-23-2007 11:54 am |
Association News
The Austin Chronicle Takes the Street-Team Concept to the Next Level [members only]
AAN News |
07-23-2007 11:45 am |
Industry News
More on FOIA Reform Bill & Senator Jon Kyl's Holdnew
"Senator Kyl agrees that FOIA needs to be modernized, though the bill in its current form has a series of unintended consequences that need to be repaired," the senator's press secretary Ryan Patmintra explains to the New York Times. As we've reported previously, Sen. Kyl (R-AZ) is the one person standing in the way of the passage of the OPEN Government Act of 2007, which would reform the way government agencies respond to FOIA requests. Last month, Cox News Service reported that the bill was in a "legislative black hole" due to Kyl's hold. "Don't expect a huge uproar if the bill doesn't make it. With an election coming, data secrecy isn't the sexiest issue," writes the Times' David Carr. "But many of those 'Holy cow' newspaper articles you read have their roots in the banal bureaucracy of government information." AAN encourages you to help get these important FOIA reforms passed -- to learn how, click here.
The New York Times |
07-23-2007 10:25 am |
Legal News
Matt Groening on His Alt-Weekly Rootsnew
Despite having drawn a weekly "Life is Hell" cartoon for L.A. Weekly for 20-plus years, The Simpsons creator says he's never set foot in the paper's office. "I'm sure very nice people work there, but here's the thing: I used to work at the [Los Angeles] Reader, and I noticed ... that people go crazy," he says in a wide-ranging L.A. Weekly profile. Groening then recounts how, after working for the Reader as a proofreader, paste-up artist, editor, critic and columnist, they fired him for selling his comic strip to Pasadena Weekly for $10 a week. "All I know is that the last time I showed up at a newspaper office, I got fired," Groening says.
L.A. Weekly |
07-23-2007 8:32 am |
Industry News
Podcasters Unite to Figure Out a Role for Adsnew
The New York Times |
07-23-2007 10:39 am |
Industry News
New Consumer Targets: Karma Queens, Geek Gods and Innerpreneursnew
Advertising Age |
07-23-2007 10:14 am |
Industry News
Major Marketers Turning to Web Ad Networksnew
Mediaweek |
07-23-2007 10:07 am |
Industry News
The Importance of Email Designnew
iMedia Connection |
07-23-2007 9:48 am |
Industry News
Tags: Design & Production, Marketing
Study: Radio Listeners Buy Less Musicnew
New York Times |
07-23-2007 8:50 am |
Industry News
Tags: Retail Advertising
Matt Coker: Gustavo Arellano's Fame 'Doesn't Surprise Me a Lick'new

The former executive editor of OC Weekly recalls the days when, helped along by a 2002 AAN Diversity Grant, the man who'd become "The Mexican" got his start at the Weekly. "'That kid is going to be more famous than any of us some day,'" Coker, who now edits Sacramento News & Review, remembers thinking. "What did surprise me was how quickly some day came." He says Arellano's transition to "national media spokesman on all-things-Latino" was partly a function of timing ("¡Ask a Mexican!" started getting more attention as the immigration debate heated up), but also
of "a lot of shameless self promotion. Not only is Arellano the most shameless of the shameless self promoters I have ever known in this business, he also is the most self-aware of his own shamelessness, which I find kind of cute." Apparently, not everyone at OC Weekly agreed with Coker: he reports that there was plenty of jealousy of Arellano's fame -- and his six-figure book deal -- in the newsroom as well.
Sacramento News & Review |
07-20-2007 3:42 pm |
Industry News
Two Alt-Weekly Cartoonists Compete in 'Science Idol' Contestnew
A strip each of Matt Bors' "Idiot Box" and Jen Sorenson's "Slowpoke" are among the 12 finalists in The Union of Concerned Scientists' competition rewarding "creative takes on the issue of political interference in science." Voting for "Science Idol: the Scientific Integrity Editorial Cartoon Contest" closes July 23.
Union of Concerned Scientists |
07-20-2007 11:43 am |
Honors & Achievements
It's Musical Chairs at SoCal Alt-Weekliesnew
Former L.A. Weekly news editor Alan Mittelstaedt joined Los Angeles CityBeat yesterday as news editor, replacing Dean Kuipers, who moved to the Los Angeles Times. A little further down the coast, Rich Kane, who left OC Weekly in 2005 and ended up as editor of Inland Empire Weekly (a paper started by ex-OC Weekly staffer Jeremy Zachary that was later acquired by LA CityBeat-parent Southland Publishing), returns to the Weekly Aug. 2 as its new managing editor. Replacing Kane at Inland Empire is Charles Mindenhall, a former L.A. Weekly staffer.
LA Observed | OC Weekly |
07-20-2007 9:13 am |
Industry News
Realogy Chief: Newspaper Ad Spend to Shrink By As Much As Two-Thirdsnew
The president of the largest real estate brokerage company and franchisor says that the Coldwell Banker and Century 21 branding budgets for newspapers will shrink by as much as two-thirds next year from 2006, Inman Real Estate News reports. Realogy intends to slash its newspaper advertising budget to 70 percent of its home-sale ad spend by 2010, down from 84 percent this year, as it shifts more ad dollars online. Borrell Associates has found that online real estate advertising grew from a $1.2 billion in 2004 to a $1.7 billion in 2005, and will grow to a $3.1 billion by 2010.
Inman Real Estate News |
07-20-2007 9:01 am |
Industry News
Tags: Classified Advertising, Management
Monterey County Weekly Editor Steps Downnew
Eric Johnson says he'll be leaving next month. "I feel sad to have to leave this newspaper," he says. "For the past six years, I've been proud to work with a team that tries every week to create something that can make a difference in people's lives. ... I'll miss almost everything about it, but it's time to go."
Monterey County Weekly |
07-20-2007 8:11 am |
Industry News