AAN News
Widget Craze Escapes Many Advertisersnew
paidContent.org |
07-16-2007 12:19 pm |
Industry News
Facebook Display Ads Performing Poorlynew
MarketingVOX |
07-16-2007 12:12 pm |
Industry News
Google Opens AdSense for Mobile Medianew
ClickZ News |
07-16-2007 11:19 am |
Industry News
Group to Address Ad Standards for Podcasts, Other Contentnew
Online Media Daily |
07-16-2007 10:47 am |
Industry News
SNA Launches New National Ad Networknew
Editor & Publisher |
07-16-2007 10:44 am |
Industry News
Tags: Retail Advertising
Weekly Dig Art Director Talks 'Secret Asian Man'new

As we reported last month, Tak Toyoshima's comic strip, which originated out of the Dig and appears in many alt-weeklies, has been picked up by the United Feature Syndicate and will become a daily feature in papers nationwide beginning July 16. In an interview with the San Francisco-based Japanese-American newspaper Nichi Bei Times, Toyoshima talks about his goal for his new expanded audience: "I want readers to see a strip that isn't afraid to talk about things that most cartoon cats wouldn't touch but also feel like they are not being hit over the head by some overbearing agenda."
Nichi Bei Times |
07-13-2007 9:02 am |
Industry News
Jonathan Gold On Childhood, Snoop Dogg, and L.A. Cuisinenew
The Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles |
07-13-2007 12:58 pm |
Industry News
Opinion: Hits, Page Views and Other Garbage We Pass Off as Metricsnew
Online Journalism Review |
07-13-2007 12:51 pm |
Industry News
New Service Enables Advertisers to Offer Fully Interactive Bannersnew
MarketingVox |
07-13-2007 11:46 am |
Industry News
Which American Newspaper Will Be the First to Kill Its Print Edition?new
BusinessWeek Online |
07-13-2007 11:33 am |
Industry News
Tags: Management
Study: If a Company Doesn't Stand for a Cause, Consumers May Stop Buyingnew
Advertising Age |
07-13-2007 11:26 am |
Industry News
Political and Advocacy Ad Spending Soarsnew
Media Daily News |
07-13-2007 9:54 am |
Industry News
Tags: Marketing, Retail Advertising
E&P: The Bush Administration is Playing a 'FOIA Shell Game'new
Mark Fitzgerald dissects Attorney General Alberto Gonzales' recent rosy report claiming that federal agencies have improved their response to requests under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). The fact that "more than half of the agencies -- 54 of them! -- actually met their mostly modest milestone goals on time" was heralded by Gonzales as a sign of "diligent and measurable progress," Fitzgerald says. "If my youngest kid brought home a report card from St. Thecla Elementary School with a mark of 59, the next time he touched his PlayStation controls he'd have to wipe away the cobwebs." Fitzgerald argues that FOIA backlogs would be reduced by the OPEN Government Act, currently stalled in the Senate thanks to a hold by Sen. John Kyl (R-AZ), who says he is acting on concerns raised by the Justice Department. "The same Alberto Gonzales who is trying to sell a rosy picture of a White House intent on making FOIA more accessible is sabotaging the very law that would accomplish that," Fitzgerald concludes. AAN encourages you to get involved in efforts to get these important FOIA reforms passed. To learn how, click here.
Editor & Publisher |
07-12-2007 2:28 pm |
Legal News
How to Use YouTube, Twitter, Slideshare and Street Boxesnew
Recent posts on AAN's web publishing best practices blog include tips on automatically feeding paper content to Twitter, finding 2.0 trends from top conferences on Slideshare.net, and setting up an easy RSS aggregator to troll for story ideas. Seven Days online editor Cathy Resmer makes her AAN-blogging debut, contributing a post on finding and using local content on YouTube, sharing stories found online that made their way into the paper. In addition, a detailed overview of NOW's recent Box Design Challenge is featured, along with tips on Managing Your Digital Professional Identity.
AAN Staff |
07-12-2007 2:18 pm |
Association News
Tags: Electronic Publishing
Alt-Weekly Campaigns to Expose Daily's Restaurant Reviewernew
Nathaniel Glen ... it's got a nice ring to it, but it's just the pseudonym being used by The Gazette of Colorado Springs' new restaurant critic. Now the Colorado Springs Independent is working to lift his veil of anonymity, running two articles criticizing the pseudonym and hinting at his identity in the form of rhymes and anagrams, according to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. The critic chose to work under an assumed name because he was already a staffer at the paper and his real identity was known. "But a person's byline doesn't make that person known to everyone in the community," says Ralph Routon, the Indy's executive editor. "We use several reviewers whose names are well known and their ability to do their job has never been compromised."
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette |
07-12-2007 8:43 am |
Industry News