AltWeeklies Wire

Could Bill Gates Be the Seattle Post-Intelligencer's White Knight?new

If the Seattle P-I is to survive as a newspaper, it would seem to require a charitable and innovative billionaire. We happen to have a couple of those handy — and Bill Gates seems the more likely of the two.
Seattle Weekly  |  Rick Anderson  |  02-10-2009  |  Media

Two North Texas Daily Papers Have Reached a Partial Detentenew

The Fort Worth Star-Telegram and Dallas Morning News have begun sharing content, but the cooperation between competing media companies in the same media market is raising red flags. Some question whether the agreement may violate federal antitrust laws.
Fort Worth Weekly  |  Dan McGraw  |  01-08-2009  |  Media

Can a New Generation of Visionaries Revive the Watchdog Press?new

As the traditional media contracts and struggles for survival, new approaches like Huffington Post, Spot.us, and the Public Press are trying to reinvent journalism.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Steven T. Jones and Tim Redmond  |  01-05-2009  |  Media

The Year in Media Malfeasancenew

Thanks to the combination of a) the presidential race, and b) the ongoing immolation of the nation's newspaper industry -- there was a veritable cornucopia of media low points to enjoy in the bygone year.
Boston Phoenix  |  Adam Reilly  |  12-29-2008  |  Media

No News is Bad News: How Reporting Cutbacks Affect Us Allnew

David Poulson -- a longtime reporter and editor who's now associate director of the Knight Center for Environmental Journalism at Michigan State University -- wants people to understand is that the cutbacks being made at papers across the country affect way more than the journalists receiving pink slips.
Metro Times  |  Staff  |  12-23-2008  |  Media

Denver's Rocky Mountain News is Going Downnew

E.W. Scripps has put the tabloid up for sale, but if no buyer emerges by mid-January, the company says it will explore "other options."
Westword  |  Michael Roberts  |  12-15-2008  |  Media

Voters Think the Media Favors Obama -- Do Endorsements Prove Them Right?new

Obama has rolled up the press like jitterbuggers rolling up a rec room rug. Not only have the dailies that always endorse the Democrat endorsed another, but reliably Republican papers have taken an existential leap into contrariness.
Chicago Reader  |  Michael Miner  |  11-03-2008  |  Media

The Successes and Failures of Charlotte's Print Medianew

Some niche pubs are prospering, but many local papers are troubled.
Creative Loafing (Charlotte)  |  Karen Shugart  |  10-16-2008  |  Media

Ink-Stained Kvetches: Where Are All the Editorial Cartoonists Going?new

As newspapers cut back on staff, editorial cartoonists are losing their positions at newspapers across the nation. In Texas, only the San Antonio Express-News, the Houston Chronicle, and the Austin American-Statesman still employ staff cartoonists.
The Texas Observer  |  Brad Tyer  |  10-08-2008  |  Media

Mark Powell's War on Errornew

For one man, every typo is a mini-Watergate. Just ask the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
Seattle Weekly  |  Jesse Froehling  |  09-22-2008  |  Media

Fact and Opinion: It's All Just Content Nownew

Internet values are seeping into print journalism, and internet values reward instant punditry, the more flamboyant the better. Simple, solid reporting is OK, but flamboyance is what attracts page hits, and page hits attract advertisers -- enough of them, in a theoretical tomorrow, to keep journalism afloat.
Chicago Reader  |  Michael Miner  |  09-22-2008  |  Media

Why Political Cartoons Matter

Editorial cartoons have never been better, more relevant or more popular. But daily newspapers are phasing them out -- because editors don't understand them.
Maui Time  |  Ted Rall  |  09-16-2008  |  Media

Sympathy for the Newspaper CEOnew

Sacramento Bee parent McClatchy Company is headed for the bottom. Company head Gary Pruitt aims to stem the tide, or go down with the ship.
Sacramento News & Review  |  R.V. Scheide  |  09-11-2008  |  Media

Blogs Tell the Story Behind Baltimore Sun Buyouts and Changesnew

Behind the scenes, journalists at the Sun and other papers owned by the Tribune Co. have launched an angry (if only online) revolt against staff layoffs, management decisions, and what they see as a wholesale dismantling of the Chicago-based company's newspapers.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Martin L. Johnson  |  09-09-2008  |  Media

More Bad News at The News & Observernew

More layoffs loom at the North Carolina daily, and the spinoff entertainment publication could be history.
INDY Week  |  Fiona Morgan  |  08-28-2008  |  Media

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