AltWeeklies Wire

New Owner of Worcester Telegram & Gazette No Stranger to Slashing and Cuttingnew

The hatchet is expected to fall inside the headquarters of the 148-year-old Worcester Telegram & Gazette, but just how painful the cuts will be will not be known until after the blow is delivered. While the immediate future of the largest daily newspaper in Central Massachusetts is murky right now, two things are clear: One, the new steward of the T&G has a track record of slashing and cutting staff - and not a perfect record of results once it buys a new product. Two, the man who sold the newspaper to the Halifax Media Group is persona non grata in Worcester.
Worcester Magazine  |  Walter Bird Jr.  |  05-29-2014  |  Media

More Layoffs Coming at the Indianapolis Starnew

Determined to squeeze every last nickel from the withering carcass of The Indianapolis Star, corporate parent Gannett Co. plans to ship its local copy-editing and page-design jobs out of town.
NUVO  |  Robert Annis  |  12-05-2012  |  Media

Why Beat Reporters Matternew

What's being lost as newspapers cut back.
Gambit  |  David Simon  |  07-17-2012  |  Media

Goodbye, Metromix!new

Gannett pulls the plug on their Indianapolis faux alt-newsweekly, and NUVO staffers breathe a deep, but temporary, sigh of relief.
NUVO  |  NUVO Editors  |  06-22-2011  |  Media

Slavery Was the Pivotal Issue for Charleston's 'Mercury'new

At the dawn of the Civil War, the editors at the Charleston Mercury were incensed.
Charleston City Paper  |  Greg Hambrick  |  04-11-2011  |  History

Will a Change in Law Put Connecticut’s Daily Newspapers Out of Business?new

The state’s newspapers has been causing a ruckus since Gov. Jodi Rell introduced a bill last month that would let towns post legal notices on their Web sites instead of having to pay newspapers, as they do now, to publish them.
New Haven Advocate  |  Betsy Yagla  |  03-23-2010  |  Media

How Cablevision Is Destroying Newsdaynew

The nation’s fifth-largest cable TV operator is tearing apart what was once one of the mightiest newspapers in the country. Interviews, financial documents and internal memos paint a picture of a paper under siege, both financially and journalistically.
Long Island Press  |  Christopher Twarowski and Michael Patrick Nelson  |  03-05-2010  |  Media

Will Polar Beverages Rescue the Worcester Telegram & Gazette?new

After 10 years of increasing integration between the T&G and the Boston Globe, increased cost-cutting, and operational "efficiencies," what has to be restored once the New York Times is not paying the bills?
Worcester Magazine  |  Tim O'Keefe  |  11-09-2009  |  Media

Can a New Publisher Reverse the Slide at The Oregonian?new

N. Christian Anderson III began his job this week as publisher of The Oregonian at one of the more harrowing times in the daily’s 159-year history.
Willamette Week  |  Henry Stern  |  11-04-2009  |  Media

Al Giordano's School of Authentic Journalism Tweaks J-School Conventionsnew

The school, which is located on Mexico's Yucatán Peninsula, has grown steadily in the past seven years. And this past month, the school announced it will be offering 24 scholarships for "up-and-coming journalists and communicators" to attend a 10-day session there this February.
Boston Phoenix  |  Mike Miliard  |  10-14-2009  |  Media

Could Less Star Power and More Depth Save the Chicago Sun-Times?new

Journalists who don't get their pictures in the paper alongside their stories tend to both envy and suspect the ones who do, believing those pictures fatten their paychecks, win them better tables in restaurants, and turn them into commodities.
Chicago Reader  |  Michael Miner  |  09-21-2009  |  Media

Philly Anarchist Newspaper Keeps Delivering the News Nobody Else Sees Fit to Printnew

The Defenestrator is released quarterly, or as often as finances and personal schedules allow. It is one of the longest-running and few remaining anarchist publications in the U.S., and it began as a photocopied newsletter.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Matt Stroud  |  09-15-2009  |  Media

Back to School: A Grown-Up's Tale of a Return to Academianew

After losing her full-time newspaper gig, one reporter talks about her personal economic recovery plan: heading back to school to earn a second degree and head off in a new career direction.
Boise Weekly  |  Lora Volkert  |  09-09-2009  |  Education

Get Ready for a Post-Daily Newspaper Worldnew

What's next for journalism? First, put the decline of daily newspapers in context.
Sacramento News & Review  |  Jeff vonKaenel  |  09-08-2009  |  Media

The News Wars Are Comingnew

If it's fight or die on the new media landscape, does anyone think traditional media won't fight? The classic portents of serious battle are converging.
Chicago Reader  |  Michael Miner  |  08-17-2009  |  Media

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