LBY3
The continuing adventures of Beau Yarbrough

SPJ winners’ names trickle out

Thursday, March 29, 2007, 1:22
Section: Journalism

Society of Professional JournalistsThe first few winners of 2006 SPJ Excellence in Journalism award winners have begun to be announced over on the SPJ message board. Bill Norris has begun to publish the names as they come in from the judges.

As usual, the Riverside Press-Enterprise has seemingly half the awards to themselves, but the Hesperia Star, Daily Press and Desert Dispatch have staff members who have picked up awards as well, and no doubt more folks’ names will be added to the list in the next week or two as well.



Microsoft sends Wired reporter Microsoft’s dossier on the Wired reporter

Wednesday, March 28, 2007, 19:47
Section: Journalism

Oops.

As journalistic windfalls go this is about as good as it gets. There I was writing a story about how Microsoft is on the cutting edge of using the Internet to become more transparent, and there in front of me are the briefing documents they are using to manage the story. The timing was so fortuitous that I wondered whether it was intentional. When I told Microsoft about it, they convincingly told me it was not.

But after I was done reading all 5,500 words I no longer felt elated at the prospect of an interesting scoop. I felt downright peculiar. I’ve been a journalist for more than 20 years and always assumed that the people I interview do as much homework on me as I do on them. So the existence of a document like this didn’t surprise me. But that still didn’t make it any easier to read lines like, “It takes him a bit to get his point across so try to be patient.” I know my long-windedness drives my wife nuts occasionally. I didn’t know it had become an issue for Microsoft’s pr machine too.

I’d be scared to see such a dossier on me. I’d read it, of course. I’d just have sweaty palms while doing so.



Freedom making good money in small papers

Wednesday, March 28, 2007, 9:19
Section: Journalism

A while back, the Washington Post called Peter to talk to him about working at small newspapers. At long last, the article is online:

The combined circulation of all U.S. newspapers in the six months ended Sept. 30 was down 2.8 percent from the comparable period in 2005, according to the Newspaper Association of America. By comparison, the combined circulation in the small-newspaper group was down 2.1 percent.

If that seems like cold comfort at best, consider this: Of the 413 papers in the small-newspaper group, 105 of them — 25 percent — gained circulation over the year, faring better than any other circulation group.

Lee Enterprises, based in Davenport, Iowa, for example, owns 56 daily papers and more than 300 small weeklies and other publications. Three of its papers have a circulation of more than 100,000 — including the St. Louis Post-Dispatch — but the rest of its dailies are much smaller, averaging about 26,000 each.

Over the past five years, the circulation gains at Lee papers have outpaced the industry average; some of the gains came from acquisitions, but much came from the growth of the group’s existing papers. Over the past two decades, the company’s stock price has likewise gone in the opposite direction of large-newspaper stock, climbing steadily from less than $10 a share in 1988 to more than $30 a share today.

“We’re largely in markets . . . that have pretty good local economies, a strong sense of place and strong newspaper readership,” said Mary E. Junck, Lee’s chairman and chief executive. Another advantage: “Many of our markets are pretty homogenous and tightknit,” she said, making it easier to pin down and target readership.

The small-newspaper division of Freedom Communications generated a 30 percent profit in 2006, up 5 percent from 2005. By comparison, a very successful large newspaper typically returns about 20 percent annually.

“In many of our smaller communities, we are the only game in town if you want to reach targeted households,” said Freedom chief executive Scott N. Flanders.

No quotes from Peter, alas, but an article well worth a read despite that.



My son, Skeletor Yarbrough

Tuesday, March 27, 2007, 7:12
Section: Life

Ultrasound picture



HesperiaStar.com: The end is near!

Friday, March 23, 2007, 18:40
Section: Journalism

The Hesperia StarWell, we’re at the 11th hour before launching the new site.

Today, I sent in the final list of show-stopping bugs to the Irvine development folks. Two of them (comments and ratings not working), I’m told, will be fixed automagically when the address switches over late Sunday night. A third bug — the send-an-email form on the contact page — now works. Now that the Irvine folks have gone home, another bug has naturally cropped up — links to outside the Web site have vanished from stories, a bug that was fixed earlier this week. That’s not a show-stopper, of course, and should be fixed Monday.

There’s apparently a chance that something awful will happen which I’m not sure I can wrap my head around, and neither can anyone else I’ve talked to, so I’m not going to worry about it and just figure things will work out, since I can’t do anything about it anyway. And if it all goes kaboom, Sharon and I will spend the day frantically shoveling old content into the new site all over again.

See you Monday.


 








Copyright © Beau Yarbrough, all rights reserved
Veritas odit moras.