Posts Tagged ‘Boston Globe’
Posted by Mediascaper on April 17, 2009
A few quotes to ponder as we head into the weekend:
“Oh, well. When the Feds surround my place for the big shootout, I hope my home gets described as a ‘compound’ just before it goes up in smoke. Cool.” –Mark Steyn, National Review Online, in response to a Department of Homeland Security report warning of dangerous right-wing extremist activity.
“Make no mistake, dear readers, we are living under tyranny. Especially to those who voted for Barack Obama and a Democratic Congress, you are living in denial if you believe otherwise. This is not hyperbole.” — The Sarasota Observer, in an article un-hyperbolically titled “Live Free or Die.”
“For now, though, one can’t help but note that these ‘conservatives’ seem so very angry about a federal government program designed to do nothing other than protect the glorious Homeland from Terrorists. And we know that this is the purpose of the DHS program because that’s what the Government said its purpose is. So what else is there to know? That’s the lesson we all learned over the last eight years: Bush said that all of his secret surveillance programs were only directed at Al Qaeda, so how can anyone say otherwise?” — Glenn Greenwald, Slate, in response to right-wing criticism of the Department of Homeland Security
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Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: Ben Affleck, Boston Globe, Gary Shelton, Glenn Greenwald, Mark Steyn, Sarah Lacy, Sarasota Observer, St. Petersburg Times | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Mediascaper on April 8, 2009
“From the moment The Times Co. purchased The Globe in 1993 it has treated New England’s largest newspaper like a cheap whore.” — Eileen McNamara, Boston Herald
“The metaphor of content as a cascading stream means there is no unit — a stream is a stream, it has no discernible building blocks.” — Martin Langeveld, Nieman Journalism Lab. (Sixteen grafs later, he writes that a drop in the stream would be a basic unit.)
“Google and aggregators and bloggers are bringing value to you; they should be charging you for the value they bring.” — Jeff Jarvis, BuzzMachine (He loves Google so much, he’s written a book called What Would Google Do?) He then gets ripped by a commenter who makes a convincing case that Google isn’t bringing value; it’s bringing traffic.
“Say this much for Good Old Roy. The guy never has been afraid of heights.” — Gary Shelton, St. Petersburg Times. (The too-obviously foreshadowed punch line from the always-entertaining Shelton, after opining that UNC coach Roy Williams must have felt like he was on top of the world following his team’s basketball championship.)
Posted in Newspaper industry, media criticism, news industry | Tagged: Boston Globe, Boston Herald, Eileen McNamara, Gary Shelton, Jeff Jarvis, Martin Langeveld, New York Times, news industry, Newspaper industry, Nieman Journalism Lab, North Carolina basketball, Online journalism, Roy Williams, St. Petersburg Times | 3 Comments »
Posted by Mediascaper on April 2, 2009
You’ve read the statistics. Now we have visual confirmation that newspapers are in a death spiral:

“That’s just a whirlpool,” you say? Maybe to someone without a taste for visual metaphor. But trust me — that’s a death spiral, and newspapers are floundering just below the surface.
And this stock photo? Just a pile of newspapers burning? Au contraire — it’s the symbolic loss of revenue from classified ads. There goes your main source of revenue, up in smoke. Craigslist says it smells great.
Still not convinced, given the irrefutable stock photo evidence?
Well, perhaps THIS will change your mind …
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Posted in Newspaper industry, Out of print, Print Journalism, news industry, newspaper cutbacks, newsroom layoffs, paid content, print advertising | Tagged: Boston Globe, Calbuzz, classified as, death spiral, Jerry Roberts, Los Angeles Times, Minnesota Star Tribune, New York Times, Newspaper industry, newspaper layoffs, newsroom cutbacks, Phil Trounstine, Tampa Tribune | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Mediascaper on March 31, 2009
Alas, these two journalists took markedly different routes to unemployment. Dave Reynolds, sports anchor, was laid off by WFLA on Monday:
“I already have some prospects, and I hope to find work soon,” he said. “I realize that I was not the only person laid off and these are difficult times for the news media. I’m just focusing on providing for my family.”
Reynolds and his wife, Holly, have a 4-year-old son.
In contrast, Nicole Wong also gave up her job — to save someone else’s:
She writes, “I was hoping I’d get to be the one who breaks the news to you that I’ve volunteered to be laid off from the Boston Globe in order to save the job of a reporter who has less seniority than me and who has greater needs to stay in the Boston area due to family commitments and other obligations. But who am I kidding? This is a newsroom!
You’re one in a million, Nicole.
Posted in Multimedia, headlines, news industry, newspaper cutbacks, newspapers | Tagged: Boston Globe, Dave Reynolds, Jan Coats, Media General, Nicole Wong, Talking Biz News, Tampa Tribune, WFLA Channel 8 | 2 Comments »
Posted by Mediascaper on March 26, 2009
So says David Mehegan, who took a buyout from the Boston Globe after 33 years of service:
There’s a lot of innovation that’s going to go on. I just don’t think it’s going to be done by the management of papers as we now know them. I don’t think they have the imagination. I shouldn’t make a sweeping statement, but so far, what I see is just cutting and cutting and hoping some kind of miracle happens. I don’t mean that that’s the character of this company more than it is the character of any other. I just think that, for the most part, most newspaper management is in a state of shock. They’re not really going to be the ones to do it.
But Mehegan is being a class act as he leaves:
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Posted in Newspaper industry, media criticism, media ownership, news industry, newspaper cutbacks, newspapers, newsroom layoffs | Tagged: Boston Globe, Boston Phoenix, David Mehegan, Marty Baron, newspaper cutbacks, Newspaper industry, newsroom layoffs | 1 Comment »
Posted by Mediascaper on February 18, 2009
Posted in Mainstream media, Newspaper industry, Online journalism, The Internet, news industry, newspaper websites | Tagged: Boston Globe, Chicago Sun-Times, Chicago Tribune, Dallas Morning News, Houston Chronicle, Los Angeles Times, New York Daily News, New York Post, New York Times, Newsday, Nieman Journalism Lab, politico, San Francisco Chronicle, top newspaper websites, USA Today, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Mediascaper on February 2, 2009
Posted in Online journalism, media criticism, news industry | Tagged: Boston Globe, Boston.com, David Scharfenberg, journalism fund, liberal agenda, media bias, New York Times, news industry, Newspaper Death Watch, Newspaper industry | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Mediascaper on February 2, 2009
GlobalPost, an Internet start-up that covers international news, plans to expand its stable of correspondents. Check out the third way the company plans to raise money (via Boston.com):
One is the advertising on the site. A second is syndication deals with newspapers and other websites that will use GlobalPost’s stories. The third is a membership program called Passport, which will ramp up next month. For a $199 annual subscription fee, Passport members can join conference calls twice a month with GlobalPost correspondents, suggest story ideas, and receive text alerts about breaking news.
Posted in Online journalism, news industry, online advertising | Tagged: Boston Globe, Boston.com, GlobalPost, Online journalism, subscriptions, syndication | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Mediascaper on January 27, 2009
GateHouse Media and the New York Times Co. settled their dispute over the Times Co.’s use of the headlines and ledes from GateHouse’s Wicked Local sites. Here’s the upshot, as quoted from the settlement by Joshua Benton of Nieman Journalism Lab:
GateHouse will implement one or more commercially reasonable technological solutions … intended to prevent [NYT Co.]‘ copying of any original content from GateHouse’s websites and RSS feeds … which [NYT Co.] shall not directly or indirectly circumvent. …
Defendants shall remove all GateHouse RSS feeds from the aggregation tool currently being used to copy and display GateHouse’s original headlines and ledes on boston.com’s yourtown websites, and shall refrain from accessing such feeds so long as GateHouse maintains any Solution(s) described in paragraph (1) to this Letter Agreement.
The Times Co. must also take down any GateHouse headlines and ledes archived on the Boston Globe’s Your Town websites by March 1. (The New York Times Co. own the Boston Globe.)
As one might have expected, the reaction to the settlement has focused on the perceived threats to “fair use.” Mathew Ingram worries that the deal sets a bad precedent for linking and quoting material on the Web:
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Posted in Online ad sales, Online journalism, fair use, journalism ethics, online advertising | Tagged: aggregation, Boston Globe, fair use, GateHouse Media, link economy, New York Times, settlement, Wicked Local, Your Town | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Mediascaper on January 23, 2009


Zachary M. Seward at the Nieman Journalism Lab provides a thought-provoking update of GateHouse Media’s lawsuit against the New York Times Company that raises issues of importance for journalists and media companies alike. Of particular note are the issues concerning non-commercial use and the altering of original material.
For a quick background on the case, you can read my post GateHouse Media takes on the New York Times Company. But essentially it boils down to this: GateHouse is upset that the Your Town sites run by Boston.com (which itself is owned by the NYT Co.) are linking to stories on GateHouse’s Wicked Local sites, which cover news in the eastern Massachusetts area.
For instance, I went to the Your Town Newton site today and found this story link:
New tolls and off-ramps may be useful down the road, but a dozen residents at an aldermanic meeting Wednesday night made it clear: The ”Circle of Death” needs improvements now. Newton Tab, 1/22/09
Click on the link above in the excerpt, and it will take you to the full story.
I was struck by two elements of GateHouse Media’s claim. In paragraph 115, it says that pursuant to the Creative Commons License, users have a qualified right to copy, transmit and distribute its copyrighted and copyrightable content, provided certain conditions are met:
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Posted in New Media, News, Newspaper industry, copyright, ethics, fair use, headlines, newspapers, online advertising | Tagged: Boston Globe, Boston.com, Creative Commons, GateHouse Media, New York Times, Wicked Local, Your Town | Leave a Comment »