We left j-school thinking we had the answers, then we learned just how much we had to learn. I learned humility when I read my first correction in a 700,000-circ paper, apologizing for an error I had made in a story. I learned creativity when security blocked me and a photographer from entering the work site […]
54 Minutes: The Life and Death of a Web Story in East Texas
Texas lawmen closed the country roads and started scouring the dusty ground late in the still-blazing afternoon in an isolated spot an hour-plus northeast of Houston, long beyond where the pavement turns to the Pineywoods. I got my first message at 4:07 p.m. Central time. It started: “POSSIBLE MAJOR STORY…” It came in all caps, […]
A real page-turner: best-read cities
Think for a moment: which U.S. cities would lead a “best-read” list of books, magazines and newspapers. Amazon has pulled together its sales since Jan. 1 and come up with its own best-read list. Looking at cities over 100,000 population, the list is based on per capita sales for print and digital products from Amazon. […]
Is survival in the cloud?
A decade ago I refereed a debate about the merits of copy editors on the 6th floor of a metro newspaper editing copy created by writers on the 8th floor of the same metro. Granted, they were in different departments, and didn’t have the same background as their same-floor copy editors. But this big step […]
It’s a small world…..
In the Dark Ages – about two years ago – newspaper companies with a healthy stable of smaller to medium size properties felt like they had the ultimate insurance policy. Perceived remoteness. “It’ll be years before Google, Yahoo and the rest discover us,” was the line of thought, as they watched the metros they owned […]
A rock for the ages
My dad’s ’61 Ford – big, hulking, white with four doors, plenty of chrome and a blue cloth interior – was backed up, rear-end to the one-car garage, as night fell, ready for a running start before dawn the next day. It was the one day of the year that the car was backed into […]
Struggling with the buffalo
I punched in the number of my Texas publisher/friend and started talking before he could reply to my ring. He interrupted my jabbering with words I have never heard before. “John, I’m at the slaughterhouse and having trouble getting this buffalo inside. It’s not going well. Got to call you back.” Was Dan speaking in […]
Who says newspapers can’t move quickly?
Well, me. And, most likely, you. “We’re like a battleship; it takes a long time to change direction,” a senior newspaper exec told me decades ago, trying to calm my impatience with the pace of a large project. “But when we change course, we’ve got awesome firepower.” Well, the firepower is greatly diminished, and the […]
Ask yourself, what would Dan do?
Like a modern-day Rip Van Winkle, my friend Dan last month walked back into the publisher’s office he once occupied at a medium-size Texas newspaper. He hasn’t been asleep in the Catskills the last four years. He’s been on his motorcycle cruising past the Tetons, hurtling across the desert. He was at his ranch home […]
Newspapers, publisher, vendorsWhat’s a j-school to do?
The media industry seeks a path to survival, even as the layoffs continue. The cost-cutting is far from over. There’s talk of a modest rebound for newspapers in 2010, but how do you define rebound? So how do the educational institutions that provide the talent and energy to help save the business succeed in this […]
j-school, journalism