2005-2014

19 September 2005

Katrina Drove Online Traffic In August To Local Media

Hundreds of thousands of people looking for the latest news on Hurricane Katrina went to New Orleans' local media last month to get the latest on the storm's devastation, a web metrics firm said Monday. Nola.com, the web home of the New Orleans Times-Picayune newspaper owned by Advance Publications, saw its traffic soar 277 percent from July to 1.7 million visitors in August, ComScore Networks...

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19 September 2005

Young Reader Prize Presented to Irish, South African Newspapers

The Irish Independent and The Limpopo Mirror newspaper in South Africa were jointly awarded the World Young Reader Prize by the World Association of Newspapers during a ceremony Monday in Buenos Aires, Argentina. La Prensa of Panama received a Jury Commendation from the Paris-based WAN. Special Mention awards went to The Hindustan Times in India and to The Record of Hackensack, New Jersey in the...

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19 September 2005

Murdoch hits 'brick wall' in China, calls Beijing 'paranoid'

BEIJING, (AFP) - News Corp. chairman Rupert Murdoch has accused authorities in Beijing of being paranoid after admitting plans to develop his empire in China have "hit a brick wall", the Financial Times reported. Murdoch said Chinese authorities were no longer opening up theier vast untapped market to international media companies, reversing their stance from a year ago. The newspaper said Murdoch...

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19 September 2005

Katrina Whips Up Spectrum Storm in D.C.

Hearst-Argyle Television senior vp for news Fred Young has a message for the rising chorus of officials telling TV broadcasters to move, and soon, off the spectrum they’ve used for decades: Look at the example of WDSU in New Orleans, and think about whether it’s smart to take away TV signals that are a lifeline for many people. Beginning two days before Hurricane Katrina laid waste to the city...

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19 September 2005

Former 'Times-Pic' Staffers Raise Over $20,000 for Paper's Employees

NEW YORK: A fund set up to raise money for staffers at The Times-Picayune in New Orleans has brought in $22,000 in donations in just two weeks, according to organizers. The effort, aimed at raising money for employees of the paper who have been severely impacted by Hurricane Katrina, is being run by a group of former Times-Picayune employees. "I would guess that it is close to 40 different...

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19 September 2005

Threat to Reporter's Privilege Is 'Severe'

The government threat to journalistic privilege is now as great as it has been since the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press began its annual Homefront Confidential report six years ago. The report, which studies how the war on terrorism has affected access to information, rates several categories according to a scale that mimics the color-coded threat level of the Department of Homeland...

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19 September 2005

More Horrible Than Truth: News Reports

DISASTER has a way of bringing out the best and the worst instincts in the news media. It is a grand thing that during the most terrible days of Hurricane Katrina, many reporters found their gag reflex and stopped swallowing pat excuses from public officials. But the media's willingness to report thinly attributed rumors may also have contributed to a kind of cultural wreckage that will not clean...

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19 September 2005

IPDC-UNESCO Prize for Rural Communication

Projects that contribute to media development in rural areas are eligible for a US$20,000 award. October 1 is the deadline to apply for the Prize for Rural Communication, organized by UNESCO and the International Program for the Development of Communication (IPDC). The goal is to honor efforts to improve communication in every way, particularly through local newspapers, radio and TV programs...

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19 September 2005

Wiped Off the Map, and Belatedly Put Back on It

The fact that most of those left behind in the New Orleans flood were poor and black is being treated by the press as a stunning revelation -- "A National Shame," as Newsweek's cover put it. But not exactly a national secret. "Apparently none of these ace reporters has ever set foot in Washington's Anacostia district, or South Central Los Angeles, or the trailer parks of rural Arkansas," writes...

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19 September 2005

The Times Selects Payment Service

THE ONLINE VERSION OF THE New York Times today intends to launch a paid service, TimesSelect, which will put some of the paper's most popular voices--including David Brooks, Maureen Dowd, and Nicholas Kristof--behind a paid wall. Access to these and other columnists, plus exclusive features and the Times's archives, now requires either $7.95 per month or $49.49 per year. TimesSelect is available...

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