2005-2014

13 September 2005

The venerable Guardian thinks small

Britain's Guardian newspaper, a venerable 184-year-old broadsheet, has become the latest major daily to convert to a compact format in a bid to win back younger, time-pressed readers who often turn to electronic means to get their news. Unlike its rivals -- The Times of London and The Independent, which have converted to the smaller tabloid format -- The Guardian has chosen the "Berliner" format...

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13 September 2005

Majority Say Press Doing Good Job on Katrina

NEW YORK: A new CNN/USA Today/Gallup survey finds that 58% of Americans say they are following news coverage of the hurricane disaster -- and a vast majority give the media high marks. At the same time, only 43% of Americans give President Bush a passing grade in response to Hurricane Katrina, with 54% disapproving, and 7 in 10 call for an independent probe of the federal response. According to...

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13 September 2005

Yahoo! hires top journalist to tour world's danger areas

"One man. A World of Conflict." That is how the internet portal Yahoo! is announcing its move into the world of war reporting. Hiring one of the world's best-known war correspondents is seen as a move by Yahoo! to widen its horizons and challenge traditional media companies. Kevin Sites, the American cameraman famous for filming the shooting by a US soldier of an apparently unarmed civilian in a...

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13 September 2005

Yahoo takes content to war

New York - Yahoo, hoping to attract younger audiences to its news site, is making its first major foray into original content with a brash, one-man effort to illuminate the world's armed conflicts. The internet company's media group has hired Kevin Sites, a 42-year-old war correspondent who has worked for NBC and CNN, to spend a year traveling the globe and telling the human stories behind some of...

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13 September 2005

Yahoo! Puts Sites in Hot Zone

NEW YORK (Mediaweek) Yahoo! has hired veteran war correspondent Kevin Sites to launch an online news journal, Kevin Sites in the Hot Zone, which the company claims will provide users "an unprecedented view of armed conflict throughout the world." Hot Zone, which will cover Sites' travels throughout war-torn areas of the globe for a one-year period, will be aimed at a worldwide audience. Thus far...

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13 September 2005

CBS News launches Public Eye

CBS News has launched Public Eye, an unprecendented effort to bring transparency to the editorial operations of a major news network, and part of CBS News' attempt to regain the trust of the public after last year's "Memogate." Public Eye is built around a blog format, in which the journalists who make the editorial decisions at CBS News and CBSNews.com will now be asked to explain and answer...

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13 September 2005

Newspaper company sees lower earnings due to Katrina

SAN JOSE, Calif. – Knight Ridder Inc., one of the nation's largest newspaper publishers, said today that third-quarter earnings from continuing operations will decline by about 20 percent due to damages related to Hurricane Katrina and higher newsprint costs. Last year, the company reported third-quarter earnings per share from continuing operations of 93 cents, compared with total earnings per...

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13 September 2005

Ethnic media report, help their own

SAN FRANCISCO – "Black general takes charge in New Orleans." "Undocumented won't be allowed to receive help from FEMA." "1,700 Koreans in New Orleans yet to be located." With passion and pride, ethnic news organizations in the United States are sending reporters, photographers and TV crews to the disaster area and covering the Hurricane Katrina story from angles not seen in many major metropolitan...

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13 September 2005

As bodies recovered, reporters are told 'no photos, no stories'

New Orleans -- A long caravan of white vans led by an Army humvee rolled Monday through New Orleans' Bywater district, a poor, mostly black neighborhood, northeast of the French Quarter. Recovery team members wearing white protective suits and black boots stopped at houses with spray painted markings on the doors designating there were dead bodies inside. Outside one house on Kentucky Street, a...

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13 September 2005

Fellowship to investigate conflict in subcontinent

September 20 is the last day for Indian and Pakistani journalists in the middle of their careers to apply for the Saneeya Hussain Indo-Pak Media Fellowships. The fellowships offer a grant of US$600 plus financial support for an investigative project. The aim is to encourage rational, balanced reporting on issues related to the tensions between India and Pakistan. Panos South Asia is organizing the...

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