2005-2014

12 September 2005

But Carefully Consider the Options: WAN

Smaller-sized newspapers are the future, but publishers should take time to optimise their strategy before rushing to change format. This is the advice of Jim Chisholm, Strategy Advisor to the World Association of Newspapers, speaking in Washington at a recent Newspaper Association of America "Free vs. Paid/Tabloid vs. Broadsheet" conference. "Yes smaller formats are a good idea. Readers have been...

More
11 September 2005

Guardian tries to catch up with the times

AT The Guardian, they claim that they came up with the idea of a compact newspaper long before The Independent. In August 2003, so the story goes, the paper’s editor, Alan Rusbridger, returned from a holiday brandishing a copy of the Italian newspaper La Repubblica. Executives at The Guardian had been looking at the possi-bility of a tabloid edition for months, worried by market research that...

More
11 September 2005

The changing of the Guardian

Alan Rusbridger, editor of the Guardian (and editor-in-chief of The Observer), thumbs through a battered volume by CP Scott, the architect of the newspaper that tomorrow embarks on arguably the most radical - and certainly the most expensive - relaunch in its 184-year history. He reads: 'The editor and the business manager should march hand in hand,' and then adds: 'and that's how it was, largely...

More
11 September 2005

Biloxi newspaper delivers record press run after Katrina

BILOXI, Miss. - The Sun Herald on the Mississippi Gulf Coast printed 80,000 newspapers for Sunday, its largest press run ever, and distributed the issue free at shelters and to relief workers helping with the recovery from Hurricane Katrina. "We believe the information that our reporters, photographers and editors are supplying is essential to the success of our overall recovery during this...

More
11 September 2005

NY Times Public Editor Rips Paper for Past New Orleans Coverage

NEW YORK: Public Editor Byron Calame of The New York Times explored the newspaper’s past coverage of New Orleans on Sunday in a column that slammed the paper for failing to report on the hurricane-ravaged city’s potential for disaster and growing poverty population. In his seventh column since assuming the ombudsman-like role last spring, Calame said the Times should have done more in recent years...

More
11 September 2005

US won't ban media from New Orleans searches

HOUSTON, Texas (CNN) -- Rather than fight a lawsuit by CNN, the federal government abandoned its effort Saturday to prevent the media from reporting on the recovery of the dead in New Orleans. Joint Task Force Katrina "has no plans to bar, impede or prevent news media from their news gathering and reporting activities in connection with the deceased Hurricane Katrina victim recovery efforts," said...

More
11 September 2005

US backs off Katrina media ban

US authorities have backed off a proposed ban by the US military on journalists and photographers documenting the recovery of bodies in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. CNN yesterday filed a suit in the US District Court in Houston to halt government efforts to exclude the media, rejecting the official argument that the television images would not respect the privacy of the dead. A judge...

More
11 September 2005

They went, they saw, they filed

Imagine, if you will, James Cameron reporting from the Berlin Airlift today. There he is in a bar, about to order another whisky, when his phone rings. "James, desk here, Bild website are saying flights are due to start. Can you re-nose your piece?" Or William Russell in the Crimea, receiving yet another email from the office: "Bill, Sky coverage of Charge pretty thorough. Can you stick to the...

More
10 September 2005

How the US occupation is murdering the truth

Waleed Khaled was shot by US troops last week while working for Reuters TV. In response US army spokesman General Rick Lynch claimed that the US soldiers "took appropriate measures". Lynch said, "What our soldiers on the scene saw was a car travelling forward at a high rate of speed. It looked like cars that we have seen in the past used as suicide bombs… and there were two local nationals inside...

More
10 September 2005

Thirty per cent users prefer Indiatimes for news

NEW DELHI, September 10: Indiatimes is most preferred news source on the Web for almost one out of every three Net users in India, according to a recent survey of India's Internet scene. Be it general, sport or event related news, it is the top player in this category with 30 per cent user share. Indiatimes’ popularity can be attributed to its close association with Times of India, one of the...

More