2005-2014

1 June 2002

Is It Journalism?

There are a couple of ways to achieve chart-topping success in online news. The conventional route is to link a team of new-media journalists with a print or broadcast heavyweight. And then there's Yahoo! News. Yahoo! News (news.yahoo.com), the third most popular news site in the U.S., needs no reporters and creates no stories. It is the ultimate aggregator of online media, republishing the work...

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1 June 2002

Does Size Matter?

Chances are you won't bother to read this article. It is just one long block of text, after all, unbroken by alluring pictures, snappy captions, or eye-grabbing infographics. You can't click it. You can't flip it. All you can do is read it. And reading a full magazine article – as opposed to scanning, perusing, surfing – is so twentieth century, so retirement home, so William Shawn. Hal Espen, the...

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1 June 2002

Online Uprising

Full disclosure: I like bloggers. This is partly because my life as a freelance writer makes me naturally sympathetic to their independence of media institutions, partly because I find the bloggers' (short for Web loggers) endless links and commentary about stories in papers I wouldn't ordinarily see quite useful, and partly because my own political bent (hawkish, impatient with P.C. hand-wringing...

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1 June 2002

Uncivil War

As a one-man bureau covering a county outpost for Greensboro's News & Record, Ethan Feinsilver was always looking for The Story. He was willing to grind out dailies, but he came to the North Carolina paper to tackle more ambitious things, stories with some depth. He thought he found one in a press release from a local community college. The release announced a continuing education course, "North...

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30 May 2002

Journalist shot in Kashmir

The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns the shooting of Zafar Iqbal, a journalist for the Srinigar, Kashmir-based English-language daily Kashmir Images. Iqbal, who was shot by three unidentified assailants this afternoon, was seriously injured and is currently in the hospital in stable condition, according to journalists in Kashmir and Indian news reports. At about 3:00 p.m., three gunmen...

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27 May 2002

Will radio cut into print?

Will radio cut into print? Conventional wisdom is that it will. But, as with most questions that conventional wisdom tries to answer, the truth is a bit more complex. First, the costs involved. For example, for a one-time insertion in The Times of India, Mumbai edition, the cost is Rs 1,600 per cc. A 52-cc ad works out to Rs 83,200. And TV rates are astronomical. According to STAR India, a 30...

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13 May 2002

Reading at noon

The average Mumbaikar has a lot of time to read. The city is the financial capital of India, and millions of people are on the move every hour. It is a city with a life that no other Indian city has - hectic, even frenzied. Yet, ironically, it is a city where a lot of people have a lot of time to read. In the Colaba cafes sipping strawberry- or mango-flavoured iced teas, or swilling generous jugs...

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10 May 2002

Win 94.6: In a combative mood

It's the dark horse in the battle for FM radio in Mumbai. It does not have the cross-media presence or heavy nationwide spread that Times Group's Radio Mirchi is counting on. It does not have the multi-media spread that Go 92.5, the FM radio foray of Mid-Day Multimedia, is hoping to bank on. What it has is programming, an advertising budget of Rs 1 crore, licenses for Mumbai, Delhi and Chennai...

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3 May 2002

FM Radio: On air, at last

If you are in the radio business, then this was one hectic week. The week saw the launch of WIN 94.6, a private 24-hour FM station, on April 29 by Millennium Broadcast. Entertainment Network India Ltd, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Bennett, Coleman & Company, formally launched Radio Mirchi in Pune on Wednesday. The station debuted in Mumbai last week. As the stations ease into the new FM radio...

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2 May 2002

The Indian Express hopes to gain more readers

Some weeks ago television channels were hit with a rather glitzy advertising campaign with models sashaying down the ramp reading the new-look Sunday edition of The Indian Express. According to the company, the advertising blitz has seen initial success, and circulation figures of The Sunday Express have gone up. The question is: Will this help it overcome the formidable challenges that have...

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