Peoria Pundit

News and Media from River City

Archive for the 'media' Category

Media: PJS owner closes another newspaper

Posted in media with tags on March 11, 2009 by Billy Dennis

More bloodletting:

GateHouse Media, the parent company of The Girard Press and The Morning Sun, announced Tuesday that it is closing The Press.

The March 25 edition will be the last of the publication.

“The decision to close the newspaper was not an easy one,” said Stephen Wade, editor and publisher of both papers. He noted that economic challenges have overwhelmed the newspaper’s ability to continue printing weekly.

The Morning Sun, with a circulation that overlaps much of The Press’, will continue to serve the area.

GateHouse blames the bad economy, but I note that the company’s entire business stratgey has always been based on buying up every single newspaper in a region, and then eliminating redundant costs. Overlapping circulation? Yeah like that was going to last long.

Media: Sometimes, just a little less right than usual

Posted in media on February 10, 2009 by Billy Dennis

*Ahem*

blogging5

It must be tiring to be 100 percent right, all the time, especially when it prevents you from being able to process the fact that someone else admitted a mistake and apologized.

Hat tip: Emerge.

Media: HOI anchor gets out alive (Was: Did WHOI lower the boom today?)

Posted in media with tags , , on February 6, 2009 by Billy Dennis

WHOINews anchor Tim McGinnis made the following remark on his Twitter page:

That’s it, my last WHOI newscast, maybe my last 10p.m. ever.

Oh, boy. I didn’t watch WHOI today. Does anyone know what was said?

UPDATE: Good news for Tim, from his Twitter page:

@PeoriaPundit I am moving to myrtle beach,sc. To be the anchor at WPDE. The boom was not lowered.

Congrats to Tim.

Media: Online journalism reaches a milestone

Posted in media on December 21, 2008 by Billy Dennis

The Los Angeles Times’ Website is now paying for itself.

I say again: The Los Angeles Times’ Website is now paying for itself. In other words, people are buying enough ads on the Web to cover the costs of putting it on the Web. And the amount on online ads sold each year continues to grow, while ads on dead treas continues to drop.

Oh, we’re not at the point where newspap3ers can sell their printing presses for scrap iron and switch to a business model centered on selling news to readers rather than owning local printing press monopolies, and the door to door distribution of half-day-old news.

Media: A little cat blogging anyone?

Posted in media with tags on November 13, 2008 by Billy Dennis

I got in trouble for creating a “mommy blogging” category.

So, I expect to get chewed out for recommending some cat blogging.

Heh.

Media: Press conference in Peoria to promote Con-Con

Posted in media with tags , , on September 9, 2008 by Billy Dennis

Bruno Behrend, Co-Founder of the Illinois Citizens Coalition and Co-author of “Illinois Deserves Better – the Ironclad case for an Illinois Constitutional Convention,” will be appearing at a press conference at the County building at the corner of Main and Jefferson at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday.

Copies of the book will be available.

Note: It would be great if Peoria bloggers attend.

Media: War on bloggers at the RNC? Not quite

Posted in media with tags , , , , on September 2, 2008 by Billy Dennis

Via someone on Daily Kos:

Freedom of the Press is really in danger folks. I mean really in danger. Amy Goodman, host of Democracy Now! has been arrested today while covering the RNC convention and the corresponding protests. A number of senior DN! producers have also been detained. The program – in its 12th year is a go-to resource for those of us who want the news that MSM refuses to cover in depth.
This is how they quell dissent, clampdown on the free flow of information and make an example out of those who dare to speak truth to power. Call who you need to call, make your voices heard.
THIS CANNOT STAND!

Right.

So, here’s what Mashable is reporting:

Over the weekend, a number of bloggers and the New York Times rose to defend what they termed as a number of bloggers and podcasters who were arrested in Minneapolis. Podcasting News called it “a pre-emptive attempt to stifle protest and independent media coverage.” The truth is a little bit different from the story presented there and at BoingBoing, Salon and a dozen other blogs.

Snip

This time around, though, law enforcement appears partially justified in their pre-emptive raids on at least four houses where self-proclaimed anarchists and anti-authoritarians were housed. While some of them might have had personal blog or even blogs dedicated to politics, their goal was not primarily to document, but (according to their organization’s website) to help “all anarchists and anti-authoritarians, all radicals and rabble-rousers … crash the convention” and blockade downtown so as to “disrupt traffic to the convention.”

I encourage politically citizens — regardless of their politics — to also blog about their activities. But if those activities include civil disobedience, then they ought to expect to pay the price. When Henry David Thoreau, the guy who literally wrote the book on civil disobedience, went to jail for refusing to pay taxes to support the Mexican-American War, he expected to go to jail. He didn’t claim that being a journalist was a get-out-of-jail free card.

If a blogger is covering one of these group’s activities, that’s journalism, no matter how sympathetic the blogger is to the cause. But if that blogger is a member of the group and a planner of these activities, he or she is a participant and ought to go to jail with the rest of them.

And here is the irony that’s going to be lost on these people. Their “protests” are designed to disrupt the convention, thus preventing the GOP from exercising their right to assemble. Why am I not surprised? The far left will TELL you they are for freedom of speech. They ACT, however, as if the only rights they cherish are their own.

Media: Newly discovered Peoria blogger (UPDATED)

Posted in media with tags , , , on January 2, 2008 by Billy Dennis

The name is Rotund Reader. The posts go back to August 2007. This post notes a cause of consumer censorship at the Big Hollow Cubs. This blogger noticed another customer flipping around a copy Cosmopolitan magazine so that virgin eyes won’t happen to glance upon naughty headlines. That’s funny, because just a few minutes earlier, I came across a blogger who was advocating a national campaign to get stores to remove any magazine with naughty headlines from locations where a little kid can read them.

UPDATE: I had a Twitter chat with the blogger I mentioned. She’s not nearly the bluenose that this post might otherwise suggest.