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FULL MAY - JUNE 2001 ARCHIVE

Web Tops Newspapers
A new study reports that the people who use newspapers most -- those aged 55 and older -- say the Internet is a more important medium to them than newspapers, by a margin of 52 to 37 percent. "The Internet is fragmenting the news audience, stealing time and attention from other media, including newspapers," says John Mc Intyre, managing editor of Content Intelligence, which conducted the study. While newspaper subscribers haven't stopped subscribing in big numbers yet, they are spending less time reading the paper edition." Even though newspaper usage appears to be relatively stable now, the study suggests that the Web represents a real threat as it grabs more of people's time.

Great Work: Aids in the Caribbean
Poynter.org's "Worth a Look" feature looks at a wonderful Web adaptation of a six-part series about AIDS in the Caribbean that ran in the Sun-Sentinel in Ft. Lauderdale. The online package, produced in Flash, is a great example of how a newspaper can take advantage of the Web to tell a story in a new way online, rather than just repackaging and adding a few bells and whistles. How did an online site with limited resources do this? By getting advance notice and working closely with all departments. The package is also noteworthy because the paper took the effort to reach out to multiple communities, producing the online package in English, Spanish and even Creole. 

Online Publishers Association Formed
Twelve Internet content companies have formed a new group to represent the interest of online publishers "before the advertising community, the press, the government and the public." The founding members of the Online Publishers Association (OPA) include CBS MarketWatch, CNET Networks Inc., Conde Net, ESPN.com, The Industry Standard, KnightRidder.com/Real Cities, MSNBC.com, New York Times Digital, Salon Media Group Inc., USAToday.com, Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive, and the Wall Street Journal Online. It's not entirely clear how this group will separate itself from the Online News Association, but it appears as though it will focus more on advertising and business issues, while the ONA concentrates more on credibility and quality of work. 

Chew on This
cudABCNEWS.com has introduced a new, innovative feature called "CUD: Something to chew on. . ." -- which is basically a themed page containing short articles, quizzes, tidbits, media and links related to a particular topic, such as marriage. CUD also includes a new element, Dingaloids, which appear at the end of lines of text and look like this: This is an exclamation dingaloid This is a parentheses dingaloid This is a question dingaloid. When a user mouses over one of these small graphics for two seconds, a message pops up. Generally, the messages are smart-alecky quips. A clever idea, but the way the Dingaloids are being used they don't add much to the content. Perhaps if ABCNEWS.com starts incorporating reader comments into the Dingaloids they will get more useful and interesting.

Big Victory for Writers
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that media companies must get permission from free-lance authors before posting their articles to electronic databases -- a victory for both writers and copyright protection on the Internet. Many publishers now say they'll delete all free-lance stories from their electronic archives; the National Writers Union and free-lancers, meanwhile, are encouraging publishers to not do so and instead to negotiate with them.

Novel Use of the Net
The Wall Street Journal's free OpinionJournal.com site has been running a serial novel by Danielle Crittenden called, "Amanda.Bright@Home." The first installment ran in the print edition and online, and subsequent chapters have been published online only. A Journal spokeswoman says the site is running the serial in part because "gives us a chance to reach a new audience of women, women at home."

An Awarding Proposition
During last year's Online Journalism Awards ceremony Slashdot's Robin Miller complained that the entry fee ($100, or $80 for members) was too high and may have prevented smaller sites from entering. He told the audience that for 2001 he would pay for entries for five sites that otherwise couldn't afford it. Now he's keeping that promise and asking for submissions. Check out what others have suggested and post your own work.

New Online Content Group?
New York Times Digital's Martin Nisenholtz is reportedly among a group of big-name industry executives who are planning to launch a new trade group to represent the interests of Web content creators, according to AtNewYork. The group will be known as the Online Publishers Association (OPA).

Sex Sells
A German Web site publisher offered a ticket to a sold-out Madonna concert in exchange for sex with sex columnist Shelley Masters. Thema1 publisher Bernd Heusinger said 120 readers applied to the "In Bed FOR Madonna" campaign for a chance to win the ticket to attend the Berlin concert as his guest. Thema1 is a bit like the Drudge Report, Slashdot and The National Enquirer rolled into one. Enough said.

Wireless reporters
The Fresno (Calif.) Bee has installed a wireless telephone network around its offices and production facilities so calls follow employees wherever they go, in what E&P calls a "an apparent first for newspapers." The costs are minimal and the reporters are far easier to reach. No more being tied to the desk while waiting for that crucial call!

Bye-Bye Internet
The Industry Standard has dropped "Internet" from its slogan, changing it from "The Newsmagazine of the Internet Economy" to "Intelligence for the Information Economy." "We really liked our old moniker, but the term 'Internet Economy' has in many people's minds become inextricably linked with the world of dot-coms, and we've always been about much more than that," Editor in Chief Jonathan Weber writes in the magazine. "Make no mistake, we're still big believers in the importance of the Internet." Yeah, right. It's lucky when they started the magazine they didn't go with one of the title suggestions, "The Internet Standard."

Net Threat
The head of the Center for Digital Democracy warns that Big Media will use its control of the broadband Internet to "wall" content and thus "severely damage the vitality of the digital world."

Reporter's requests exposed
ExpertSource, a service designed to help journalists anonymously find sources, failed to protect its database, leaving journalists' requests viewable through Google. "The entries included thousands of reporter names, phone numbers and details on stories they were pursuing," The Wall Street Journal reported. The problem has since been fixed

Tribute to Suck.com
The Washington Post's Joel Garreau took a nostalgic look at the recently expired Suck.com, calling it "the great-granddaddy of all the online newspapers and magazines you see today."  Suck.com's readers, meanwhile, share their opinions about the site in Jim Romenesko's MediaNews Letters.

SAJA Award Winners
The South Asian Journalists Association announced winners of the 2001 SAJA Journalism Awards contest. CNET News.com and MSNBC.com were the winners in the new media categories. Read the winning entries and the runners-up.

Suck and Feed Cease
Two of the oldest original content sites on the Web, Suck and Feed, were "placed on immediate hiatus" due to lack of money. The Web pioneers' edgy content -- at times clever, at times random and rambling -- will be missed.

Meet Other CyberJournalists
Check out our new feature, a collection of links to Weblogs and personal sites of online journalists. Got a favorite site or a site of your own? Send it in!

Content Cutbacks
As online news sites have cut editorial staffs, they've also cut original content. WSJ.com looked at this disturbing trend. Several people quoted pointed out that sites need to offer something special to keep readers -- and readers are already noticing the difference. "It's thinner, it's shallower, it's more mass market," one person says of Salon.com. "It's just not as good."

Shoddy Synergy
News sites appear to be having trouble seperating fact from fiction these days -- at least when it involves movies by corporate parents. ABCNEWS.com's Pearl Harbor package and Webcast included images from the movie produced by Disney's Touchstone Pictures, as J.D. Lasica reported for the Online Journalism Review. CNN.com followed that June 6 by featuring on its cover a live chat with Tom Hanks about D-Day, timed to coincide with the broadcast of the "Band of Brothers" D-Day documentary on HBO. The site failed to mention that both CNN and HBO are own by AOL Time Warner. As Saturday Night Live's Church Lady character might have said, How conveeeenient!

Tips & Jobs Galore!
Check out the new, expanded Tips and Jobs sections. Check back often for updates. And send in your tips and links to good tips you've read. Thanks!

Wild West Online
In the Wild West atmosphere of online opinion-slinging, journalists are being sliced, diced, skewered and smoked as never before," writes The Washington Post's Howard Kurtz. "...What is it about the Web that fuels such slashing attacks?" One reason he gives is that online columnists get "little or no editing." 

Get Your News Buddy
Reuters will be launching an instant messaging News Buddy in June. The "interactive agent" will provide news headlines for free to those who add it to their buddy lists, while offering links designed to increase traffic to Reuters' Web site. Clever idea. And with the popularity of instant messaging, one that other news organizations would be smart to follow.

Online Journalism Awards
Time to get your applications ready for the Online Journalism Awards -- deadline is July 16. It will be interesting to see how they turn out after so many dot-coms have gone out of business or cut resources. Even so, they've added two new awards categories: Feature Journalism and Innovative Presentation of Information. AtNewYork.com explored some of these issues.

War Stories
The Newseum has put together an exhibit on war reporting, much of which can be viewed online -- including an essay by Harold Evans, video interviews with war correspondents and a Flash presentation of the coverage of seven wars.

Great Work: Pearl Harbor Packages
Both ABCNEWS.com and MSNBC.com used the much-anticipated movie "Pearl Harbor" as an excuse to produce impressive packages on the bombing. Check out the Flash reenactment of the bombing produced by MSNBC.com, in conjunction with Newsweek. ABCNEWS.com offered up eyewitness accounts, historical media clips, a quiz and a message board.
(Disclaimer)

Great Work: Virtual Voting
CourierPost Online partnered with the editorial department of its print brethren, The Courier-Post of New Jersey, in its push for statewide online voting. They commissioned a private company to create a sample, secure, online ballot, which walks users through an interactive vote of presidential, congressional and local candidates. A clever, original use of the Web -- and one of the few original projects by a newspaper's editorial department.

Google Groups
Reporters suffered a great loss with the recent demise of Deja.com, which made searching and posting to Usenet Newsgroups a breeze. Fortunately, Google bought Deja.com's 650 million record database and has just unveiled a new feature, called Google Groups, that enables you to search it quite well. You still can't post using Google, but the search feature alone is a valuable tool for finding sources, leads and ideas.

Online Ombudsman
MSNBC.com has hired an ombudsman, a first for an online news organization.
(Disclaimer)

Cool Calendar
WashingtonPost.com put together a unique Interactive Calendar looking at President Bush's first 100 days in office. The navigation could be a little easier, but the concept is clever and original. Each day includes a summary of the news of the day and links to stories, photo galleries, speech transcripts and audio and video from that day.

Boosting the Brand
Visiting a newspaper Web site increases the likelihood that a person will start a subscription to a print newspaper or buy single copies, according to a new survey. Interesting, particularly in light of recent announcements that some papers will start charging for access to their Web sites. Perhaps giving the content away for free isn't eroding circulation.

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