newspapers http://michiganradio.org en Commentary: Newspapers still matter http://michiganradio.org/post/commentary-newspapers-still-matter <p>Last week I went to Springfield, Illinois to do some workshops for a program called NewsTrain, which is sponsored by a number of journalism organizations and foundations.</p><p>The idea was to provide reporters and editors, a fair number of them from Michigan, with tools to do their jobs in what was described as a “rapidly changing media setting.” Translated, that means a world where fewer reporters are supposed to do more work on multiple media platforms at the same time.&nbsp;</p><p>Newspapers always have been a backbone of our democracy. Thomas Jefferson once said that he’d prefer newspapers without government to a government without newspapers.</p><p> Tue, 07 May 2013 12:45:52 +0000 Jack Lessenberry 12443 at http://michiganradio.org Commentary: Newspapers still matter Find the work you love and forget the rest http://michiganradio.org/post/find-work-you-love-and-forget-rest <p><a href="http://www.careercast.com/jobs-rated/best-worst-jobs-2013">CareerCast.com ranked more than 1,000 American jobs</a>, and determined that the worst job isn’t garbage collector, animal cage cleaner or Lindsey Lohan’s sobriety tester &nbsp;– but journalist.</p><p>Yes!&nbsp; Score!&nbsp; Booyah!</p><p>They based their rankings on four criteria:</p><ul><li>the workplace environment,</li><li>the industry’s future,</li><li>the job’s average income,</li><li>and stress.</li></ul><p>Okay, it’s true: newsrooms aren’t pretty places.&nbsp; The future looks bleak for newspapers.&nbsp; You can make more money doing a lot of other things.&nbsp; And, yes, the stress is very real. &nbsp;The hours are bad and many of our customers think they can do it better – and often take the time to tell us that.</p><p>But journalists themselves have reacted to this ranking with all the cool, collected calm of Geraldo Rivera, or Nancy Grace.</p><p>But here’s why: newsrooms aren’t for everybody, but we <em>like</em> them – the hustle and bustle and energy and urgency.&nbsp; We like the stress, too – no matter how much we complain about it – because it comes with doing work we think actually matters. Fri, 26 Apr 2013 05:11:00 +0000 John U. Bacon 12288 at http://michiganradio.org Find the work you love and forget the rest Two metro Detroit newspapers could face strikes in the coming weeks http://michiganradio.org/post/two-metro-detroit-newspapers-could-face-strikes-coming-weeks <p>Union workers at the Macomb Daily and Royal Oak Tribune newspapers are contemplating a possible strike and other job actions at the end of the month.</p><p>The Journal Register company owns the papers. It has announced plans to end its union contracts and probably make deep cuts in its union and non-union workforces, more than 800 people statewide.</p><p>Lou Mleczko is the president of the Newspaper Guild of Detroit. He says the unions, representing the union 175 members involved, met Sunday to agree on a strategy.</p><p>“We are not just going to sit idly by and let them terminate these contracts….and strip pay and benefits away from our members,” says Mleczko.&nbsp;</p><p>Mleczko says the unions plan to start telling advertisers about their plans.</p><p>He says the unions may hold strike authorization votes before March 19th.</p><p>That’s the date of the next bankruptcy hearing for the Journal Register company. Mon, 04 Mar 2013 21:00:00 +0000 Steve Carmody 11507 at http://michiganradio.org Two metro Detroit newspapers could face strikes in the coming weeks Not Dutch? New Spanish language magazine launches in Holland http://michiganradio.org/post/not-dutch-new-spanish-language-magazine-launches-holland <p>Most people know Holland, Michigan for its Dutch roots and maybe it’s <a href="http://www.michiganradio.org/term/tulip-time-festival">big tulip festival</a>.</p><p>But in the 2010 U.S. Census, more than&nbsp;1 in 5 people who live in Holland identified as Latino. So maybe it’s no surprise why <a href="http://www.hollandsentinel.com/homepage">The Holland Sentinel </a>newspaper decided to put out a new Spanish&nbsp;language monthly&nbsp;magazine.</p> Fri, 25 Jan 2013 03:09:20 +0000 Lindsey Smith 10928 at http://michiganradio.org Not Dutch? New Spanish language magazine launches in Holland Commentary: The need for newspapers http://michiganradio.org/post/commentary-need-newspapers <p><font color="#000000" face="Arial" size="2"><font size="4">The conventional wisdom is that newspapers -- dead tree news -- are on their way out. In some places, like Ann Arbor, there is no longer a daily newspaper at all. The publishers of the Detroit News and Detroit Free Press deliver papers only a few days a week.</font></font></p> Wed, 25 Jul 2012 14:43:00 +0000 Jack Lessenberry 8432 at http://michiganradio.org Commentary: The need for newspapers Homeless writers find meaning, sense of self http://michiganradio.org/post/homeless-writers-find-meaning-sense-self <p>If you walk around downtown Ann Arbor you may have spotted people selling something called <a href="http://groundcovernews.com/">Groundcover News</a>. The paper is what’s known as a <a href="http://www.nasna.org/">street newspaper</a>. That means homeless people sell the paper for $1 and they make a profit on every issue they sell.&nbsp;</p><p>http://stream.publicbroadcasting.net/production/mp3/michigan/local-michigan-999268.mp3</p> Sun, 08 Jan 2012 21:33:18 +0000 Kyle Norris 5690 at http://michiganradio.org Homeless writers find meaning, sense of self A.V. Club Ann Arbor closes after roughly 3 months in business http://michiganradio.org/post/av-club-ann-arbor-closes-after-roughly-3-months-business <p>The <a href="http://www.avclub.com/annarbor/">Ann Arbor A.V. Club </a>has folded. The local entertainment arm of the popular satirical newspaper &ldquo;The Onion&rdquo; made its debut in September and employed three full time workers.</p><p><a href="http://www.heritage.com/articles/2011/07/31/ann_arbor_journal/news/doc4e32b0bb8db37263425912.txt">Bobby Mitchell</a> and his company Bopper Media handled all aspects of the Ann Arbor Onion and A.V. Club franchise - from printing to distribution and ad sales. Mitchell did not want to be recorded for an interview, but he did confirm that the November 24<sup>th</sup> issue was the last one he&rsquo;d be publishing. He wouldn&rsquo;t say more except to say &ldquo;lawyers&rdquo; were involved. He also added that there&#39;s a slight possibility The Onion corporate might want to take over the Ann Arbor A.V. Club and publish it.</p><p>Curtis Sullivan was very surprised to hear the news. Sullivan co-owns the comic store <a href="http://www.vaultofmidnight.com/">Vault of Midnight</a> in Ann Arbor. He says, unlike other free, entertainment weeklies, copies of the Onion&rsquo;s used to fly off the shelves at his store:</p><p>&quot;We almost never have leftovers of the Onion! And I hear people talking about, &#39;did you read The Onion?&#39; I don&rsquo;t know, you don&rsquo;t really hear that as much about other things.&quot;</p><p>Sullivan himself is a huge fan of The Onion - so much so he even signed up for a full year of advertisements with the local A.V. Club, something he never does:</p><p>&quot;I&rsquo;m not very excited about print advertising as a business owner generally. When they approached us, it was like, this is great, we&rsquo;ll do it! I thought it would be a perfect match.&quot;</p><p>Instead, Sullivan&#39;s <a href="http://platform.publicbroadcasting.net/michigan-new/media/docs/vaultonion.pdf">Vault of Midnight ad</a> only got to run once before the publication folded. Wed, 30 Nov 2011 19:55:12 +0000 Jennifer Guerra 5198 at http://michiganradio.org A.V. Club Ann Arbor closes after roughly 3 months in business Booth papers, MLive.com form new company, cut home delivery http://michiganradio.org/post/booth-papers-mlivecom-form-new-company-cut-home-delivery <p>According to a <a href="http://blog.mlive.com/updates/2011/11/letter_from_our_publisher_anno.html">press release</a> by Booth Newspapers Publisher Dan Gaydou, Booth Newspapers and MLive.com will now operate as one consolidated company, MLive Media Group.</p><p>Distribution and administrative operations will move to Advance Central Services Michigan, a newly formed subsidiary company.</p><p>The restructuring will most likely mean job cuts as the organization increases its focus on digital content.</p><p>From the announcement on MLive.com:</p><blockquote><p>Many of our newspaper employees will have a place in the MLive Media Group and will still work in your local community at the MLive Media Group office. Many others will have a place at Advance Central Services Michigan. While we believe these changes will create growth opportunities for our current employees, the reality is they will also lead to reductions in our work force. We will provide as much notice and consideration to our employees as possible. We&rsquo;ll strive throughout this process to treat all our employees with the professionalism and respect they deserve.</p></blockquote><p>Gaydou says MLive Media Group will open new offices and hire people to produce content for its online products and its newspapers. Employees affected by the layoffs will be able to apply for those jobs.</p><p>Home delivery will be reduced to three days a week for the following newspapers, with daily content available in an online format.</p><ul><li>The Grand Rapids Press</li><li>The Kalamazoo Gazette</li><li>The Muskegon Chronicle</li><li>The Jackson Citizen Patriot</li></ul><p>Other Booth newspapers including the Flint Journal, Saginaw News, Bay City Times, and AnnArbor.com will also move under the MLive Media Group name but delivery changes at those papers are not expected.</p><p><em>John Klein Wilson - Michigan Radio newsroom</em> Wed, 02 Nov 2011 21:11:25 +0000 Michigan Radio Newsroom 4818 at http://michiganradio.org Booth papers, MLive.com form new company, cut home delivery Why Journalism Matters http://michiganradio.org/post/why-journalism-matters <p>We&rsquo;re living today in a confusing and somewhat frightening time. Michigan is in trouble, economically. Trouble of a different kind than we&rsquo;ve been through before. The longtime mainstay of our economy, the automotive industry, will never again be what it was.</p><p>This has plunged us from one of the nation&rsquo;s richer states to one of its poorer ones. State government is finally facing a financial crisis it tried to ignore for years, and the governor is proposing changes that seem radical and sometimes hard to understand.</p><p>Beyond that, education at all levels is in crisis. We learned last month that our largest city has suffered a staggering population loss over the last decade.</p><p>There are real questions about whether Detroit and other cities, communities and school districts are going to have to be taken over by Emergency Financial Managers.</p><p>Understanding all this is vitally important in order to make key decisions for our own lives. Should we trust the public schools? Should we buy a house? Where should we live?</p><p>And even, should we leave the state?</p><p>We clearly need thoughtful, intelligent and easily accessible journalism to help make sense of these and other events - and need it possibly more than at any other time in our history.</p><p>Yet journalism is in trouble too. Journalists, if they do their jobs right, are never very popular. Much of the time, we&rsquo;re bringing you bad news, and some of the time, we are obnoxious about it.</p><p>But right now, we&rsquo;re having trouble doing that. Digging our news is an expensive, labor-intensive job, and the vast majority has always been done by newspapers. Yet newspapers are facing a deep crisis of their own, thanks in large part to the internet revolution, and our changing lifestyles. Newspapers have been supported historically by advertising, and much of that has melted away to cyberspace. We also don&rsquo;t read newspapers as much as we used to. People read news on the internet, but internet providers produce little news.</p><p>They merely collect it - mainly from our shrinking newspapers.</p><p>That doesn&rsquo;t mean some broadcast and even online publications don&rsquo;t produce quality journalism. But in terms of content, it is comparatively small.</p><p>Last night I spoke at the Detroit area Society of Professional Journalists annual banquet. Michigan Radio won a number of awards, and an encouraging amount of good journalism was on display. But attendance was smaller than last year. Some people have left the profession. Some companies no longer buy tickets.</p><p>Yet there were still an impressive corps of men and women there who work long hours for usually not much pay to find out what we need to know and shape it into an interesting package. Thu, 07 Apr 2011 15:13:27 +0000 Jack Lessenberry 1956 at http://michiganradio.org Why Journalism Matters Saving Newspapers http://michiganradio.org/post/saving-newspapers <p>It&rsquo;s hardly a secret that newspapers aren&rsquo;t doing very well these days. Over the decades, they&rsquo;ve been gradually replaced as the nation&rsquo;s universal mass medium by television.</p><p>Newspaper&rsquo;s biggest economic blow came, however, with the flight of advertising revenue to the Internet. This, combined with an ever-more busy public bombarded by more and more media choices, has badly wounded what was once a thriving industry. And, left us in danger of being dangerously uninformed as well. Ann Arbor, for example, no longer has a daily newspaper at all.</p><p>The problem is perhaps most acute in Detroit, where, twenty-five years ago, the Detroit News and Free Press sold a combined total of one point three million newspapers every day.</p><p>That number has declined ever since. Audited figures show that as of last September, they were down to a combined circulation of less than four hundred thousand, a number that has dropped further since then.</p><p>To save money two years ago, Detroit&rsquo;s newspapers embarked on an experiment in which they would deliver the papers only three days a week, and asked consumers to read them online or go to the store and buy it the rest of the week. This really hasn&rsquo;t worked. Mon, 14 Mar 2011 14:57:33 +0000 Jack Lessenberry 1637 at http://michiganradio.org Saving Newspapers Michigan Lawmakers look to change legal notice policies http://michiganradio.org/post/michigan-lawmakers-look-change-legal-notice-policies <p>On Thursday, members of the Michigan State House Committee will discuss two bills that could change how cities and townships publicize legal notices such as public hearings and foreclosures.&nbsp;</p><p>Current laws require all legal notices to be published in local newspapers. But these bills would allow local governments to post the information on their own websites or an online newspaper. Other options include broadcasting the notices on a radio or television station.</p> Wed, 09 Mar 2011 19:22:23 +0000 Michigan Radio Newsroom 1539 at http://michiganradio.org Michigan Lawmakers look to change legal notice policies Detroit newspapers to squeeze the belt tighter http://michiganradio.org/post/detroit-newspapers-squeeze-belt-tighter <p><font color="#000000" id="role_document" size="2"><font size="4">Newspapers aren&rsquo;t doing well these days, though the companies that own them are still making money. Michigan Radio&rsquo;s Jack Lessenberry <a href="http://jackshow.blogs.com/jack/2010/10/essay-newspapers-in-crisis-10182010.html">says </a>the result is being played out in Detroit.</font></font></p><p><font color="#000000" size="2"><font size="4">_______</font></font></p> Tue, 19 Oct 2010 10:43:23 +0000 Jack Lessenberry 164 at http://michiganradio.org Detroit newspapers to squeeze the belt tighter