Thursday, November 16, 2017

US media gets craven over RT being named a foreign agent

The Nation, in a good piece by Aaron Mate, has the silence of American media — and American and international human rights groups — over the U.S. government's recent requirement that RT, the former Russia Today, has to register as a foreign agent.

First, it has less than 30K daily viewers. Nielsen doesn't list it among its top 94 cable networks.

Related, whether Russian-related purchases of ads in the U.S., and the minuscule amount spent on them, influenced our election last year or not (pro tip: it didn't), nobody's traced any of those buys to RT.

And yet, this:
RT has found few defenders among the foremost advocates of media freedom and free speech in the United States. The Nation sent queries about RT America’s foreign-agent designation to the leading US civil-liberties and media-freedom groups. Amnesty International, Reporters Without Borders, the Poynter Institute, and Columbia Journalism Review did not respond. Human Rights Watch and the National Coalition Against Censorship declined to comment. The silence by Human Rights Watch and Reporters Without Borders contrasts sharply with their condemning of the ongoing Gulf-state effort to close Al Jazeera. 
There are some exceptions. Michael W. Macleod-Ball, a legal adviser for the American Civil Liberties Union, says the foreign-agent investigation of Russian outlets “highlights the potential for mischief” in having FARA applied unequally, but that not enough is known about the government’s criteria to reach a conclusion.
Pathetic.

But not quite as bad as this:
At a recent Atlantic Council event, columnist and Brookings Fellow James Kirchick advocated “private sector initiatives…to name and shame and isolate RT and push it out of the respectable precincts of society.” For “young up-and-coming 22- and 23-year old journalists in the West,” considering employment at RT, Kirchick explained, “maybe they won’t take that job offer if they know they will never get a job afterwards at any reputable news organization.” On Twitter, a former Daily Show producer has just urged fellow comedians who work at RT’s comedy news show, Redacted Tonight, to stop being “useful idiots,” and instead “get work elsewhere.” 
Horrible.

Meanwhile, Google is reportedly considering banning RT. Other tech companies are looking at similar.

What's also shameful is the bipartisan collusion behind it.

As the action came from the Department of Justice, this arguably is AG Jeff Sessions throwing a bone back to President Donald Trump over Trump's alleged continuing anger over Sessions recusing himself from the alleged Russia collusion investigation, which necessitated the naming of Robert Mueller as special counsel.

For Democrats, this is another way to beat the Putin Did It drums and try to disempower Trump at the same time.

Both political parties, right along with journalists and journalism organizations, are showing their contempt for the First Amendment.

Beyond wingnuts who don't trust "the media," many intelligent left-liberals and leftists don't trust it for other reasons. Like this.

Monday, October 02, 2017

An ethics problem at the 'eastern front' headquarters

Near the bottom of this piece about the biolab on Galveston, where journalism turns straight to PR.

Multiple ethical issues here.

First is the local newspaper not doing a story like the Consortium News reporter actually did. That's PR by omission.

Second is multiple subsets of ethics issues in Ferguson's attack.

First subpiece is publicly attacking another journo for fake journalistic reasons.

Second is, er, lying, as it seems, about what the other journalist actually said and did not say.

Third is repeating that seeming lie to yet other outlets.

I don't know if there's a third main ethics issue, but that could be. That would be if the Consortium News author contacted the Galveston publisher, who then doubled down on Ferguson.

And, given that Galveston sea level has risen two feet in the past century, we need MORE concern about the biolab.

==

The bigger picture is that the "eastern front" probably does its fair share of turd-polishing.

Thursday, September 28, 2017

The war is being lost on the 'eastern' front

Nice, or 'nice,' to have an actual lead editorial tactician at this particular outpost on the 'eastern' front with the old head editorial tactician becoming the tactician for the entire publishing operation in this division when the previous Italian owner sold the division to the Germans.

Not so nice when it seems the only reason the new editorial tactician got the job was from being native to this division's patrol area and possibly being low-ballable due to her freelance work thinning out more and more.

Other than not being native to this brimstone site and only recently moved here, this staff sergeant in the editorial regiment could do a better job than the lead tactician. That includes page-building speed, page design quality, photo editing, story editing and other things.

Well, eventually a staff sergeant stops volunteering so much for the first louie when he or she is a seeming 90-day wonder. The 90-day wonder also, despite having had 4-5 years of freelance time for personal reconnaissance of the news scene, appears unaware of some terminology in her home state.

That's a 90-day wonder, who despite all her alleged writing experience, doesn't know AP Style well, doesn't know that "entrée" is a synonym for "entry" and not just a French meal course, and who doesn't know that a phrase like "second annual" should not be capitalized because it's not part of a title, and many more thing. Worse yet, from a daily paper's POV, is that she has nobody else proofread her front pages. So, besides crappy layout, even if she's edited stories, cutline spelling mistakes and more continue.

I've said enough, as I continue to trudge with the other troops in the trenches, and also up my recon of the surrounding scene.

I've attached a map of a recent day's tactics by the louie. Just enough to give the big picture without giving away secrets. And no, that's not the worst possible map.

Monday, September 04, 2017

The 'eastern front' may be hitting headwinds in France

What would people think about a six-day daily regiment that

Is looking (again) for an editorial captain.
That’s after promoting the city news First Louie to the position in May.
Hired an exercise, athletics and competitions First Louie at the start of fall competition season.
That is after a possible fall competition First Louie from another army company decided not to go there.
And, turnover in editorial non-coms.

Interesting, no?

Been there once myself.

Eventually, the top general got rid of the regimental commander at the outpost, but it took  more than a year of the local marching staff describing command problems before action was taken.

And, no, no secrets. These are all publicly known openings. 

---

Turns out the regimental commander has been gotten rid of at this post, too. Wasn't handling the troops correctly in some cases, and may have wanted to "handle" them in others.

---

And, five months later, is looking for another editorial captain.

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

Morning News and Star-Telegram JOA five years off? Less?

The Morning News recently announced it was outsourcing most of its advertising graphics work to Gannett. That's with a layoff of 45 people.

That, in turn comes just six months after the Snooze said it was outsourcing its page-building to GateHell. That got rid of about 20 jobs.

The Snooze cited "declining revenue," but didn't say how bad the decline was, whether the paper or the Belo parent is still profitable, if so, by how much, etc.

Speculation about the Morning News and Fort Worth Star-Telegram entering a joint operating agreement has run rampant for several years, starting when they started divvying up, and sharing the packaged product of, pro sports coverage in the Metroplex.

Of course, that was before Belo split TV and newspaper sides, followed by the newspaper successor half selling all non-Dallas print properties. Oh, and Belo sold off its share of Cars.com for short-term money, but what's a long-term revenue hole that's soon starting to hit. More on that here, on the deal, and here, on the five-year preferred treatment that has has two years left.

During the previous speculation, everybody figured the Snooze was operating from the side of strength. I didn't totally think that then, and certainly don't know.

McClatchy is a pretty strong newspaper company, and has held the StartleGram long enough to develop some stability there. If anybody is in a position of at least relative strength, it's the StartleGram, in my book.

==

In all of this, the smugness of the Snooze, year after year, is part of why I blog about this. I have a friend who works there, and his girlfriend used to. I don't know that she still does, as she was a copy editor/paginator, per the outsourcing to Gatehouse. No schadenfreude against them, but the company's smugness stinks.

Plus spinning off the graphics to Gannett? I guess Belo's alternative biz of providing graphics, advertising and PR services in Dallas isn't working, else these people would have been moved rather than shit-canned, right?

==

Update, Sept. 19: The Snooze must be getting closer to packing it in .... I saw help wanteds for SIX different intern slots. Yes, they'd be taking interns anyway, but with fewer staff to supervise them, how much do they learn? Or are they replacements?

Monday, August 07, 2017

Goodbye to Granite

It's been six-plus months since I left the last newspaper I worked at for Granite Publications, one of three people downsized as the paper planned a switch from semiweekly to weekly publication.

I'm not one to talk too much out of school, but other former editors and publishers there, in some cases even before ever starting there, talked about the "Granite gossip," or "Granite gallop," or similar.

In the case of my previous paper, it was, in my opinion, a series of bad publisher hiring (and firing) decisions that led to that point.

The publisher who was there when Granite bought the paper was let go before I got there. I've heard various versions of why. As best as I can guess, steering between Scylla and Charybdis, is that he was adamantly resistant to pages being built at Granite's mini-Gatehouse pagination hub. (And, speaking of Gatehouse, this, as part of this story.) That was probably in part about editorial control and in part about finances, as he would already have known how he was being build for Granite's hubbed graphic art services.

(Newspaper companies are like insurance companies. Everybody's independently incorporated, but with incorporation structured in such a way that you're required to follow most home office dictates while most burden of blame, failure, etc., is on your own local publishing shoulders. The independent incorporation, as well as independently incorporating graphics and pagination services, is also done for tax reasons.)

The company then hired someone without one day of newspaper experience to be a publisher-in-training and shuffled other staff around, thorough pissing off the then-senior ad salesperson.

That soon enough didn't work out. They then hired someone with previous publishing experience, who was nice enough personally, and with some ideas, but just ... not a go-getter, etc.

They then canned him without a replacement lined up. That's when my arm was broken due to an on the job accident caused by another driver. I appreciate corporate filling out workman's comp's initial claims papers for me — even if it was in part due to other worries. I less appreciated, with an in-and-out interim publisher there, nobody from corporate springing for flowers, a get-well card or two, etc.

No, I resented it. And still do. The owner had done a couple of other good things in the past, but this sets the needle back to zero.

They then finally hired the person they should have hired three years ago, if they were determined to can the publisher in place at the time of purchase. (BUT ... more on other aspects of his background in another piece.)

The biggest problem, in my opinion, is that the owner,  who is the daughter of the founding owner, bought this paper on nostalgia. It was the first one her dad, the founding owner, owned, though later selling it. It was the town where she grew up. Nostalgia as a basis for financial decisions in general and business decisions in particular is usually not that smart.

On the resentment side, add to that my downsizing, and them not trying to find room for me, or immediately moving me to the front of the line, or even officially automatically considering me for relevant positions — they had two publishers' spots open, both of which involved a fair degree of selling, but not sales-only. It would have been an adjustment, but, it was certainly doable.

True, they have offered me, when they sold the company paper I worked at before, to give me the open editorial job at their nearest paper, and keep the same rate of pay for me, which was more than the normal salary for that slot. I wound up, because they asked, pinch-hitting at the Center paper for three weeks, and then asked if we could make this permanent. It was yet more money, but it did them a big favor, too.

Since then, Granite has split, as well, with founder Jim Chionsini hiving off the majority of papers after taking over again as boss man from daughter Brandi, and giving her a few that I think he wanted to axe.

At a paper now, a daily, that also does a magazine, I have to say that her idea for magazines in general wasn't all bad — but it was far from all good.

First of all, the rigidity of saying that such a magazine should have the same theme, issue after issue, is stupid. Sorry, Brandi, but no other word for it. (Being at a place that has a magazine, but does it like an actual magazine, I have personal reasons to say that.)

Second, your expectations should have been tapered back. Most your newspapers, a 32-page mag every quarter was heavy enough lifting. Actually, 32 pages 3x a year would be about right for the more rural papers. (I know that 24 pages quarterly would be the same number, but, a 24-page magazine would be its own stupidity.)

Third, without paywalls, you're still floundering in other ways.

Fourth, as I look at publisher hires at multiple papers ... erk???

==

Update: Since this has been posted, Big Jim Chionsini sold Center, and the Mount Pleasant paper that a previous publisher there wrecked, to Moser Community Media.

Thursday, July 20, 2017

More vampirism in the newspaper industry

I've seen it outside the forty-fourth estate, but it is apparently starting to catch on inside, too.

"It" is a newspaper trying to get as detailed a past salary history as it can from you as early in the process — as in as part of the application — as it can.

Via Journalism Jobs, I believe it was, a while back, I saw a Virginia newspaper saying that W-2s from previous work were part of the hiring process. I found that paper's Twitter account and told it what place it could find to file those W-2s.

Then, the growing Community Impact group. Its web-based application asks for salary at each previous spot. I had had two jobs with it pop up off of one of my job search engines. I had started applying for the higher-level one when I saw this. So, I put in $1 per week/month/year on each job.

And didn't apply for the other position.

These folks are relying on a mix of a still weak job market (don't listen to Janet Yellen at the Fed), an ongoingly weak newspaper market, slick branding of "we're new and different" (with Community Impact), and masochists in the biz who don't want to leave.

I DO!

But, that's another story.

Friday, June 23, 2017

The publisher as projectionist

Picture that your community-sized daily paper, which you joined just recently out of necessity, it not being "your" community until you moved there after being downsized elsewhere, is bought from its family owner by a small chain.

Picture the new chain's nearest paper is less than 40 miles away, in a community and county somewhat bigger but not too much. Picture the managing editor of your paper is bumped to publisher. Picture the publisher of the next paper over figures he'll take this new publisher under both the publishing and editorial wing of his.

With me?

Picture the next-door publisher has what he thinks are some great design ideas.

Picture that ...

He doesn't always practice what he preaches at his own paper, and you have the publisher as "projectionist."

Not the movie-theater guy. The Freudian psychological projectionist.

Next-door publisher thinks you should always have a vertical picture on the front page.

Problem? A 12-issue sample of front pages, riffing through issues at the next-door town's library, says he broke that one-third of the time.

Yes, it's a small sample. But, it's not tiny, let alone infinitesimal.

The projectionist.

Other things? Yes, it might be nice to run less AP content. Or it might not. And, it would be easier to do that with one more editorial person. And with a half-point bigger font that looked like wider Century Schoolbook or similar, rather than Times, to boot. And with all stories run ragged right. And on a narrower web.

And, with a five-column double deck header on the front page (yes!) that ... looked like ass or something.

The projectionist.

Nuff ced for now.

Friday, June 09, 2017

Fake news, thy name is Associated Press



Mainstream media has caviled about so-called "fake news" for the last year or so.

Of course, there's a high level of hypocrisy here.

The New York Times ran Judith Miller's fake news, nay, PUSHED it, then, if that contribution to the Iraq War wasn't enough, it spiked for a full year a story about Bush's warrantless snooping, which helped him get re-elected. Not that John Kerry would have done much different on Iraq, and judging by Dear Leader four years later, wouldn't have done much different on spying on Americans.

(And, I haven't even covered the fake news that's increased on the Times' op-ed page with hiring Bret Stephens.)

And, earlier this year, after it decried "fake news," the Washington Post then Tweeted repeatedly for a third-party group called "Prop Or Not," which made the Democratic Party's, and Clintonistas', "Putin Did It" claims about the presidential election read as soberly as wallpaper drying compared to Prop Or Not's McCarthyism — McCarthyism which later turned up to have seeming connections to Ukrainian fascists.

And, now? Per that screenshot up top?

It's the good old Associated Press, with the screenshot coming from this story.

The issue of posting crap from a place like Taboola has become even more decried in the last year or so, even as "digital dimes" in the online ad world become ever more "mobile nickels." (Thanks, Dean Singleton, and the 1990s AP board of directors, who touted the "TV model" of the Internet while ignoring that pay TV channels like HBO had already existed for 15 years or more.) Indeed, Taboola itself is one of the worst of the "sponsored links" folks, and most the news, or "news," you'll find off those links is sketchy at best, skeezy at worst, and almost certainly native advertising in some way, shape or form.

But, that's not all.



AP is writing, and photographing, its own clickbait as well, as shown above.

If American media dies, it will be from self-strangulation in its own crib.

Friday, June 02, 2017

NYT kicks Liz Spayd to curb as cover for continuing ad struggles

Liz Spayd has been neutered
So, the Old Gray Lady has decided to can its public editor position, apparently in part as a way of canning its current public editor, Liz Spayd, who didn't do the job as well as predecessor Margaret Sullivan.

That said, the position, created in the wake of Jayson Blair, was always about forward-looking PR for the paper at bottom. And, when the paper gives you shit, sometimes, shit-tasting lemonade being made at the end still isn't that good, if you're the public editor, no matter the seriousness of your lemonade-making endeavors.

That said, per a Salon overview, on paper, Spayd had the chops for the job. But, she not only appears antiquated in relation to social media, but in relation to ways in which the Times could be, and sometimes was, different in a good way.

In hindsight, she strikes me as "earnest." Like a fourth-grade schoolteacher from the 1950s. And, generally, that's not that good.

On the other hand, predecessor Margaret Sullivan was by no means perfect. I once both emailed and Tweeted her about staff "pre-writing" a weather storm in anticipation of a snowpocalypse that didn't pan out. Never heard back. How she would have handled Stephens, I have no idea. That said, per Nieman Lab, Sullivan's defense of the position, and by extension, her prior inhabitation of it, is kind of laughable.

But, back to the headline of this post.

The decision to eliminate the public editor comes a day after the Times announced the creation of a “Reader Center” led by editor Hanna Ingber. One role of the new “Reader Center” is to improve how the Times “respond(s) directly to tips feedback, questions, concerns, complaints and other queries from the public,” according to a Tuesday memo.
This is the TrumpTrain punking part of the headline. Have fun with THAT, Times! Because you will get it. You're probably already getting it with your idiotic "say something nice about Trump" schtick. I know that, if there's others like me, you're getting punked from the other side, too. Well, actually from the nonduopoly left-liberal third side.

Then, there's this, from the memo to staff from Punch Sulzberger:
We are dramatically expanding our commenting platform. Currently, we open only 10 percent of our articles to reader comments. Soon, we will open up most of our articles to reader comments. This expansion, made possible by a collaboration with Google, marks a sea change in our ability to serve our readers, to hear from them, and to respond to them.
Lemme see how interesting that is. Will readers try to Google SEO their own comments? Will Google AdSense try to sell Google ads into those comments?

What else will this involve? Google bots helping edit comments?

And, while the PE role was allegedly designed to address, or turd-polish, the Blair issue, it never did allegedly do that for Judith Miller. Or for the Times holding a 2004 story on President Bush spying on Americans until after the election. Or its sanitized photo coverage of U.S. wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Couple of other notes, coming primarily from the Times' own piece. One, Spayd is getting kicked to the curb today, just two days after the announcement.. Wow. Second, this is part of larger buyouts. Third, they're going to hire some new journos. They claim that the moves are to hire journos who don't think in "legacy" ways, but what it really is, is younger people they can pay less.

Overall ad sales are still down. It's unclear if the post-election circ rise has come close to offsetting that. It's also not reported if the backlash over the Stephens hiring has ixnayed that rise or even reversed it.

In any case, getcha popcorn! And remember Spayd by this interview earlier in May.

Saturday, May 27, 2017

Nooo, Facebook Live videos are not "the answer" for a struggling newspaper

The publisher at my former newspaper, who downsized me, then cut to a weekly, then downsized the sports editor after winter sports were over because baseball and softball aren't a big deal, has some "interesting" ideas.

Among the interesting dumb in my opinion ideas? His lusting for Facebook Live videos. He shot one nearly 20 minutes of himself walking through a house the day after it was gutted by fire. Not sure how much of that is a general lust for Facebook Live videos, and how much is a pontificating ego.)

Then, to top that, about two months later, he shot another one, of a fatal bus crash. On the scene. Before all families — the injured as well as the one fatality — had been notified, from what I heard.

And, it got a lot of negative comments on Facebook.

First, 10 minutes is too long for ANY video of that nature.

I'm not sure that Fountain was a vulture for doing a 10-minute vid about a bus crash, as some called him — and if he was, then the 325 people and counting who shared it are vultures, too.

But, I do think he's wrongly enamored of the idea that Facebook in general, and Facebook Live videos in particular, are an important part of journalism. Even if we get guaranteed income, people still have to follow YOU, not Facebook.

Had I thought a video were warranted (which is itself dubious), I would have shot one with my DSLR, non-live, and done some editing. Yes, Fountain did lower his cam at times to avoid people, but he didn't always.

I think he's also enamored of the idea of being a videographer.

This gets back to the "wrongly enamored."

TV news doesn't run 10-minute videos. People don't normally sit through them unless they either have a loved one potentially involved with a situation like that — in which case I do question disturbing them — or unless they're vultures, IMO.


Friday, May 19, 2017

The media has but selective support for the First Amendment

I've been at a number of rodeos, with different companies in different places. Some were newspaper-only, others were combination media in some way, shape or form.

But, in general, at least among old media, support for the First Amendment is selective.

And, that means we need to first look at exactly what the First Amendment says — including ALL FIVE different phrases for different "intellectual expression freedoms" it supports.

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
Most people know only the first three, and know them imperfectly, like the Religious Right claiming America is a Christian nation.

The media is established on the third freedom.

Over the past decades, this has become problematic in several ways.

First, "old media," especially old print media, was slow to accept blogs, or even full online-only news websites, as "journalism." Shamefully slow. Parochially slow.

And, ultimately, capitalistically slow.

That leads to what I'm really getting at here.

At various media organizations, I've been asked to sign papers about personnel policies, etc. Invariably, part of this involves social media.

Some companies are less hinky on this, others more so. The more hinky ones basically want you the media employee to throw away your First Amendment free speech rights — just because you work for a media company.

Now, to some degree, I'll bet other businesses try this, at least if you're a rung or two up their white-collar ladder. (Does the trash company make its pick-up people sign such policies?)

But, it's more egregious with media companies for several reasons.

One is that, per the header, they're being selective about the First Amendment.

Another is that, when they get into image management, they're now getting into public relations. Oh, sure, any company has to do that somewhat, but when a media company wants its employees to be tohu w'vohu (Google it) on opinions, then, no, we're at PR at the expense of journalism.

The third is when said media companies extend the spirit of this idea to employees being asked to write columns, do opinion-like podcasts, do opinion-like takeout videos — but actually say as little as possible.

And, of course, the hardness of said media stances are going to be doubled down upon in right to work get fired states.

In a sidebar, at least in the media world, it's easy to tell exactly how a company has been burned by its employees in the past, by looking at two things:
1. Their personnel policies and
2. Their access restrictions on what can or cannot be on computers, what server portions are accessible by whom, etc.

Let's get back to the First Amendment, though, as months or years from now, that may become its own post.

Media at the national level are also selective in their defense of the last two clauses of the First Amendment.

Unions get shorter and shorter shrift, even from allegedly liberal newspapers. That includes said newspapers overlooking national Democrats cutting them shorter and shorter shrift.

Well, part of the power of organized labor has traditionally come from a robust interpretation of what "peaceably assemble" covers.

But, that's just one problem.

The mainstream media has remained silent for more than a decade as presidents and presidential candidates have used "security" as a claim, especially at political conventions, to herd peaceably assembled protestors a half a mile or more away from them.

Boycotts, too, are a form of peaceable assembly. Yet, the mainstream media, when confronted with a New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo talking about criminalizing the Boycott, Divest, Sanctions movement against Israel, has managed to keep its collective mouth totally shut.

The real bottom line on this issue IS "the bottom line."

When the First Amendment meets capitalism, the media bread will always have capitalist butter on it.

Of course, this is one small chip in why media is dying, in my opinion. And, it's a big boulder in why "old media" SHOULD die more.

Friday, May 05, 2017

We're a print-first newspaper ...

Except when we're NOT!

Yep, yep, have heard those words more than once in the past three months. Heard them again on Monday, when a new change came within my southern world of newspapers.

And then, two days later ...

"Oh, we need an Instagram account as well as Facebook and Twitter."

Dunno if that's the publisher's own initiative, or a "suggestion" from the new sheriffs.

But, I don't think I've seen the Instagram Times or the Instagram Daily News printed anywhere.

Personally, I think Instagram may be an even higher level of potential Internet addiction crack cocaine than Facebook.

Wednesday, February 08, 2017

Newspapers as marketing consultants

I bring this up because, at least at one community newspaper, my previous employer, the idea of newspapers levering their expertise (like The Dallas Morning News), or alleged expertise, in advertising and news coverage combined, to offer marketing services to businesses, has trickled down.

In a sense, if a pitch (which is what The Light and Champion is offering) of digital marketing services is nothing more than a spiel about, "Hey, small-town biz, here is why you should buy our online ads," then, to riff on the gospel of Bubba, this is just the same old pig stuffed in a new poke. Or worse yet, "Hey, small-town biz, we're ready to start doing some advertorial work for you," then it's a new pig, albeit one with a bad case of foot in mouth disease, in a new, turd-polished shiny, poke.

There are no advertising agencies in most small towns.

But, on the other hand, community newspapers have long, long offered ad-building services. So, digital marketing has to be more than that.

But, the typical community-sized business isn't selling outside local boundaries, so what really can digital marketing be besides old pig in new poke, or the advertorial spinoff? (And, yes, community papers, despite years of blather from publishers and owners, between special sections and pulling punches in regular issues, have already engaged in plenty of semi-advertorial.)

As for the big boys? They've long had competition from advertising, marketing and public relations firms. I'm sure the Dallas Snooze can't compete with any of the top shops there, much as it would claim to do so, unless it shatters the editorial-advertising wall far more fatally than what I'm talking about with my previous newspaper owner.

And, if THAT is the case, then just remove the title of "reporter" or "staff writer" from your remaining editor people. Call them "marketing writer" or whatever instead, and be honest about it.

I definitely don't expect that to happen at magazines. Their websites are already drowning in "sponsored stories" clickbait plus advertorial clickbait. Newspapers, so far, have resisted much of the sponsored story stuff, and still run more advertorial in print than online, it seems, but how long will that stay that way? Both are seeing programmatic ads vampirize ever more revenue, which is why, as I've said before, if we look at "devices," digital dimes (on computers) will eventually become mobile nickels.

As for non-daily papers, other than that being a rebranding phrase, I have no idea what else it could be.

Meanwhile, how does the AP stay afloat as papers stretch budgets tighter?

Actually, it's because most dailies continue to slash in-house staff, rather than force AP, AFP, and Reuters, along with anybody else, to bid against one another.

==

All of this ignores that with more fake websites, like ESPN knockoffs, and other "sponsored story" sites running fake news (almost ALWAYS with a model shot of a humongous-breasted woman doing something or another as the thumbnail image), then legit websites paying for their stories to run as sponsored stories elsewhere, plus that fact now going meta to sponsored stories, and Americans having just a finite amount of ad spending dollars, and total spending dollars, that much of this is crapping one's own newspaper pants for diminishing returns. The above is true almost totally of the bigger dailies; not everything directly compares to community papers. But they should still take note.

==

Note 2: On the other hand, being semi-addicted to Facebook Live videos, for which a publisher should know FB pays just pennies on the dollar to big dailies, and fractions of mills on the dollar to small non-dailies, may mean that perhaps your digital marketing advice may not be perfect.

==

Note 3: Both before and after Craigslist started poaching their classifieds, alt-weeklies claimed to be harder-hitting on local investigative news than traditional metro dailies. Well now, at least one alt-weekly is going down this same road — and very explicitly, it's doing business PR mini-magazines.

This isn't even the small community paper doing a "buy an ad, get a story" deal for special sections like women in business or whatever. This appears to be producing straight, commissioned special projects.

Speaking of, when in the Metroplex on Saturday, I took a look at the latest issue of the Dallas Observer. It's probably down to about 60 percent of the size it was in 2009, when I moved out of there, and 75 percent of the size just four years ago, the last time I remember looking in detail.