Thursday, October 27, 2022

The Texas Trib is neoliberaling on with Ev Smith's replacement

 That's the case with Evan Smith's CEO replacement, Sonal Shah, per the Gray Lady's profile. She worked in Dear Leader's White House and later on Mayo Pete Buttigieg's prez campaign. She also squeezed in a stint at Goddam Sachs. Probably gives her an in on finding people for those oh-so-vaunted Trib Talks.

So, we should probably expect the Trib to continue to pull punches on environmental, financial and other types of news, despite its claims that it doesn't, of course.

Thursday, October 20, 2022

Did the Dallas Observer fire Simone Carter?

 And, if so, was it over her coverage of the PRO Gainesville protests?

Or, did she just quit?

In either case, I found it weird that, even before that, she was doing reporting on exurban areas not even part of the Metromess, and also found it weird that she wasn't being more reined in to Metromess reporting, as I told the Observer when applying for an ME opening a year or more ago. (It was Meredith Lawrence, not her, though, that wrote, even more bizarrely, about a wind farm in my neck of the woods.)

In either case, it's six weeks and counting since she had a byline there. She has been pumping out volumes of bloggy stuff for Newsweek since then. (IMO, listing ALL of them on your Muck Rack profile is a good way to undercut your bona fides.) There, she does list herself as "former" of the Observer. The fact that she has nothing but Newsweek blog posts listed on her profile says it was either a firing, or a downsizing for Observer fiscal reasons, but not her quitting.

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Update, Feb. 26, 2023: She's back at the Observer as of late January.

I disagree with Dick Teufel on paywalls

In a recent post at Second Rough Draft, he doesn't say "abandon them entirely," but does say that most papers that aren't "national," ie, WaPost, NYT, WSJ, and maybe the LAT, should pretty much abandon them, starting with this thought:

Where paywalls work: Broadly speaking, I think we now know that paywalls work only when a publication is producing high quality content in high quantity. This is the through-line from the Wall Street Journal (the earliest major adopter) to the Financial Times (where the idea of the meter was developed) to the later-adopting but now very successful New York Times and Washington Post among newspapers and Atlantic and New Yorker among magazines.

He goes on to add:

Relatedly, the problem for the vast majority of metropolitan newspapers is that while many continue to produce high quality content on occasion (their best stories are in many cases their best ever), they do not now do so in sufficient quantity to attract a large enough group of paying digital subscribers. (The average Gannett or Lee chain paper, for instance, has about 6000 paying digital subscribers. That’s not enough to make this economic model work in the long term.)

But, he doesn't address the issue of paywall development and history, by and large, outside these national sites.

For instance, the Dallas Snooze, after its CueCat failure, went through two different paywall iterations before hitting on a third.

My answer? 

As I said in comments there, Counterpunch recently added a Counterpunch+ set of paywalled stories. It's no more than 15 percent of its total, so in Teufel's terms, it's NOT "quantity." So effing what? I think the idea is great. Regional daily papers could and should do similar, with a harder paywall on the "quality" stuff. You get NONE of that free, while getting your five free monthly peeks at other stuff only.

Otherwise?

Some money is better than none, and as long as the paywall money isn't costing yet more ad money? Some money is better than none.

He then goes Joe Biden:

There are big equity issues here: Paywalls are ultimately for richer people. Journalists may be willing to pay for a passel of digital subscriptions, but most civilians don’t feel like they have the money to do that, even if they have the time. To put some numbers on this, fewer than one out of five Americans pays for online news, and the median number of subscriptions among that group is two. 
When you target high income and wealth in this country, unfortunately you end up with an audience that is disproportionately white, while Black and Latino people are underrepresented. That is especially problematic in our cities, where paywalls therefore have the effect of furthering the historical pattern of underserving these communities, even when they represent a majority of residents.

Sorry, not buying it.

Back when print was print, some community papers offered a senior citizen discount, and that was it. AFAIK, Black and Hispanic papers, as well as mainstream ones, didn't ask your socioeconomic class, and the advertisers that made the bulk of the paper's profits didn't ask, either. Just if you had money, period. And, he's been around long enough to know that.

Then, there's this:

Bigger subscriber revenues have costs as well as benefits: Paywalls have been great for the businesses of the news organizations that have the largest number of paid online subscribers, especially as print advertising has continued its secular decline and the platforms have monopolized digital advertising. But the growing economic dependence of these publications on their readers is having increasingly troublesome editorial consequences. 
This dependence, I think, is the principal source of the rising tide of consumerist features and the increasing celebration of luxury items and trends. Even worse, at least in my view, is what I am starting to see as a reluctance to challenge readers’ preconceptions, even when those may not be deeply rooted in fact. What is sometimes denigrated as “political correctness” is often, I fear, actually a reluctance to discomfit paying subscribers.

As I asked semi-rhetorically in a comment, is that any different or any worse than 20, or even 30 or more years ago, newspaper publishers being afraid of editorial content pissing off a major advertiser, even as it was claimed the wall between editorial and advertising was as high as Jefferson said the church-state wall should be?

I doubt it. Beyond that, pissing off a "class" is different than pissing off one individual company.

You want papers to be like Vox, or something, then, pandering to venture capitalism? Being even worse than the NYT's consumerist stories?

Finally, there's his hinting about community papers.

As I told him in comments, without mentioning a Tex-ass community newspaper group like Jim Moser's by name .... the paywall there should be even firmer. Just like the WSJ, but no exception. You see 50 words, if that, including the headline, period. And, that's what you see at the start, not a slowly descending gray screen which can still be beaten at times by Apple-A + Apple C.

Thursday, October 13, 2022

"Pink Slime" is now officially bipartisan

 We all now about wingnut "Pink slime" fake news sites. Some are blatant, with almost no actual local news, and only regional, state and national news release type stuff from PACs, etc. masquerading as news, like the Metric Media stable. A few, like the paper in DFW that adopted the name of a now-defunct Black newspaper, and part of Metric's allies will have some local "reporting," but that will be more hatchet job than actual news. (More on it and Monty Bennett's nuttery here.)

Well, Democrat-affiliated PACs, etc., per Axios, have decided that, if you can't beat them, join them. And, with all the same excuses, like "these places are news deserts already anyway, so ...."

Oh, and shock me that #BlueAnon thought leader David Brock is behind some of this.

Thursday, October 06, 2022

Why does the Texas Press Association partake of some of these press releases?

 TPA has a subdivision called Texas Press Service, through which companies can run press releases to TPA member newspapers.

Yesterday, a company headquartered in Mississippi announced five larger and five smaller charitable donations totaling $394,000.

None of the 10 recipients is in Texas.

This is not the first time Texas Press Service has puzzled me, but it is the biggest to date. It's also not the first time TPA in general has puzzled me, and in this case, this is NOT the biggest to date. Its legals website partnership with Column.us, and their unbridled sales push, remains the biggest.