AAN News
Dailies Struggle to Rebuild Confidence With Advertisersnew
The summer of scandal in the newspaper circulation business has left advertisers and agencies worried about what could possibly be next. Most say they are placing increased scrutiny on audience statements and newspaper ad budgets, though they believe the power of the medium will protect it from any immediate advertiser backlash.
Media Daily News |
08-25-2004 9:31 am |
Industry News
On the Web, Branding is Backnew
Experts predict the brand-ad rebound is more sustainable than the boom that buoyed dot-coms in 1999 and 2000, in part because it's being led by the offline world's big brand builders -- including Coca-Cola (KO ), Nike (NKE ), and Visa. While paid search advertising, where companies buy placement in search results from sites such as Google (GOOG ) and Yahoo, was all the rage in 2003, online branding is gaining steam this year and may become the strongest growth story of Net advertising in 2005.
Business Week |
08-24-2004 4:03 pm |
Industry News
Protecting AAN Members' Ad Content on the Web
Alice Neff Lucan |
08-24-2004 3:19 pm |
Legal News
Tags: Classified Advertising, Management
Dig's Associate Music Editor Plays Extra Roles Promoting Paper
Craig Kapilow is a busy man. By day, he's a senior account executive and associate music editor at Boston's Weekly Dig. By night, he spins at highly marketable DJ nights, thus building relationships with venues around town -- many of which are clients of the paper. One of the longest running events, taking place each Saturday night, was profiled in the Aug. 19 edition of the Boston Globe (see below). Here Kapilow answers a few questions about his multiple roles at the alt-weekly and his side-career behind the turntables.
(FULL STORY)
AAN Staff |
08-20-2004 5:11 pm |
Industry News
McNamara Says Farewell to Pacific Sun Readersnew
Owner, publisher and editor of the Sun since 1966, Steve McNamara addresses his sale of the paper to Embarcadero Publishing in this message to his readers. He writes, "Being editor and publisher of the Sun has been a dream job, way better than working the oars at the dailies in North Carolina, Miami and San Francisco where I started out." And he's leaving his legacy in good hands. About the paper's new owners, McNamara says, "In the newspaper business there are some real egomaniacs and general nut cases, but these guys are at the other end of the scale."
Pacific Sun |
08-19-2004 6:10 pm |
Industry News
Some Alt-Weeklies See Improvement in Second Quarter
Advertising sales at alt-weeklies varied from region to region during the first half of 2004, in large part following the path of the spotty economic recovery. Happily, the second quarter of the year was an improvement over the first, both for national sales overall and for local sales at selected alt-weeklies. Freelance writer John Ferri reports for AAN News on the state of the business.
(FULL STORY)
John Ferri |
08-19-2004 5:27 pm |
Industry News
Pacific Sun Sold to Owner of Palo Alto Weeklynew
Two AAN newspapers serving different parts of the San Francisco Bay Area became part of the same organization today as the owner of the Palo Alto Weekly, Bill Johnson, purchased the Pacific Sun of Marin County. The sale coincides with the 70th birthday of Sun owner, publisher and editor Steve McNamara, who purchased the paper in 1966 and grew it into an award-winning newsweekly. McNamara said, "Once the decision [to sell the Sun] was made, it seemed natural to pass the responsibility to my old friend Bill Johnson and his associates at the Palo Alto Weekly." Said Johnson, "Steve and I have known each other and shared our challenges and ideas with each other for the last 25 years, and this seems like a natural outcome of that relationship."
Embarcadero Publishing |
08-18-2004 5:58 pm |
Industry News
Classifieds Surge Propels 2Q Newspaper Ad Growthnew
While the newspaper world struggles to recover the faith of advertisers after an unprecedented series of circulation scandals and battles with the Internet's threat to local ad sales, some good news for the industry emerged Tuesday. Total newspaper ad expenditures rose 4.1 percent for the second quarter of 2004 to $11.5 billion versus the same period last year, according to preliminary estimates from the Newspaper Association of America.
Media Daily News |
08-18-2004 9:08 am |
Industry News
Tags: Classified Advertising
MSNBC Starts New Classified Online Productnew
In an example of the new economy taking a page from the old, MSNBC.com adopted a longtime newspaper strategy yesterday, starting an online classifieds site. The service, part of the broader joint venture between Microsoft Corp. and NBC News, lets users search for employment, real estate, personals, merchandise, and other types of listings from sites including eBay, cars.com, HomeGain. com and Match.com.
Seattle Post-Intelligencer |
08-18-2004 9:05 am |
Industry News
Tags: Classified Advertising
Pacific Sun Sold to Palo Alto Weekly
08-18-2004 5:50 pm |
Press Releases
Unmasked by the Phoenix, Anonymous Goes Unnamed in Major Dailiesnew
In the July 2 edition of the Boston Phoenix, reporter Jason Vest revealed the identity of Anonymous -- author of "Imperial Hubris: Why the West Is Losing the War on Terrorism" -- as CIA analyst Michael Scheuer. Other print and online media outlets have since published his name. Writing for Slate, Jack Shafer then wonders why the Washington Post and the New York Times continue their attempts to perpetuate Scheuer's deflated anonymity. Writes Shafer, "James Risen reports in the Aug. 5 New York Times that Anonymous is 'known publicly only as Mike,' which is true if the definition of the public doesn't include the readership of the Phoenix."
Slate |
08-17-2004 4:04 pm |
Industry News
Tags: Boston Phoenix, Jason Vest
Vincent Gallo Pulls Essay from the Village Voicenew
The filmmaker pulled his three-page essay from the Village Voice at the last minute because he didn't approve of the paper's choice of art for its front cover. According to the New York Post's Page Six gossip column, editor-in-chief Don Forst wanted to run a still from the film "Brown Bunny" in which actress Chloe Sevigny performs oral sex on Gallo, the film's star and director. Gallo, however, wanted the Voice to run his photo self-portrait, claiming its full-page publication was a condition of his involvement. Voice publicity director Jessica Belluci told the Post, "When he got wind that we wanted to use another image for the cover, he got all bent out of shape and pulled the whole thing."
New York Post |
08-17-2004 1:18 pm |
Industry News
Merrill Lynch Concerned About Circ Scandalsnew
The Dallas Morning News' recent circulation disclosures certainly aren't helping the industry move beyond the scandals previously announced by Newsday, Hoy and the Chicago Sun-Times. "The fact that four newspapers (three companies) have disclosed circulation overstatements has been a real shocker," wrote Lauren Rich Fine in a Merrill Lynch report released today. "Now, of course, there is concern that more companies will step forward with disclosures, especially in view of Sarbanes-Oxley," a new federal law requiring more financial disclosures from publicly traded companies.
Editor & Publisher |
08-16-2004 10:34 am |
Industry News
EBay Acquires 25 Percent of Craigslistnew
The World's Online Marketplace and craigslist, an online community featuring classifieds and forums (www.craigslist.org), announced today that eBay has acquired a preexisting minority ownership interest in craigslist of approximately 25%. The resulting relationship will allow eBay and craigslist to share expertise, resources, and creativity on behalf of online communities everywhere.
Press Release via Yahoo! News |
08-16-2004 10:32 am |
Industry News