Vancouver Sun and Province get new president, discuss content-sharing

Source: thetyee.ca

By ROBYN SMITH

A former managing editor of the Vancouver Sun is the new president and publisher of the newspaper, as well as The Province, it was announced today.

Gordon Fisher, most recently the president of the National Post, will now oversee the Pacific Newspaper Group, the company that manages the major B.C. dailies.

“A major focus of this year’s business strategy is to redefine our organization and today we announced changes to the senior management group,” wrote Postmedia CEO Paul Godfrey in a statement. “I have great confidence that Gord will be able to parlay the successes he has had in Eastern Canada and bring his insights and passion to our BC operations.”

Fisher succeeds Kevin Bent, who’s held the job since 2006 but is now leaving to pursue other opportunities, according to Godfrey’s statement.

Postmedia suffered a decrease in its first quarter earnings, the Globe and Mailreported last week. To pay down debt and invest in profitable areas of the business, Godfrey said the company must cut up to $80 million out of its operating budget over the next two years, as well as boost digital revenue.

Today’s announcement follows discussions among senior management about sharing content between the two newspapers. On Jan. 17, The Province’s editor-in-chief Wayne Moriarty sent an email to the paper’s editorial team about some of those discussions, which The Tyee obtained. We reprint some of that email below:

“The Province and The Sun have pooled resources and shared a photo department since January 2010. This eliminated duplication — those occasions when each paper dispatched photographers to the same news events, games, concerts, meetings and other assignments. The move also enabled a rationalization of assignment staffing, with one editor from each paper able to cover the department around the clock.

“The papers centralized the assignment and editing functions for both newsrooms’ production of Travel, Driving, New Homes, At Home, and Recreational Properties. The Specialty Publications department works closely with advertisers to produce copy for both papers, with an office and supervision that is completely separate from the two newsrooms, and more closely allied with Advertising and the Creative departments.

“For special events the two newsrooms have combined staffing in order to eliminate duplication and increase the volume of content online and in the papers, including the 2010 Olympics, and provincial and civic elections.

“On Wednesday [Jan. 16], section heads and senior management from both papers met to discuss the next step in sharing content. The three areas most affected will be city, sports and entertainment. The objective is to eliminate some duplication in areas around commodity news and event coverage. Excluded from the sharing strategy will be all enterprise reporting and reporting that either paper deems necessary to maintain its unique identity.”

Robyn Smith reports for The Tyee.

Scrambling for Profit, Media Slip ‘Custom Content’ into Mix

Some reporters resent rise of assignments born of deals with advertisers.

Source: thetyee.ca
By Jonathan Sas

“I hate it. I hate doing it… It’s not what I signed up for.” That’s the lament of a former Postmedia reporter assigned all too often to write “custom content.”

Most of us assume that media outlets still go about producing their news the traditional way — a reporter sniffs out a lead or an editor assigns an evolving story or, these days, a columnist storifies a flurry of Twitter activity.

Increasingly, however, stories are put into motion differently. Referred to variously as custom content, custom publishing or directed content, Canada’s major broadsheets and newsmagazines are now speckled with content spun up by marketers and brand sponsors.

click here to read entire story

Print’s financial future may last longer than expected, according to new reports

Source: poynter.org

As this year begins, three notable reports share the same conclusion about the future of news: The path we are on is uncertain and debatable. But two of the three studies now see an extended economic shelf life for print, even as audiences swing digital and the search for viable digital news products continues.

 

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Postmedia Network and Kijiji Join Forces to Provide Expanded Automotive Listings

Source: financialpost.com

Postmedia Network, Canada’s largest publisher of paid English language daily newspapers and Kijiji, Canada’s most popular free, local, online classifieds website, today announced that the used car listings for all 10 Postmedia daily newspaper websites* and driving.ca are now powered by Kijiji. The new automotive classifieds sites offer a mobile friendly experience.

“By working with Kijiji we have turbo-charged our listings offerings while continuing to deliver Postmedia’s great content to our audiences,” said Wendy Desmarteaux, Senior Vice President, Postmedia. “The new used car classifieds sites give audiences more than double the used car listings and enrich their shopping experience.”

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2013 John Belcarz and Dan Zeidler post-secondary education/training memorial scholarships.

 

BelcarzZeidler
I am pleased to announce that we are now accepting applications for

the John Belcarz and Dan Zeidler post-secondary education/training memorial scholarships.

Two scholarships of $1,000 each are available. The accompanying attachments contain a poster and application form in both English and French

(also available on our website: http://www.cwa-scacanada.ca. Please circulate this information to your members.

In solidarity,

Martin O’Hanlon
Director, CWA/SCA Canada

 

Major papers’ longform meltdown

Stories longer than 2,000 words down 86 percent at the LAT since 2003, 50 percent at WaPo, etc.

By Dean Starkman

Source: cjr.org

No one equates story-length with quality. Let’s start with that concession.

But still. Story-length is hardly meaningless when you consider what it takes to explain complex problems, like say, the financial crisis, to the broader public. Or when you consider what it takes to lay out the evidence needed to properly support a story that makes explosive allegations against a powerful institution. It takes space.

Put another way, there’s a reason David Barstow’s landmark expose of bribery and high-level cover-ups at WalMart ran to more than 7,000 words.

So, all in all, it’s more than instructive to check in on longform newspaper writing, and the start of a new year isn’t a bad time to do it.

And it’s pretty to shocking to see what’s become of the time-honored form since the newspaper industry’s great unraveling started a decade ago.

Click link to read the entire story

Think newspapers are doomed? Think again

Source: kamloopsnews.ca

The death of newspapers has been greatly exaggerated, Rotarians heard Monday.

Peter Kvarnstrom, chairman of the Canadian Newspapers Association board, told a luncheon of the Rotary Club of Kamloops that the print medium is far from extinction.

Kvarnstrom also serves as president of B.C. community media for Glacier Media Group, the B.C.-based publisher of The Daily News and 80 other community newspapers across Canada.

“We really have been our worst enemy over the last decade in reporting on our death or impending death,” Kvarnstrom said.

Click the link to read the entire story

 

Postmedia sees earnings slide

Source: theglobeandmail.com

postmedia-logosPostmedia Network Inc. posted a sharp decrease in earnings in its first quarter, as a surge in digital revenue failed to make up for weak advertising and declining circulation revenues.

Chief executive officer Paul Godfrey doesn’t see things getting better, conceding in an interview that he expects print revenue to continue to decline by about 8 per cent a quarter. The company must cut as much as $80-million out of its operating budget in the next two years and aggressively increase its digital revenue, he said, to help pay down its $464-million debt and to make investments in the areas of the business that are making money.

Click the link to read the entire story @ theglobeandmail.com

IFJ Renews Call to UN and Governments to Halt Slaughter of Journalists after 121 Killings in Bloody 2012

Source: ifj.org

The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) today said that 2012 has been one of the bloodiest years for journalists and media workers after recording 121 killings in targeted attacks and cross fire incidents. The IFJ warned that these terrible numbers are the result of systematic failure by governments and the United Nations to fulfill their international obligations to protect and enforce journalists’ basic right to life.

“The death toll for 2012 is another indictment of governments which pay lip service to the protection of journalists but have consistently failed to stop their slaughter,” said Jim Boumelha, IFJ President. “It is no wonder that these sky-high numbers of killed journalists have become a constant feature in the last decade during which the usual reaction from governments and the United Nations has been a few words of condemnation, a cursory inquiry and a shrug of indifference.”

According to figures released today by the Federation which has published annual reports of journalists and media workers killed in work-related incidents since 1990, 121 journalists and media staff lost their lives in targeted attacks, bomb attacks and other cross-fire incidents this year, up from 107 recorded in 2011. Thirty more died in accidents or of illness while they were at work in 2012, against 20 last year.

Syria tops the IFJ’s list of the most dangerous countries for media in 2012. More violence and lawlessness in Somalia turned the country into a media killing field while organised crime in Mexico and insurgents in Pakistan account for the high numbers of fatalities in these countries.

The Federation said that, by and far, journalists were deliberately targeted because of their work and with the clear intention to silence them. This constant finding in IFJ annual reports bring into sharp focus the need for genuine measures to protect journalists and punish those responsible for violence against media.

Last month, the IFJ urged accountability for violence targeting media at the UN Inter-Agency’s conference in Vienna, Austria which officially launched the UN Action Plan on the safety of journalists and the issue of Impunity, noting that ‘ the new UN plan is akin to drinking in the last chance saloon.”

“We now look to the UN Plan on the safety of journalists and the issue of impunity to deliver on its mandate,” added Beth Costa, IFJ General Secretary. “The situation is so desperate that inaction no longer represents an option.”

As of 31 December, the IFJ recorded the following information on killings of journalists and media staff in 2012:

Targeted killings, bomb attacks and cross-fire incidents    : 121

Accidental and illness related deaths                                     : 30

Total Deaths                                                                                 : 151

The deadliest region in 2012 was the Middle East and Arab World with 47 journalists and media personnel killed.  Syria had the region’s highest death toll with 36 dead.

Among countries with the highest  numbers of media fatalities are:

Syria                                       : 35

Somalia                                 : 18

Pakistan                                : 10

Mexico                                    : 10

Philippines                           : 5

Iraq                                         : 5

 

The list of journalists and media personnel killed in 2012 is available here

 

For more information, please contact IFJ  :

Jim Boumelha, IFJ President                   :+44 1865723450

Beth Costa, IFJ General Secretary           : + 32 2 235 22 10/ +32 279077194

Ernest Sagaga, Human Rights Officer   : +32 2 235 22 07/+32 477 71 40 29

The IFJ represents more than 600,000 journalists in 134 countries around the world