Category Archives: newspapers

Goodbye St. Pete, Hello Tampa Bay

What’s in a name? Maybe the fortunes of a newspaper and the region it represents.

At midnight Tuesday, the St. Petersburg Times announced it will become the Tampa Bay Times to ring in the new year, 2012.

The column attributed to CEO Paul Tash offers a lengthy defense of the change. As Tash explains it, the new name was needed because most readers of the paper reside outside of the St. Petersburg area. While acknowledging the significance of messing with a respected brand that has been established for over 110 years, Tash offers a few justifications, among them the common denominator of “Tampa Bay” among the area’s professional sports teams, “Tampa Bay” as the listed destination for flights to Tampa International Airport, and the newspaper’s history of philanthropy throughout the region.

He even provides a cute, nostalgic anecdote about Orlando ridiculing St. Pete while competing with the area for a Major League Baseball team over 20 years ago.

My initial thought was that money is the driving force  behind the change, and perhaps it is. I wouldn’t be surprised to learn that this is about nothing more than getting more eyeballs in order to move businesses to spend their advertising dollars with the Times (assuming enough is out there to be made in this economically distressed period we’re suffering through).  Tash noted the St. Petersburg Times is already the region’s most-read newspaper, so I’m not sure swapping out a name will have that much of an impact in the short term.  Most likely the upper brass isn’t expecting it to, and this could be just part of a larger overhaul of the paper’s infrastructure. As recently as this month, the Times has been dealing with its financial hardships through layoffs and furloughs.

It was another passage, however, that got me to thinking the Times could be trying to change more than just its fortunes by swapping “St. Pete” for “Tampa Bay”:

But like other citizens and civic leaders, we recognize that all our communities have a stronger future as part of a dynamic Tampa Bay region, rather than a constellation of towns and cities jockeying for advantage against each other.

This sure sounds like Tash editorializing about the alleged rivalry between Pinellas and Hillsborough (not without significance regarding the paper’s financial interests). While I’m not convinced that dynamism and competition among municipalities are at odds with one another, the point Tash is making about the benefits of cooperation comes through. Personally, I’m looking forward to the Tampa Bay Times, and to see whether something as simple as a name change could be the catalyst to something far more important — an area’s revival and growth as it alters its self-perception.

What’s in a name? We’ll see.

Does this headline need a rewrite?

Maybe I’m being overly sensitive, but the back-page headline from today’s tbt* sure seems to be teetering on the edge of offensiveness.

Yes, the deck offers some context to the use of the word “primal,” but tbt backpageconsidering that it’s clearly being used in the sense of “primitive” and not “original,” and in light of the accompanying photo, I’d say “Primal Time” betrays of lack of good taste and judgment.

Laid-off journalists have a home

For the unemployed journalist thrown out on his or her keester, Jim Gold, a former senior editor for the Arizona Republic, and his wife Sue have created Jilted Journalists.

It’s nothing much to look at design-wise, and the content is rather thin so far. But it has a cheeky tone, and at least endeavors to offer some helpful advice for those recently reacquainted with the ranks of the unemployed. A couple of highlights:

Continue reading

St. Petersburg middle school wins best newspaper honors

For the third year in a row, the J. Hop Times, the student newspaper for St. Petersburg’s John Hopkins Middle School, was named best in the nation by education magazine Weekly Reader.

As much as it recognizes the students’ efforts, the award also clearly reflects the leadership of Jenny Butkus, now in her fourth year as John Hopkins’ journalism coordinator.

Butkus will not be able to attend the awards luncheon in Washington, D.C., because of a commitment to a summer journalism camp to be held at John Hopkins.

However, Symone Brown, a seventh-grader in the program, will attend the June 11 ceremony with her mother, as well as Assistant Principal Carolyn Altenore.

J. Hop Times is the best because it’s very professional,” Brown said. “It’s like a real newspaper. We have a lot of talented students working on the paper.”

On her decision to ask Brown to represent the paper, Butkus said, “She has a very strong voice. We’re hoping she’ll rise to the occasion and be a leader next year.”

Butkus said the $500 prize money would be used for classroom supplies, particularly technology upgrades, including new computers.

Because of an oversight on the part of the Weekly Reader, the journalism program can also expect another $500 from last year’s win.

Note: I volunteer  a few hours each week at John Hopkins Middle School, assisting journalism students with the writing and editing of their stories.

Talkin' newspapers and journalism

A couple of articles worth your while regarding the financial troubles  of newspaper industry and what has brought them (in part) to this point:

The Fed shouldn’t save newspapers because they “are not too big to be allowed to fail.” (Newsosaur)

American journalism is in trouble because of “editors and reporters focused more on winning prizes or making television appearances.” (Walter Pincus, Columbia Journalism Review)

The physical attraction of newspapers

Alan Mutter explains why newspapers have it all over Amazon’s recently  released Kindle DX, a larger version of the electronic tablet.

Nothing beats the convenience and portability of a well-organized newspaper.

A newspaper requires no batteries or AC current, can be read anyplace in all-but-blackout conditions, can be folded (unlike a jumbo Kindle) for convenient transport, can be clipped for coupons, can catch canary poop and can be responsibly recycled into cute flower pots (see below) in a way that electronic detritus cannot.

Plus, you can’t smash a bug with Kindle.

Call it what it is

Did the RedEye outright copy the Chicago Reader‘s cover from about a pkngmonth ago?

You don’t have to call it “stealing” or “plagiarism” or “an oversight” to realize it’s wrong.

Call it what it is

Did the RedEye outright copy the Chicago Reader‘s cover from about a pkngmonth ago?

You don’t have to call it “stealing” or “plagiarism” or “an oversight” to realize it’s wrong.

There's laid off, and then there's axed

While going through a divorce, and  recovering from painful surgery, Laura Meade Kirk was let go by the Providence Journal, where she’d worked for 23 years. Let’s just say the timing wasn’t all that great:

I then hobbled to HR to listen to the company spiel about the layoffs. Blah, blah, blah. “Do you have any questions?” I was asked.
“No,” I replied. But holding out my arms, with the IV lines hanging, I did say: “Your timing sucks.”

I then signed the requisite forms and crutched off to the elevator, fighting back tears. I wasn’t going to let them see me cry. I punched at the buttons, but the elevator never came.
Of course not. Just my luck.
So I crawled down the stairs, on my hands and knees, careful to make sure my crutches didn’t catch the IV lines and rip them from my heart.

Kirk’s story ends up having a happy ending, perhaps validating the old adage, “It’s darkest just before the dawn.” But what a way to get there.

Google News Timeline

Mathew Ingram looks at the brand new Google News Timeline and wonders: Why can’t newspapers exhibit this kind of creativity?

Google News Timeline is very impressive, offering users the abililty to look at news by days, weeks, months, years and even decades in a visually appealing column format. You can also refine your search according to a particular news source.