Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Well, some interesting and scary news from a media observer and insider. Note the material on McClatchy's financial peril. They're of course owners of the Tacoma News Tribune (where I worked for many years), as well as Anchorage, all the Bees in California etc. Give a read - I welcome comments.

Also, it would be amazing if Gourmet were to fold. It's an institution in food-related journalism, certainly, one I grew up and still read.

http://www.facebook.com/ext/share.php?sid=55383695756&h=Ej5ZC&u=NEuAP

Friday, January 9, 2009

The end is in site.

As a Seattle P-I veteran, it's unspeakably painful to hear that the P-I is at the end of the line: http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/business/395463_newspapersale10.html. I just can't imagine life without it. Admittedly, I contributed in my own way...using Craigslist, reading news online...

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Morphing faster than the speed of light...

Along the same lines as problems we're seeing in the Northwest newspaper industry comes this story, from an astute writer I admire at slate.com.
It's at http://www.slate.com/id/2206854/pagenum/2.

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Exotic birds and the foreclosure crisis

Late last week the Reuters News Service ran a story of mine, on how the foreclosure crisis continues to hurt both people and their pets. In this case, it's exotic birds. Lively and sometimes loud, people needing to find new digs after losing their homes to foreclosure find they can't take their birds with them. This is predictably leading to some very sad stories of abandonment and abuse. I'm happy to report the story has run around the world, from the Northwest to Qatar and Singapore, and even made the Rush Limbaugh show. One bird sanctuary I highlighted in the story, I'm happy to report, says they've been overwhelmed with offers to adopt or otherwise help.
Read it here at:

http://www.reuters.com/article/oddlyEnoughNews/idUSTRE4B45NQ20081205

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

The news keeps getting sadder for newspapers

I've spent the vast majority of my life as a hard-news reporter at daily newspapers. I've covered everything from Randy Weaver's stand-off at Ruby Ridge to the Tacoma daffodil festival, and it was largely a terrific ride. For the last few years I've morphed into a wire service and magazine journalist, and a writer of books, Websites and newsletters, among other writerly pursuits, but I still am a newspaperwoman at heart. That makes this week's newspaper developments so painful. At the same time the Tribune Company files for bankruptcy, potentially jeopardizing major papers like the Los Angeles Times, local newspapers here in Washington have hideously contracted their news sections. The Seattle Times has made the curious decision to fold local news and features together, while the Post-Intelligencer (Full discloure: I'm a former P-I reporter and still have many friends there) has folded local and national news together. When I read through them, they feel, well, like they've suffered an amputation (a topic I just wrote about for Seattle Magazine!). The news continues: The Tacoma News Tribune has shrunk their sections, too, as has the Bremerton Sun. It all feels a bit like a collapsing star. So who will cover the local news? Who will keep an eye on utitlity rate increases, the Port, those damn suburban fire districts, county charter initiatives? (one of my first election stories as a cub reporter). Blogs are great, but no way to pull such info together in a timely fashion, obviously. As the Times candidly said last weekend, sometimes "Less is less."