About Media Industry

BNET Media provides daily industry trends and news coverage with insights for managers and executives in publishing, print, broadcast, film, and online media. In addition to media company profiles, we bring you industry analysis on new partnerships, media products, mergers and acquisitions, labor and cost management, media buying, investments and a host of other important business issues.

Media Roundup: Tuscon Citizen Will Not Close, Seattle P-I Goes Online Only, and More

By Sean Blanda | Mar 18, 2009

Tucson Citizen will not close — The Tucson Citizen, which had been slated to close on Saturday, will remain publishing. The newspaper’s publisher, Gannett, announced that there are two interested buyers that may keep the paper afloat. The Citizen has struggled in past decades to keep pace with the Arizona Star, which has nearly 100,000 more subscribers. Gannett said it hopes to make a decision about the paper’s future “in the short term.” [Source: Editor and Publisher]

Seattle P-I goes online only — The Seattle Post-Intelligencer finalized its move to a Web-only publication yesterday. The Hearst-owned newspaper is the largest newspaper in America to make the transition from print to online-only. The paper has cut its staff to 20 from 165 and rely more on aggregation and linking. Some worry that the other paper in Seattle, The Times, will have similar problems in the future, due the end of a joint operating agreement between the two papers that shared production costs. [Source: New York Times]

46 percent of the Digg front page is controlled by the same 50 Web sites — According to a study by Digg news site di66.net, 46 percent of the stories that make the front page of Digg are from the same 50 Web sites. The majority of sites are news organizations with the Telegraph, New York Times, YouTube and Time heading the list. The social news site has made changes over the past year aiming to increase user diversity on the front page. However since the changes, the range of Web sites making Digg’s front page has narrowed. [Source: Soshable]

Twitter grows 1,382 percent — Compared to last February, the mico-blogging site Twitter has seen 1,382 percent growth. The site registered more than 7 million unique visitors in the United States for February. The service has been touted in recent months by politicians, celebrities and journalists widening the user base past the initial group of early adopters. The site’s growth rate, though not its traffic, puts it in striking range of Facebook; a threat magnified by Facebook’s Twitter-inspired redesign. [Source: Mashable]

Conde Nast announces cuts — Reports from several publications indicate that magazine publisher Conde Nast is planning several cuts. The company is said to be eliminating jobs from Conde Nast Media Group, the division that handles more than 80 percent of the company’s revenue. Additionally, publishers and editors have been told to cut 10 percent from their non-salary discretionary budgets and pensions have been frozen. This is the second round of cuts for the New York-based publisher in less than sixth months. [Source: MediaBistro]

AOL launching “polypartisan” political site — AOL is set to launch a political site in April that is focused more on commentary than breaking news. The company has hired several well-respected political journalists and the site’s top editor will be Melinda Henneberger, a former Slate and New York Times writer. The move is part of AOL’s push into breaking ties with its past as a portal to become more of a content provider. The political blog will add to AOL’s already impressive roster of blogs such as the celebrity gossip focused TMZ and the tech news site Engadget. [Source: The Wrap]

Sean Blanda is a Philadelphia-based freelance writer and co-founder of Technically Philly, a blog about tech news in Philadelphia.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Twitter and Facebook Post Huge Growth Numbers in March

    Mashable - 215 days 9 hours 46 minutes ago

    Several weeks ago, we noted that Twitter was now growing at a staggering 1,382 percent on an annual basis, via data from Nielsen Online. Today, the latest numbers from Compete show the trend accelerating even further, with Twitter.com growing 76.8 percent just...

  • Media Roundup: SeattlePI.com is growing, AP Offers Buyouts and More

    BNET Media - 171 days 15 hours 28 minutes ago

    SeattlePI.com is growing — Hearst has announced that the Seattle Post-Intellegencer has seen an increase in online pageviews and unique visitors since becoming an online-only publication. The Seattle Post-Intellgencer is the largest newspaper to cease print publication and move to an online-only model. The current editorial staff is 80 percent...

  • Media Roundup: AOL Cuts 700 Employees, House Axes Digital Switch Delay and More

    BNET Media - 282 days 14 hours 40 minutes ago

    AOL cuts 700 employees -- In the midst of declining advertising revenues, AOL has cut 10 percent of its workforce. The company also announced that it will freeze all merit pay raises. In addition to the cutbacks AOL has been reorganizing its media properties under its MediaGlow brand and last week the company received a write down from investor...

  • Monitor Any Page with Website Monitor Google Gadget

    Search Engine Journal - 25 days 18 hours 29 minutes ago

    Do you want to be the first to know when your site goes down? Or once your page goes off Digg front page? Here's one handy Google desktop gadget for you to use when you are running some solid social media promotion: Website Monitor (by Random Geek). Here's what it can do: (1) Monitor the availability of a URLs; (2) Check your web… Check out...

  • Reddit's Ad Experiment Is Good News For Conde Nast. Maybe For Digg, Too [MediaMemo]

    Wall Street Journal - 225 days 16 hours 18 minutes ago

    How do you sell ads on a user-generated content site frequented by people who love technology and hate ads? Sell ads that look exactly like the content itself. That's the strategy that Conde Nast is taking - cautiously -- with Reddit, the Digg-like news aggregator it bought a couple of years ago. And it might be working. So says Josh Stinchcomb,...

 

BNET TalkbackShare your ideas and expertise on this topic

Please add your comment:

  1. You are currently: a Guest |
  2.  

Basic HTML tags that work in comments are: bold (<b></b>), italic (<i></i>), underline (<u></u>), and hyperlink (<a href></a)

advertisement
advertisement
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
advertisement