LULA AND THE BRAZILIAN WATCHDOG MEDIA

Files under General | Oct 30th

With more than 60% of the votes, Lula wins the Presidential elections in Brazil.

As you know, the independent media has been very persistent covering corruption scandals linked directly to the President´s party but the candidate of the left was able to survive and now has been re-elected.

My impression is that this is going to be a short happy-victory-time as many of these scandals will not go away.

The media in Brazil has a very important mission in the next few months: to act as a powerful watchdog.

Lula has been a moderate leader but at the end of the day he was unable to control the corruption inside its party, and between his closest assistants.

Folha de S.Paulo, O Estado de S.Paulo, O Globo, Zero Hora, Veja and many other first class Brazilian media are going to have a great time.

You always perform better when you become a real watchdog.



THE BEST OF THE BEST BUT JUST ONCE EVERY TWO YEARS: BOB WOODWARD, CNN AND ROLLING STONE

Files under Journalism | Oct 30th

Read this month Rolling Stone cover story The Worst Congress Ever, that includes a great list with The 10 worst congressmen.

Bob Woodward could not do it better.

And if you watched last night CNN special report on prime time about Broken Government, you will agree with me about two things:

1. Rolling Stone, Bob Woodward and CNN are right.

2. But why they have not done this necessary reporting job before?

Why our best media are so politically correct for years and years and then, to our surprise, they tell us the true?

Something must be wrong when Bob Woodward discovers in the last day that Bush and his team were fooling us.

Something must be wrong when CNN discovers in the last day that Bush and his team were fooling us.

Something must be wrong when Rolling Stone discovers in the last day that Bush and his team were fooling us.

But we need real journalism everyday, not just every two years, right before the elections.

Thanks to Hold hands and fight



CASTRO’S LAST VIDEO AND THE LATE RESPONSE OF THE MIAMI HERALD

Files under General | Oct 30th

A 80-year-old Fidel Castro with terminal cancer, in a 5 minute video shown in the Cuban television.

But The Miami Herald web site did not have these pictures in the following hours to the TV program.

Just the AP dispatch from 8:41 pm of last Saturday

More than two hours later, no pictures.

Why?

Well, at least next day the print edition of The Miami Herald had the photo from the last video of Castro.

And the online edition has now portions of the video in an AP video story.

A breaking-news, but not for the Miami market from the dominant paper and the largest newsroom in Florida where the Cuban community rules.

The old campaign against the Herald: “I do not trust The Miami Herald” could be now “I do not need The Miami Herald.”



A BLOG FOR BOOK PLATES

Files under General | Oct 28th

If you like “ex libris” (I do) bookplatejunkie is your blog.

Blogs like that one explain very well the instant success of any hobby-oriented blog.

What a joy!



THE UK PRESS GAZETTE CRISIS

Files under General | Oct 28th

Let me start saying that I have been a regular subscriber of this old fashion trade magazine.

And always I had the impression that was as bad andf soft as the US Editor&Publisher.

Like E&P, as soon as the UKPG started to do independent reporting… media companies and advertisers did not like the approach.

Well, nothing new for trade publications as their audiences are their advertisers.

So, now the new owners of the UKPG want to create and independent Trust in order to survive.

I am sorry, but I don’t see why they are going to fund a publication that they are not going to be able to control.

But more important that that.

Like many other ex-readers of these publications, I don’t subscribe anymore to these print magazines.

Internet and the media blogs provide today a lot of information on real time.

E&P is now a monthly print magazine.

Perhaps UKPG must do the same.

But the era of media gatekeepers is gone.



THE HUNGARIAN REVOLUTION 50 YEARS AFTER AND THE WORDS OF ALBERT CAMUS

Files under General | Oct 28th

Why the Western media is not remembering too much the 1956 Hungarian revolt?

In Time words:

October 23, 1956: Students hold demonstration in front of the General Bem statue demanding reforms, democratization, and the return of premier Imre Nagy.

When students attempt to be heard over Budapest radio, police try to disperse crowd with tear gas, beatings and numerous arrests.

The crowd attempts to free the students and the police open fire.

The bloody revolution begins as the demonstration turns into a riot and street fighting breaks out.

Martial law is declared, a call for Russian troops issued, and, during the night, Soviet tanks and jets are reported used against demonstrators.

State Minister Bibo on November 4th, as Soviets continued their massive attack on Hungary: “I appeal to the great powers of the world for a wise and courageous decision in the interest of my enslaved nation and of the liberty of all Eastern European nations. God preserve Hungary…”

Hungary repeated free radio broadcast calls for Western help.

But the West never came.

November 4th marked the end of Hungary’s valiant fight.

But marked the beginning of suffering for thousands involved in the fight for freedom.

Thousands died, and many more many more jailed.

2% of the population, over 200,000 people, were forced to flee.

One year after, Albert Camus wrote this magnificent “Stirring Letter to the World”

“The Blood of the Hungarians”

I am not one of those who wish to see the people of Hungary take up arms again in a rising certain to be crushed, under the eyes of the nations of the world, who would spare them neither applause nor pious tears, but who would go back at one to their slippers by the fireside like a football crowd on a Sunday evening after a cup final.

There are already too many dead on the field, and we cannot be generous with any but our own blood. The blood of Hungary has re-emerged too precious to Europe and to freedom for us not to be jealous of it to the last drop.

But I am not one of those who think that there can be a compromise, even one made with resignation, even provisional, with a regime of terror which has as much right to call itself socialist as the executioners of the Inquisition had to call themselves Christians.

And on this anniversary of liberty, I hope with all my heart that the silent resistance of the people of Hungary will endure, will grow stronger, and, reinforced by all the voices which we can raise on their behalf, will induce unanimous international opinion to boycott their oppressors.

And if world opinion is too feeble or egoistical to do justice to a martyred people, and if our voices also are too weak, I hope that Hungary’s resistance will endure until the counter-revolutionary State collapses everywhere in the East under the weight of its lies and contradictions.

Hungary conquered and in chains has done more for freedom and justice than any people for twenty years. But for this lesson to get through and convince those in the West who shut their eyes and ears, it was necessary, and it can be no comfort to us, for the people of Hungary to shed so much blood which is already drying in our memories.

In Europe’s isolation today, we have only one way of being true to Hungary, and that is never to betray, among ourselves and everywhere, what the Hungarian heroes died for, never to condone, among ourselves and everywhere, even indirectly, those who killed them.

It would indeed be difficult for us to be worthy of such sacrifices. But we can try to be so, in uniting Europe at last, in forgetting our quarrels, in correcting our own errors, in increasing our creativeness, and our solidarity. We have faith that there is on the march in the world, parallel with the forces of oppression and death which are darkening our history, a force of conviction and life, an immense movement of emancipation which is culture and which is born of freedom to create and of freedom to work.

Those Hungarian workers and intellectuals, beside whom we stand today with such impotent sorrow, understood this and have made us the better understand it. That is why, if their distress is ours, their hope is ours also. In spite of their misery, their chains, their exile, they have left us a glorious heritage which we must deserve: freedom, which they did not win, but which in one single day they gave back to us.



WEB DESIGN IS 95% TYPOGRAPHY… AND SIMPLICITY

Files under General | Oct 28th

Information Architects got it right:

95% of the information on the web is written language.

It is only logical to say that a web designer should get good training in the main discipline of shaping written information, in other words: Typography.

And then they add:

Simplicity as a result of a creative process is “the ultimate sophistication”, as Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519) said.

Simple websites are easy to use, easy to understand, nice to look at. In practice, websites are either unusable or ugly and in general filled with too many complicated words. Why do designers have such a hard time to keep it simple?

Web-designers are confronted with a set of rules that websites have to follow in order to work, such as:

- Links have to be recognizable either through being underlined or blue.

- Logos should be placed in the upper left corner.

- Fonts should not only be big (at least 12px) but also scalable.

- Few pictures is better than many pictures.

- Few fragmented text works better than text-blocks.

- No columns for text, as websites scroll.

See the creative way to present themselves in this pdf about Information Architects.



SIR, YOU BETTER PAY MORE ATTENTION TO INTERNET

Files under General | Oct 28th

WPP CEO Sir Martin Sorrell said yesterday that the relentless rise of the internet was a key factor in the depressed state of the overall UK advertising market.

Well, Sir, you must start to consider that Internet is also part of the advertising market.



THE GUARDIAN, THIS SATURDAY: A MAGAZINE INSTEAD OF A DVD

Files under General | Oct 28th

Today, The Guardian is promoting its Saturday edition with Space, a free magazine.

The Italian “panini” strategy comes to the UK.

Also The Observer will offer tomorrow its monthly Sports magazine.

Newspapers that promote their sales with editorial print quality products send the right message to the market.



WHY DOW JONES IS SELLING SIX OF ITS COMMUNITY NEWSPAPERS?

Files under General | Oct 28th

Dow Jones & Company announced a definitive agreement to sell six of its community newspapers to Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc. for $282.5 million in cash (after-tax proceeds to be approximately $268.0 million) which will be used to fund the recently announced Factiva acquisition and to pay down debt.

“This sale and the pending acquisition of Factiva are the latest examples of our commitment to transform Dow Jones from a company heavily dependent on print publishing revenue to a more diversified company capable of meeting the needs of its customers across all consumer and enterprise media channels, whether print, online, mobile or otherwise,” said Rich Zannino, CEO of Dow Jones.

“By selling these papers for more than 11 times EBITDA and buying the remaining 50% of Factiva for an effective price after tax benefits and cost synergies of about 4 times EBITDA, we are efficiently redeploying capital from print to faster growing digital publishing.” Mr. Zannino concluded.

Well, like The New York Times Company, the publishers of The Wall Street Journal need to concentrate in their main products.

These newspapers were the legacy of buying the Ottaway Group many year ago and since then Dow Jones made good money as anybody does in the US with these community publications, but at the end of the day they were a distraction.

The Wall Street Journal is another great newspapers with a poor financial performance, and I will not be surprise if very soon a free financial newspaper like CITY AM comes to Wall Street and grabs some of its readers and advertisers.