THE TRAGIC (AND SADLY EXPECTED) END OF ELEFTHEROS TYPOS

Files under General | Jun 22nd
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A few minutes ago, the bad news came from Athens:
“Eleftheros Tipos Newspaper and City Radio will suspend their function, an official announcement said today.
During the General Meeting of the Shareholders΄ held on 19 June, it was unanimously decided to place the companies in liquidation.
The announcement also states that big funds were invested in the two companies, but the fact that they were always in the red plus the news model that prevails in Greece led to this decision.
Theodoros and Gianna Angelopoulous, that bought the newspaper 3 years ago, will walk out of the media business.”
As all of you know, INNOVATION created the new paper’s editorial and graphic model, and with Saf Fahim in New York, we designed one of the most fantastic multimedia newsrooms in the world.
But like any Greek tragedy, our professional efforts were not enough for a newspaper market where politics, politicians and politically engaged publishers, editors and journalists rule.
We were told that the new paper would be an independent one.
The editorial and graphic model become an instant icon of modernity and won many European and World design awards.
Surveys told us that young readers, female readers and advertisers, loved the ET2 section (second part of the paper), which included lifestyle and consumer news and stories.
But the front of the paper was always heavy and boring with plenty of commodity political news.
The paper had too many editors, including Lambros Smailis, our trusted friend during long working months, who resigned within just a few days of the launching.
Lambros was right: the paper was not going to break the traditional Greek political news model.
He and other brave editors and reporters couldn’t cope with the constant interference of two journalistically ignorant and incompetent political advisers that misguided the new publisher.
So, after investing millions of euros, the paper is gone.
It’s hard to believe that so much money could have been invested and managed so badly.
We said from the beginning that ET should not become a political project but a journalistic project with independence and credibility. This advice fell on deaf ears. We pushed and pushed for a credible brand of quality journalism but the inertia of politically motivated editors led to the demise of a great brand with a great concept and brilliant design.
That said, Greece stills needs an independent and professionally run modern newspaper.
Today more than ever!
ET was launched with this mission, but ended like the old newspapers in this country: with no credibility, no readers, no advertisers, and no money.
As you can imagine, we and many of our friends from ET are very, very sad.
And be sure: this is not another casualty of the so-called newspaper crisis.
If there is a market that needs a good, professional, profitable and independent newspaper, Athens is it.
UPDATE: The Athens Union of Journalists (ESIEA) on Monday called a 24-hour strike beginning at 5:00 p.m. the same day until 5:00 p.m. on Tuesday, in protest of the closure of newspapers. No news will be disseminated by ANA-MPA for the duration of the strike. News from ANA-MPA will be discontinued at 5:00 p.m. on Monday and will resume at 5:00 p.m. on Tuesday


BUDAPEST 1956, TEHRAN 2009

Files under General | Jun 22nd

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The same sad story.

In 2009 like in 1956.

In Iran like in Hungary.

Two rebellions against tyrannies.

With no real response from the Western world.

No one.



IRAN, CELL PHONES AS MACHINE GUNS

Files under General | Jun 22nd

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From a twitter in Iran:

A cell phone in your hand, looks like a machine gun to guards! They’d arrest you for your phone.



TEHRAN WOMEN IN GREEN

Files under General | Jun 21st

Amazing pictures from Andrew Sullivan‘s minute-to-minute blog coverage of Iran’s Green Revolution:6a00d83451c45669e201157129c520970b-800wi6a00d83451c45669e201157023b39b970c-800wi

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ROGER COHEN FROM TEHRAN

Files under General | Jun 21st

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The last paragraph of a new and fascinating dispatch from Roger Cohen from the streets of Tehran:

“Later, as night fell over the tumultuous capital, gunfire could be heard in the distance.

And from rooftops across the city, the defiant sound of “Allah-u-Akbar” — “God is Great” — went up yet again, as it has every night since the fraudulent election.

But on Saturday it seemed stronger.

The same cry was heard in 1979, only for one form of absolutism to yield to another. Iran has waited long enough to be free.”



ARE YOU IN IRAN? THE BBC WANTS YOU…

Files under General | Jun 20th

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The BBC posted this call:

“Are you in Iran?

What do you think of the current situation?

Are you taking part in the demonstrations?

If you have any information you would like to share with the BBC you can do so using the form below:

Send your pictures and video to yourpics@bbc.co.uk or text them to +44 7725 100 100. If you have a large file you can upload here.

Read the terms and conditions

At no time should you endanger yourself or others, take any unnecessary risks or infringe any laws.”



HERE THEY COME AGAIN: THE DAILY TELEGRAPH FIGHTS THE BLACKOUT AND THE GUARDIAN ASKS READERS FOR HELP

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Today the House of Commons told us half of what we knew from reading the revelations made by The Daily Telegraph more than one month ago!

But the most outrageous details were hidden by the thick black strokes of a censor’s pen.

Parliamentary authorities posted details online of four years worth of legislators’ claims but thousands of pages were obscured amid concerns over privacy and security.

It was too little and too late.

The Telegraph will publish some of the uncensored documents in full on Friday.

As BBC’s Martin Rosenbaum says:
Now the Commons has released the official data on MPs’ expenses, much of the focus will actually be on what they still haven’t released – the information which has been blacked out or “redacted”.

2009-06-18_2346And The Guardian launched a tool asking readers for help to review the files:

Step 1: Find a document
Step 2: Decide what kind of thing it is and whether it’s interesting
Step 3: Copy out any individual entries
Step 4: Make any specific observations about why a claim deserves further scrutiny



A TRIBUNA, A LEADER THAT CHANGES AND CHANGES

Files under General | Jun 18th

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Only leaders change, and they change because they are — and want to be — leaders.

This is the amazing case of A TRIBUNA (Vitoria, Brazil).

INNOVATION changes between 1995 and 2007 (Juan Antonio Giner, Gonzalo Peltzer, Daniel Diez, Guillermo D’Aiello, Eduardo Tessler, Raul Braulio Martinez and Ricardo Melo) made this popular 8,000-copy paper a leader.

After some new INNOVATION changes in 2003, A TRIBUNA became the leader with more than 30,000 copies.

More INNOVATION changes in 2007 and A TRIBUNA sold 53,000 copies.

Today A TRIBUNA sells on average more than 62,000 copies from Monday to Saturday, and more than 70,000 on Sunday.

Three times more than the A GAZETA, which was the leader in the Vitoria market in 1995.

Today’s paper shows a new face, and an improved editorial and newsroom management formula.

Eduardo Tessler, INNOVATION’s director in Brazil, was the project manager of a team that included  Saulo Ribas (design), Gabriel Sama (newsroom management), Ricardo Chaves (photojournalism) and Rodrigo Cavalcante (newsroom training).

Joao-Luiz Caser, editor-in-chief of this paper, is a low-profile journalist, but nobody else in Brazil has been able to increase the circulation of a daily newspaper by almost eight times in the last 14 years.

The secret?

A newspaper that is local, local, local.

Full of local stories.

Friendly.

Useful.

Easy to read.

Energetic.

Happy.

Well written.

Well designed.

Readers and advertisers love A TRIBUNA.

So do we.

Congratulations to Joao-Luiz and his fantastic team!



THE SND EMBROGLIO

Files under General | Jun 16th

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All the Society for News Design (SND) members got this nice and encouraging message from founder and past president (1982-1983) Richard Curtis (bolds are mine):

Matt Mansfield, the current SND president, has resigned, effective June 18. The reasons for his resignation are not altogether clear to those of us who do not sit on the board of directors, but I — and at least 13 other founders and past presidents of SND who participated Thursday in a lengthy teleconference that discussed the resignation and its ramifications — are convinced that Matt did resign in the interest of the Society.

In the phone conference, we fully acknowledged Matt’s worth to the Society and his many and valuable contributions over many years. We tried to dissuade him from resigning, but he was steadfast.

Where does that leave the Society, and more important, what does it mean to you, as a dues-paying member?

One, the Society is more than one person. Let’s remember that the Society is made up of true believers, or as Mario Garcia put it, “fools with enthusiasm.” That spirit cannot be dampened. This is just a temporary, albeit serious, setback to an organization that is essential to the future of journalism.

Two, know that the Society and its programs will continue. The Buenos Aires workshop will take place this September; the design contest in 2010 and its subsequent awards book will continue; Design magazine will be published as will SND Update; and regional workshops and Quick Courses will continue as scheduled.

Three, since this resignation caught everyone by surprise, in the coming weeks and months the remaining officers and board members will take whatever steps necessary and appropriate to address this challenge. You may be called on to volunteer; if so, we hope you’ll step up to the plate and take your strongest swing.

Current Vice-President Bonita Burton, now presumed president, has asked the past presidents to act as an advisory group to her and the board as she and others plot the Society’s immediate and long-term strategy; the past presidents have agreed. That’s a lot of firepower to bring to bear on whatever challenges she might face. Bonita and SND have our full support.

We hope you, too, will continue to support your Society through these rough times and to contribute in any way possible.

Thank you.

Matt and president pro-tem Bonita Burton are holding a live chat at 3:30 p.m. EDT  today, June 16, to answer questions about the future of SND. (Check your local time here.)

Well, to start, what we need is to know the reasons, and then we can discuss the past, present and the future.

Unfortunately, SND is facing serious problems.

And one of them is transparency.

My feeling  is that the Buenos Aires workshop could become a big issue, too, in these turbulent times.

(In the picture, Richard Curtis on the night USA Today launched)

UPDATE: You can read here the 40 minute chat that was of course ”moderated” and didn’t add any new facts.

A journalistic society that doesn’t (really) inform its members…

Must be a Guiness record!

The chat was just another kind of  “damage control” that will not end the questions.



AMAZING! FACEBOOK IS A $10 BILLION COMPANY

Files under General | Jun 12th

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Facebook, still a privately owned company, sold 1.96% of its capital to  the Russian internet firm Digital Sky Technologies (DST) for $200 million a few days ago.

In 2007, Facebook sold 1.6% to Microsoft for $240 Million.

Facebook has more than 200 million active users,

Google’s initial public offering took place on August 19, 2004, and gave Google a market capitalization of more than $23 billion.

Google’s market value today is $134 billion.

Time Warner, $31 billion.

News Corporation, $27 billion.

Yahoo, $22 billion.

And The New York Times is $905 million, so less than half of Facebook.

Amazing grace!

Amazing race!