A NEWSSTAND VERDICT FOR PUBLICO

When I arrived in Barcelona (Spain) on Thursday night, I went to the first newsstand at the airport on my way to get a taxi.

The rack of newspapers was almost empty.

It was 9 pm.

No La Vanguardia.

No El Periodico.

Two Avui.

No El Mundo.

No El Pais.

No ABC.

Three La Razon.

Twenty Publico!

Publico is the new national newspaper launched a few days ago following a massive free-DVD campaign.

So, the “testing” is over.

And if this rack says something, it is that they are printing a lot of copies, but selling very few.

The cover price is just 0.50 euros ($0.70) against the one euro for the competitors.

I asked the newsstand vendor about Publico.

His reaction: “The free paper, you mean?”

Well, it’s not a free paper I said.

“Si, pero parece un gratuito” (Yes, but it looks like a free one)

The comment is quite serious.

This was the same reaction that many readers of El Periodico had after this kind of design a few years ago (too much color, too many boxes, too many short stories…)

El Periodico lost more than 30,000 copies and La Vanguardia has been the clear leading paper in Barcelona since then.

Will Publico be another Pagina 12 of Buenos Aires, Liberation in Paris or The Independent in London?

A viewspaper for a minority?

A non-profit newspaper?

Publico and its young and combative newsroom deserve a better future.



IS WATER NEXT?

Files under Barcelona, EL PERIODICO, THE NEW YORKER | Jul 25th

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Today, EL PERIODICO has this interesting front page.

Quotes from angry readers screaming against the power failure.

A good front page.

But no one has been better than the cover of the New Yorker after a similar situation in Manhattan a few years ago:

Is Water Next?

A perfect headline for the much needed what’s-next journalism.

I am from Barcelona.

So, I can’t understand why almost all the city has been with no electricity for two days.

Catalans are seen in many parts of Spain as prone to separatism.

Well… here are some ways to prevent it:

One: Privatize the state-controlled, third-world Barcelona airport.

Now, you have to connect in Madrid for too many international flights.

In my whole life, Barcelona airport is the only one to have lost one of my suitcases!

Two: Speed up the arrival of fast trains – coming to Barcelona later than to any other big city in Spain.

A shame when the first train line in Spain was the Barcelona-Mataro one.

Third: Invest in the orbital highways around Barcelona.

See the differences with Madrid in this graphic chart posted in an excellent Catalan blog.

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BIG ADS ON SPANISH FRONT PAGES

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It is a national 50-day advertising campaign.

Started today.

El Pais, El Mundo and Expansion published a smaller version of the same ad.

In La Vanguardia, ABC, El Periodico and other newspapers, the ACCIONA ads were bigger.

ACCIONA is a Spanish company investing and doing business in the green energy sector.

The ad today was a celebration of World Environment Day.

Using newsprint!

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SARKOZY ON THE FRONT PAGES

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