BSO

BSO
Showing posts with label newspapers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label newspapers. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Paper Comeback?

 

I was intrigued by this announcement that appeared in the Springfield Republican yesterday. (click to enlarge)





For the last several years people have been talking about the Springfield Republican as if it were in an irreversible death spiral. Certainly that view was re-inforced last year when the paper went to a tabloid format twice a week, with many observers suggesting it was only a matter of time before all editions were done in the down-sized tabloid style. That of course would only be a prelude to one by one eliminating the daily editions until finally the presses were turned off for good.

But a funny thing has happened on the way to the graveyard - the newspaper got a pulse! Their announcement is sorta vague, and apparently they are still searching for ideas, but the Springfield Newspapers at least appear to have the confidence to expand back to full size in all editions starting in September.

The tabby style never really suited the Springfield Republican anyway. The paper's journalistic standards were too high to get as trashy as a true tabloid style requires, and it was embarrassing as the regions largest paper that they had been forced to cut back to the tabloid format when their smaller competitors The Hampshire Gazette and the Greenfield Recorder never did.

But perhaps their revival has more to do with the growing realization throughout the newspaper industry that, despite wrenching changes in the market, it will still be possible to make a buck off a printing press. Despite all the news to be found online, people still go to coffeeshops to read the paper, or enjoy it at the breakfast table or after dinner, and they appreciate the paper format's still unique advantage over the computer screen of being able to scan the information all at once without having to click and search all over the place. In other words, while the cocky kid The Internet is still destined to become the King of All Media, there apparently will still be a profitable place at the table after all for at least some of the lords of the old mainstream.

Wow look at this video of how some guys got their shit back from the Greenfield police all trashed.





 

A giant stalked the streets of Northampton last night.

 



I doubt he arrived in this cute little antique. 





A nearby flower power car complete with daisy hubcaps. 





A view out the back window of Urban Outfitters.



The surviving Merry Pranksters celebrated the 4th with the help of semi-deadster Bruce Hornsby.

 



photo by A. Mateus

Thursday, December 17, 2009

McDermott's Legacy

A Mixed One

 



The Springfield Newspapers have announced that their publisher Larry McDermott is retiring, ending an interesting and often controversial journalistic tenure in Valley history.

McDermott first arrived in the Valley in the early 90's, when the Springfield Newspapers were being denounced by an array of critics for its alleged distorting of local news to protect a small insider's cartel of politicians and businesses who were exploiting the city for their personal gain. The difficulty in getting useful and accurate news about local affairs from the paper once prompted the Valley Advocate's Al Giordano to call their Springfield headquarters "Pravda on the Connecticut." McDermott had little to do with that reputation, but still walked into that firestorm of criticism and immediately made a bad impression.

The way most people were introduced to Larry McDermott was through a memo that was leaked to the Valley Advocate by someone who worked at the newspaper. In that memo, McDermott gave a very unflattering appraisal of the Pioneer Valley and its citizens, saying that based on his first impressions, the area lacked character and vision. The newspaper never commented on the leaked memo, but also never denied it was real.

At first McDermott was mostly in the shadow of the paper's controversial publisher David Starr. But when Starr retired to the gentleman's do-nothing position of newspaper President, McDermott came into his own and began making some long overdue reforms. He shocked everyone by reversing the paper's often strident support for casino gambling, doing so without apology or explanation but pleasing reformers who had seen casino interests as simply one more corrupt special interest trying to bleed the city dry. He also promoted the career of staffer Tom Shea, who had been under-utilized for years, until Shea blossomed into their star writer. McDermott also repealed the paper's longstanding ban on their reporters appearing in any other media but their own paper by granting Tom Shea permission to appear on the Dan Yorke Show.

Some critics were not impressed, complaining that the paper still coddled its pet people and institutions. As activist Sheila McElwaine once wrote on Heather Brandon's blog Urban Compass.



Larry McDermott and Heather Brandon


I got a letter from Larry McDermott in the mid 1990s saying the paper wasn’t about to look into how the Springfield Library and Museums Association used Springfield tax dollars because they didn’t want to drag this fine institution into politics–as if it wasn’t knee deep in politics already which was exactly the problem. There’s a real defender of public access for you.

Informing the public and encouraging civic participation aren’t even on their radar screens. As we see so often in the morning paper, Larry is passionate about the right of the PRESS to know anything that interests them, but indifferent to the right of the PUBLIC to know more than journalists, in their infinite wisdom, feel we are entitled to. He gave lip service to “feet on the street,” but it’s been a long time since any reporter’s feet have been down my street. Instead, they are tucked under desks down at the paper where their owners are banging out stories which conform to the AP style book and editing prom photos.


But probably the most damning incident of the McDermott era came to light in the deposition by Springfield Library Association head Joe Carvalho in a lawsuit in which the Advocate reported:

According to Carvalho's timeline, in February, Albano informed SLMA leaders that there would be cuts to its budget. The conversation took place via a conference call, Carvalho testified, with the mayor out of town, and Carvalho, Don D'Amour and Larry McDermott in McDermott's office at the Republican. Albano told the group that the cuts were prompted by major reductions in local aid; he also told them, Carvalho said, that Springfield was "going to be in receivership most probably" by that summer.

Think about that for a minute. The mayor personally informs McDermott that the city is "going to be in receivership" and what is McDermott's response? If ever there was a Perry White moment in which to scream, "Stop the presses!" that was it. Instead, nothing was printed, and the paper continued to back the Albano Administration. Through their silence they protected the politicians responsible for the fiscal crisis and delayed necessary reforms. The Springfield Newspaper's stubborn support of the local establishment insiders ultimately proved to be a major embarrassment, as the FBI raided City Hall within 24 hours of Albano's last re-election.

McDermott wrote an often interesting and entertaining weekly column in which, despite his allegedly negative first impressions, he seemed to develop a genuine fondness for our Valley and its people, so perhaps in retirement he will stick around. But nothing can change the fact that McDermott's legacy is definitely a mixed one. He inherited a newspaper whose credibility was basically shot and made an honest effort to rebuild it. Indeed the paper's reputation has risen somewhat in the last several years, as the staff seemed to learn some valuable lessons from Springfield's terrible fall.

Yet it was still a fall which they had done much too little to prevent when they had the chance, and Larry McDermott has to take some of the responsibility for that.

 

Roundabout

Someone sent me this great shot of downtown Springfield from high up in Monarch Place.





Mark Alamad caught this pic on the Mass Pike. 





Congrats to TV40's Scott Coen on his daughter's bat mitzvah. 





In downtown Amherst someone sits reading the memoirs of Amherst homeboy Augusten Burroughs. 





In Amherst they drive funny vans.





Silver trees in front of Northampton's Cathy Cross Woman's Wear