Dec
2
What’s up? Postal rates increasing for some magazines and not others, so harder for us to get variety of news?
Filed Under Media Journalism | 2 Comments
Habitus asked:
Postal regulators have accepted a scheme designed in part by lobbyists for the Time Warner media conglomerate. In short, mailing costs for mega-magazines like Time Warner’s own Time, People and Sports Illustrated will go up only slightly or decrease. But smaller publications like The Nation will be hit by an enormous rate increase of half a million dollars a year.
For The Nation, $500,000 a year is a lot of money. Believe me, I know. I’ve been working at the magazine for over 20 years. The pay ain’t great. But there are few media outlets that allow their writers and reporters the freedom to go beyond the headlines and take on the powers that be—to ask inconvenient questions and pursue uncomfortable truths.
But starting July 15, 2007, The Nation will face this whopping postal rate hike. Not to be melodramatic, but this rate increase is a threat to democratic discourse. Why should magazines that can afford high-powered lobbyists receive preferential treatment? This rise in mailing costs will make it harder for the magazine to deliver the investigative reporting and independent-minded journalism upon which you depend. (Take my word; I see the editors and publishing people in our New York office freaking out about this postal rate hike and discussing possible cutbacks.)
The magazine is fighting this corporate-driven, unfair and anti-democratic increase as best it can. It has joined forces with conservative publications in an attempt to beat back the rigged rate structure. (Imagine Katrina vanden Heuvel and Rich Lowry, the editor of National Review, working together!) But even if we “win”—which, I’m told, is a long shot—The Nation will still face hundreds of thousands of dollars in additional postage.
Source: David Corn, The Nation
LAVERN
Postal regulators have accepted a scheme designed in part by lobbyists for the Time Warner media conglomerate. In short, mailing costs for mega-magazines like Time Warner’s own Time, People and Sports Illustrated will go up only slightly or decrease. But smaller publications like The Nation will be hit by an enormous rate increase of half a million dollars a year.
For The Nation, $500,000 a year is a lot of money. Believe me, I know. I’ve been working at the magazine for over 20 years. The pay ain’t great. But there are few media outlets that allow their writers and reporters the freedom to go beyond the headlines and take on the powers that be—to ask inconvenient questions and pursue uncomfortable truths.
But starting July 15, 2007, The Nation will face this whopping postal rate hike. Not to be melodramatic, but this rate increase is a threat to democratic discourse. Why should magazines that can afford high-powered lobbyists receive preferential treatment? This rise in mailing costs will make it harder for the magazine to deliver the investigative reporting and independent-minded journalism upon which you depend. (Take my word; I see the editors and publishing people in our New York office freaking out about this postal rate hike and discussing possible cutbacks.)
The magazine is fighting this corporate-driven, unfair and anti-democratic increase as best it can. It has joined forces with conservative publications in an attempt to beat back the rigged rate structure. (Imagine Katrina vanden Heuvel and Rich Lowry, the editor of National Review, working together!) But even if we “win”—which, I’m told, is a long shot—The Nation will still face hundreds of thousands of dollars in additional postage.
Source: David Corn, The Nation
LAVERN
Nov
27
Kim b. Wanting the article from Sport’s Illustrated Are you out there?
Filed Under Media Journalism | 1 Comment
VetSupporter asked:
I was wanting to know if Kim b. that wanted the article from S.I. still wanted the article? I don’t have it but I have some information on how to get it. Thanks.
CESAR
I was wanting to know if Kim b. that wanted the article from S.I. still wanted the article? I don’t have it but I have some information on how to get it. Thanks.
CESAR
Aug
31
How do local papers find out about local news, sports, and business without getting a news tip?
Filed Under Media Journalism | 2 Comments
Water asked:
You see your local news and local sports news and local business news etc in a local paper. WHO finds out about them if the paper doesn’t get a news tip?
You see your local news and local sports news and local business news etc in a local paper. WHO finds out about them if the paper doesn’t get a news tip?
10 points to the most knowledgeable!
GAIL
Feb
25
Why is sports so special that it deserves a section of its own in newspapers and the media?
Filed Under Media Journalism | 3 Comments
phoenixashes asked:
And why don’t we have, for instance, a daily section dedicated to music, or graphic design? It seems like music and designs, among many many others, are not of the same status and prominence as sports. Why is that so?
ALTON
And why don’t we have, for instance, a daily section dedicated to music, or graphic design? It seems like music and designs, among many many others, are not of the same status and prominence as sports. Why is that so?
ALTON



