‘Online Media’ Archive

Twitter, Blackbird Pie and permanence

Twitter released a small, simple app called Blackbird Pie that, when Twitter isn’t painfully slow and blogged down, should make it easy to embed a tweet in a blog post. It creates little bit of static HTML code that you can plop in a page. Like so: This is a tweet that I will later [...]

Metaphors: Selling snowmen

Selling snowmen to Eskimos Information Architects‘ “The Value of Information” Information on the Internet is as common as snow in the arctic. You can’t expect Eskimos to buy a snowman. Jay Rosen on Twitter Journalist: hey, I made a snowman. Inuit: nice! Journalist: it took me all day. Inuit: what’s your point? Journalist: that’ll be [...]

Where will those dirty, dirty bloggers aggregators stop?

The irony of Connie Schultz’s video diatribe against parasitic aggregators being embeddable shouldn’t be overlooked.

Poor Doub Roberson

It this week’s Hoopla, Gazette Communication’s weekly for “young adults,” there is a short interview with Doug Roberson, longtime booker and bartender at Gabe’s and the Picador. After the interview, Mr. Roberson was laid off. This sucks. But to make matters worse for Mr. Roberson, when the story appeared online, it ran with this editor’s [...]

You should read Todd Dorman

I complain about The Gazette in this space a lot, partially because it’s a good target as the largest media company in the Corridor Crandic, and partially because I want it to be a great organization. So, today, some kudos. Todd Dorman is a guy who gets it. Three columns a week about stuff that [...]

The Gazette lays off 13

Gazette Communications publicly announced its reorganization (which I’ve written about here and in the Corridor Business Journal) and laid off 13 employees. According to the media company, the restructuring will result in 100 fewer jobs. The restructuring sees Steve Buttry move from editor of The Gazette and GazetteOnline to overseeing the entire news gathering operation [...]

The Gazette’s reoganization

In Monday’s Corridor Business Journal is the first of what we plan to be a monthly media column that I will write with John Goodlove. In this installment, we wrote about the recent announcement that The Gazette is restructuring its newsroom, and the following staff uneasiness. Mr. Goodlove is a grizzled newspaper veteran while I’m [...]

That crazy electronic newspaper thing, circa 1981

Please don’t use euphemisms for death

Today I’m reminded of a lesson I learned in a reporting 101 class: People die. People do not pass away. They do not meet Jesus. They do not cross over. They are not lost. People die.

Flooded by a historic deluge of “epic surge”

For the last six months, The Gazette has done an admirable job covering the 500-year flood that covered downtown Cedar Rapids in June and the city’s recovery since. Local stories by local writers about local people and local challenges. This week, the organization looked back at the changes the flood wrought, and put all of [...]