Archive for the ‘Media’ Category

Steve Jobs Out – Apple Briefly Halts Trading

Steve Jobs, head of Apple, has announced in an email to employees that he is vacating his post until June for “health related reasons”. Tom Cook, current COO, will take over until his return. There has been much speculation about the health of the Apple CEO, who has visibly lost weight in recent months. Apple shares were halted shortly before this email was released. After trading resumed, the stock fell 10% in after hours trading.

The email that Jobs sent to Apple employees today:

Team, I am sure all of you saw my letter last week sharing something very personal with the Apple community. Unfortunately, the curiosity over my personal health continues to be a distraction not only for me and my family, but everyone else at Apple as well. In addition, during the past week I have learned that my health-related issues are more complex than I originally thought.

In order to take myself out of the limelight and focus on my health, and to allow everyone at Apple to focus on delivering extraordinary products, I have decided to take a medical leave of absence until the end of June.

I have asked Tim Cook to be responsible for Apple’s day to day operations, and I know he and the rest of the executive management team will do a great job. As CEO, I plan to remain involved in major strategic decisions while I am out. Our board of directors fully supports this plan.

I look forward to seeing all of you this summer.

Steve

Facebook’s Tempest Over Ta-Tas

Facebook’s Breast Feeding Ban results in Nurse-In.

It seems the only legimate exposure of breasts in the media is when Nature, Discovery Channel or National Geographic show a tribe in the Amazon or Africa where shirts and shoes are optional.  Janet Jackson they are not.  In America, public displays of breast feeding is still a sensitive issue depending on the community you live in.  Now the tempest has reached into one of the main public squares online – Facebook.

MILC (Mothers International Lactation Campaign) staged a protest outside of Facebook’s Palo Alto office protesting the popular site’s policy of removing images of Mother’s breastfeeding, if the photo displays the nipple or areola.  The red-dot policy has some mothers up in arms (because we should note that there are plenty of mothers against public displays of breast feeding in this country as well).

Heather Farley, organizer of the “nurse-in” outlined in an open letter why she opposed such a ban:

..”it is an issue of discrimination against breastfeeding mothers. Like issues such as pregnancy, breastfeeding discrimination is a gender issue. When pictures are removed of breastfeeding and not of artificial feeding, breastfeeding mothers are being discriminated against and a wrongful double standard is set. After all, a bottle is simply a plastic, prosthetic disembodied breast in size, form, and function.”

More than anything however, it is a public relations issue, which Heather also noted.  The question is, on which side will the online public take?  The issue has its advocates on both sides in the real world and we doubt it will be any different online. Facebook however, could’ve mitigated the problem and even increased stickiness on its site by simply asking its members to vote on the issue.  Meanwhile, the temptest over ta-tas will continue unabated, for another online minute or two at least.

photo: a baby breast feeding.  This photo, which shows some nipple, would be banned on Facebook.

Photo Credit: ocadotony via Flickr Creative Commons.

Emmys Announced

  • December 2, 2008
  • Media
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NEW YORK CITY – CNN international correspondent Christiane Amanpour presented David Schlesinger, Editor-in-Chief of Reuters, with the Emmy Lifetime Achievement Award at a luncheon ceremony in the Rainbow Room of the famed Rockefeller Center. Notable speakers included Peter Price, President/CEO of the National Academy of Television Art & Sciences, Robert Thomson, Editor-In-Chief of the Dow Jones Company and Managing Editor of The Wall Street Journal; and Bill Small, Chairman of the News and Documentary Emmy Awards, who presented the awards on behalf of the Academy.

Notable Winners:

ABC World News with Charles Gibson, Global Food Crisis

ABC New Nightline, Brian Ross Investigates: The Multimillion Dollar ‘Appeal’

Bloomberg, 401(k) Hidden Fees

Bloomberg, The Human Toll of Ethanol

CBS Evening News with Katie Couric, Life and Debt in America

CBS News 60 Minutes, King of Sushi

CNBC Business Nation, Field of Dreams

PBS, NOW, India Rising

PBS, NOW, Taxing the Poor

above: Na Eng wins an Emmy as producer of “Taxing the Poor”, a segment on the show NOW on PBS.

photo courtesy of the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.

Behind Twitter’s $500 Mil. Rejection of Facebook

  • November 24, 2008
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Kara Swisher’s Boomtown blog gives us some juicy tidbits as to why Twitter eventually rejected Facebook’s $500 million offer to acquire Twitter.  Twitter if you’re unaware is a fast growing “life streamer” that has spawned not only direct competitors, like FriendFeed, but also feature-cloning from the likes of Facebook and Gmail.

Apparently Twitter felt that $500 million in Facebook stock wasn’t necessarily worth $500 million.  Twitter investors and execs also felt the timing wasn’t right, and that Twitter still had room to grow and needed time to try to monetize the site to see its full potential.  While Twitter has grown 600% in the past year, investors such as Charles River and Union Square Ventures determined that it was still too early in the game to be acquired.  Facebook has recently surpassed Myspace, accumulating 120 million users, but so far has yet to be revenue-positive.

The acquisition offer was in all-stock form according to the report, at an earlier buzzed-about $15 billion dollar valuation from Microsoft.  Twitter reportedly pegs Facebook at $5 billion, giving their true acquisition payout to be $150 million – too low, even in this current economic climate.

Read more at AllThingsD.com

History of The New York Herald.

  • November 24, 2008
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History of The New York Herald.

1794-1797. “Herald” of New York has a three year run as a “Gazette for the Entire Nation”

1802-1826. The “New-York Herald.” has a successful run and is predessor to the Gordon Bennett Publication.

1835-1924.

Monetizing Online Newspapers

  • November 23, 2008
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As a novice ‘news brand’ publisher, I read with great relief that the best in the business, Rupert Murdoch, is bullish on the future of newspapers. He ought to know – not only is Mr. Murdoch a legend in the publishing business, known for his tenacity as well as his populist, reader-knows-best editorial perspective, he has also recently impressed many by taking a decidedly old-world brand, the Wall Street Journal, into the digital age with finesse and aplomb. The new Wall Street Journal’s website looks great, makes money, and is outpacing its rival The New York Times in the one metric that counts most – ad rates.

My take on his perspective on the future of newspapers is that while the challenges of printing on “dead trees” and competing with the likes of Craigslist is very real indeed, news brands can survive and dominate because they offer something thousands of blogs don’t – instant credibility earned over decades of journalism. The focus of that credibility of course is in the brand, and the journalists, journalistic standards and corporate resources the brand represents. The challenge is for these news brands then is to walk the fine line between editorial integrity and modern communication standards, while still managing to earn a profit. Its not as easy as it sounds. Newspapers that veer towards “advertorial” content do so at great risk to their reputations, and some esteemed news brands, such as the Christian Science Monitor, have jumped off the printed press entirely, choosing to double down on their journalists while cutting off the cost and hassle of a daily printed edition.

As a digital strategist who learned the ropes through direct response online marketing, I’ve been trained to think most importantly of R.O.I. Search engine marketing, vs. banner ads bought on a CPM, is as ROI-centric as you can get. You are literally picking keywords and landing pages and measuring conversions on each creative decision you make. According to Hitwise, 25% of all online news brand traffic arrives via search engines. Thus, a new editorial dilemma, along the lines of the advertorial controversy, is taking shape. Do you write for the reader, or Google?

Although I’ve yet to find a clear roadmap that addresses such dilemmas, I offer my current perspective on how newspapers can please Google, maintain editorial integrity and monetize traffic enough to remain viable and even market-leading in the world of online publishing.

Change Perspective. A blog is a newspaper concept without the kind of editorial and journalistic qualities usually associated with newspapers. A newspaper is a blog that is generally behind the curve on the new business and communication models of a blog. The answer is for blogs to structure themselves in a professional manner along the lines of a respected newspaper, and for newspapers to take technical advantage of the blog platform. They are not mutually exclusive – and in fact are the same entity but with polar strengths and weaknesses.

First, we have to accept the following premises:

The economies of scale for newspapers have changed permanently, thus newspapers have to radically alter their organizational ratios. Newspapers made a great living off paid classifieds, so much so that Craigslist is often credited as the newspaper killer. While charging for display ads still brings home the bacon, the competition for eyeballs has generally lowered ad rates across the board. Newspapers compete not ony with other newspapers, but also blogs, cellphones and increasingly multi-media televisions and computer screens.

News has become a low value commodity. Subscriptions have fallen off a cliff, as news, for example, about the MTA’s planned fare hikes, can be found anywhere and everywhere. In the case of printed subscriptions, printing such news is akin to printing “yesterday’s news tomorrow”.

The printed newspaper, along with its distribution, is too resource-intense and will continue to be so in the future. We’re talking dead trees, mammoth factories and printing presses, diesel trucks winding its way through thick city traffic and guys lifting 50 lbs of news into a bodega every morning, yes, to deliver “yesterday’s news”.

How then do we move forward? The key is to leverage the news brand as an authoritative source and voice. Polls indicate that the internet is becoming more trustworthy to consumers than what they hear on television. That’s good news for newspapers, and newspaper-like blogs. We can maintain or accelerate that credibility by maintaining and improving on the editorial voice and quality of the news brand. Thus advertorials are out, and working to please Google ahead of readers is a no-no. All we have is our news brand’s credibility and authoritative voice – its golden and should be protected and expanded above all else.

Secondly, we have to recognize the new economics. The online news business doesn’t make the kind of margins the printed newspaper did in its hey day. That’s ok, if we’re able to cut costs in two areas – the printed newspaper, and news as commodity. In other words, stop printing if you can’t get people to subscribe, and stop spending so much time and money on telling readers about the fare hike that 1,000,000 other blogs and newspapers have already reported on.

Instead, focus the newsroom on analysis, observation and generally high-quality, well-researched unique content. Instead of 5 people hired to chase every news bite, hire one good reporter to research the sexual habits of 18-25 year old girls in New York City. Its an example of a story that would be picked up by every other blog and newspaper. That in turn gives your news story and website backlinks – something Google weighs very heavily in determining what website results they want to display. Of course, if you’re the Washington Post, you can aim a little higher. Their most recent example of such good investigative reporting can be found here. Its a story I couldn’t find anywhere else – and its the kind of thing that makes the Washington Post, well, the Washington Post.

Syndicate content to leverage economies of scale. In this day and age, that fare hike story should be an RSS feed from an external source, which ideally will act as a sort of news wire service (AP/Bloomberg/Reuters specialize in syndicating their content). This allows the news brand to spend their resources on chasing unique stories, the accumulation of which defines their editorial focus and voice.

Don’t be afraid to charge for unique, highly respected content. Of course, you have to earn that respect, but newspapers like the New York Times and WSJ already have earned it – over many Pulitzer Prizes (Paul Krugman, a NYTimes columnist for example, just won an Economics Prize). The WSJ is charging for its online access, the NYTimes is not. Once you’re content is mostly unique, via investigative reporting or highly credible and popular columnists, you have something you can begin charging for, again.

Understand behaviorial/contextual marketing, while not breaching editorial integrity. The furor over advertorials is that the newspaper shouldn’t be paid to tell you what to buy. They certainly shouldn’t make it look like a standard newspaper article if the main goal is to sell you a product. Agreed, but what if you did a standard news bite story on the latest cars at the LA Auto Show. Why not below the article, have a list of offers related to the story, such as:

Comment | Related Stories | Related Offers

where related offers might include Car Loans, Auto Insurance, etc. By using SEO best practices (tagging, title description, etc) combined with the best technology available to connect that offer with that contextually related article, you’re improving monetization rates, without veering into advertorial land. In my estimation, most newspaper sites are far behind the curve with their use of technology to match content with offers.

Don’t just consider CPM! CPM means cost per thousand, and generally refers to the sale of eyeballs to your article. $10 CPM means it costs an advertiser just $10 to make 1,000 impressions. Unfortunately, unless you’re pulling in 12,000,000 viewers a day, that payday is quite small.

Focus also on CPC or better yet CPA – which is cost per action. That means it doesn’t matter how many people viewed that article on the LA Auto Show, it just matters how many people clicked on the offer for auto insurance and actually signed up. You get paid for example, by Progressive, for every new sign up. By putting the onus on the publisher to match the offer with the content, the advertiser enjoys less risk, while the publisher who can best organize data to match offers, will enjoy a bigger paycheck WITH LESS TRAFFIC.

The various strategies to match content with offer is technologically driven, and changes all the time. However, with a strong tech team who’s mandate is to match offers with content WITHOUT veering into advertorial land, a well-funded organization like the New York Times should be able to multiply their income almost immediately. I’ve seen it in a very small scale with the monetization research I’ve done, and many small but well-respected bloggers have earned a healthy profit from savvy content/offer matching.

In conclusion, news brands can and should lead the way on monetizing traffic, while still winning awards and the respect and envy of their blogging peers. They have all the resources to do it. All it really takes is a change in perspective and a re-allocation of their resources. For a non-funded start up like The New York Herald, that’s easier said than done, but from our perspective, its the roadmap forward.

Ponara Steven Eng is digital strategist and publisher of The New York Herald.

The Future of Newspapers

Editor’s Note:

The following is a transcript of a Nov. 17th Australian radio broadcast by Rupert Murdoch, media mogul and publisher of The Wall Street Journal, New York Post and Times of London, among other notable news brands.

The Future of Newspapers, Rupert Murdoch

I WOULD like to talk with you about a subject that always gets certain journalists going: the future of newspapers, and it’s a subject that has a relevance far beyond the feverish, sometimes insecure collection of egos and energy that is the journalistic profession.

Too many journalists seem to take a perverse pleasure in ruminating on their pending demise.

I know industries that are today facing stiff new competition from the internet: banks, retailers, phone companies, and so on. But these sectors also see the internet as an extraordinary opportunity. But among our journalistic friends are some misguided cynics who are too busy writing their own obituary to be excited by the opportunity.

Self-pity is never pretty. And sometimes it even starts in journalism school — some of which are perpetuating the pessimism of their tribal elders. But I have a very different view.

Unlike the doom and gloomers, I believe that newspapers will reach new heights. In the 21st century, people are hungrier for information than ever before. And they have more sources of information than ever before.

Amid these many diverse and competing voices, readers want what they’ve always wanted: a source they can trust. That has always been the role of great newspapers in the past. And that role will make newspapers great in the future.

If you discuss the future with newspapermen, you will find that too many think that our business is only physical newspapers. I like the look and feel of newsprint as much as anyone. But our real business isn’t printing on dead trees. It’s giving our readers great journalism and great judgment.

It’s true that in the coming decades, the printed versions of some newspapers will lose circulation. But if papers provide readers with news they can trust, we’ll see gains in circulation — on our web pages, through our RSS feeds, in emails delivering customized news and advertising, to mobile phones.

In short, we are moving from news papers to news brands. For all of my working life, I have believed that there is a social and commercial value in delivering accurate news and information in a cheap and timely way. In this coming century, the form of delivery may change, but the potential audience for our content will multiply many times over.

The news business is very personal for me. For more than a half century, newspapers have been at the heart of my business. If I am sceptical about the pessimists today, it’s because of a simple reason: I have heard their morose soothsaying many times before.

The challenges are real. There will probably never be a paperless office, but young people are starting paperless homes. Traditional sources of revenue — such as classifieds — are drying up, putting pressure on the business model. And journalists face new competition from alternative sources of news and information.

So we have a steady stream of stories like The Economist covers declaring that “newspapers are now an endangered species”. That’s quite ironic coming from a successful and growing magazine that likes to describe itself as “a newspaper”.

My summary of the way some of the established media has responded to the internet is this: it’s not newspapers that might become obsolete. It’s some of the editors, reporters, and proprietors who are forgetting a newspaper’s most precious asset: the bond with its readers.

When I was growing up, this was the key lesson my father impressed on me. If you were an owner, the best thing you could do was to hire editors who looked out for your readers’ interests — and give these readers good honest reporting on issues that mattered most to them. In return, you would be rewarded with trust and loyalty you could take to the bank.

Over many decades in newspapers, I have been privileged to witness history being made and printed almost every night. Today I’d like to talk about what these experiences have taught me — and why they give me confidence about the future.

My intent is to use my experience to illuminate the way we need to respond to the two most serious challenges facing newspapers today. The first is the competition that is coming from new technology — especially the internet.

The more serious challenge is the complacency and condescension that festers at the heart of some newsrooms. The complacency stems from having enjoyed a monopoly — and now finding they have to compete for an audience they once took for granted.

The condescension that many show their readers is an even bigger problem. It takes no special genius to point out that if you are contemptuous of your customers, you are going to have a hard time getting them to buy your product. Newspapers are no exception.

I became an editor and owner well before I had planned. It happened when my father died, and I was called home from Oxford. That was how I found myself a newspaper proprietor at the age of 22. I was so young and so new to the business, when I pulled my car into the lot on my first day, the garage attendant admonished me, “Hey, sonny, you can’t park here”.

That paper was The Adelaide News. Its newsroom was a noisy place. But it was noise with purpose. The chattering and pounding of typewriter keys reached a crescendo in the minutes before a deadline that was stretched beyond breaking point by gun reporters determined to get the latest, freshest version of a story.

That background music created an urgency all of its own. When the presses began to run, everyone in the building felt the rumble. And when the presses were late, the journalists felt me rumble.

When I took over the News, the Adelaide Advertiser was the dominant paper in town. Its owners tried to get my mother to sell to them. They sent her a letter basically saying that if she didn’t accept their offer, they were going to put the News out of business. We responded by printing their letter on the front page of the News.

The result was a good old-fashioned stoush — a newspaper war. It cost a great deal. But it taught me that with good editors and a loyal readership, you can challenge better-heeled and more established rivals — and succeed. And we did.

A decade later, there was another test: creating Australia’s first national paper. That might not sound like a big deal today. But it was back in the 1960s, when the country was only barely linked by phone lines. Our plan was to start a paper in Canberra … build it … and then take it national.

If the technological challenges were not daunting enough, our competitors got wind of our plans. As soon as they did, they transformed the existing paper — The Canberra Times—into a pretty impressive broadsheet. By doing that, they hoped to grab readers and advertisers before we could even get off the ground. There was only one way to respond: we would have to go national almost two years ahead of schedule.

Today, of course, even the smallest Australian newspaper has a web page that you can log in to from Cairns to Caracas. But back then, we didn’t even have reliable fax lines. Instead, we had to fly the printing plates from Canberra to presses elsewhere in the country — usually late at night. We even started up our own airline to do it.

It was all complex, and of course, things did not always go to plan. But it was also exhilarating. The result was that we brought readers across Australia a better product, and helped transform Australian journalism.

All this was excellent preparation for the next big fight we had: the opening of our new presses at Wapping in England.

For those who are too young to remember those daunting days, let me give you some perspective. Back in the mid-1980s, British papers were essentially run by their unions, and these unions resisted all improvements.

These were not unions acting on behalf of the working class, but a cosy, corrupt closed shop. Some of the names that drew pay cheques didn’t even exist. Our payroll showed that cheques were being sent to people like M. Mouse and D. Duck — neither of whom paid income tax.

At a time when new printing technology was making other papers around the world more efficient, newspapers in Britain were forced to rely on a technology that had not changed much since Gutenberg’s Bible. The costs were destroying hundreds of jobs and crippling what is now the world’s most vibrant newspaper market.

This was not sustainable in the long run. The columnist Bernard Levin described Fleet Street this way: “Conditions which combined a protection racket with a lunatic asylum.”

We decided to change that. So we bought new, state of the art presses, installed them at a site in Wapping, and found good people to run them.

In the end, it was expensive. There was terrible violence, especially against the police. Those workers who chose to fight us expected that management would roll over as so many managements had in the past. And for a few weeks, we were literally under siege by people intent on damaging our presses … hurting our people … and killing our business.

But we had planned well, and we prevailed. Our victory helped make all British newspapers more profitable. And of course this meant better wages and a brighter future for their employees.

Today the challenge we face is different. In some ways, it is a direct attack on our judgment.

It used to be that a handful of editors could decide what was news — and what was not. They acted as sort of demigods. If they ran a story, it became news. If they ignored an event, it never happened.

Today editors are losing this power. The internet, for example, provides access to thousands of new sources that cover things an editor might ignore. And if you aren’t satisfied with that, you can start up your own blog and cover and comment on the news yourself.

Journalists like to think of themselves as watchdogs, but they haven’t always responded well when the public calls them to account.

When Dan Rather broadcast his story suggesting President Bush had evaded service during his days in the National Guard, bloggers quickly exposed the dubious nature of his sources and documents.

Far from celebrating this citizen journalism, the establishment media reacted defensively. During an appearance on Fox News, a CBS executive attacked the bloggers in a statement that will go down in the annals of arrogance.

60 Minutes,” he said, was a professional organisation with “multiple layers of checks and balances.” By contrast, he dismissed the blogger as “a guy sitting in his living room in his pajamas writing”. But eventually it was the guys sitting in their pajamas who forced Mr Rather and his producer to resign.

Mr Rather and his defenders are not alone. A recent American study reported that many editors and reporters simply do not trust their readers to make good decisions. Let’s be clear about what this means. This is a polite way of saying that these editors and reporters think their readers are too stupid to think for themselves.

By taking their audience for granted and allowing themselves to become as institutionalised as any government or company they write about, these journalists are threatening their own papers. It is simply extraordinary that so many who are privileged to sit in the front row and write the first account of history could be so immune to its obvious meaning — not to mention the consequences for their own industry.

Let me give you an example. Four years ago The Times of London was going through a difficult time in circulation. So we experimented with changing from a broadsheet to what we call a “compact” version. For almost a year, we printed two versions of The Times — each with the same photos, the same headlines, and the same stories.

By an overwhelming margin, readers preferred the compact version. So we adopted that version … reversed our decline in circulation … and helped put The Times on a more solid footing, which of course is the key to keeping jobs. And we did it without affecting the quality of the news.

You might think our experience with The Times would be a good lesson about responding to what readers want, and keeping a newspaper relevant and viable. But that’s not what most journalists wrote about. Instead, they offered a lot of hand-wringing about tradition — and sentimental laments for a format that most Times readers no longer cared for.

I see the same thing every day. Instead of finding stories that are relevant to their readers’ lives, papers run stories reflecting their own interests. Instead of writing for their audience, they are writing for their fellow journalists. And instead of commissioning stories that will gain them readers, some editors commission stories whose sole purpose is the quest for a prize.

When I started out in the business, anyone who dared parade a prize for excellence would have been hooted out of the newsroom for taking himself too seriously. But today the desire for awards has become a fetish. Papers may be losing money, losing circulation, and laying off people left and right. But they will have a wall full of awards — prisoners of the past rather than enthusiasts for the future.

Readers want news as much as they ever did. Today The Times of London is read by a diverse global audience of 26 million people each month. That is an audience larger than the entire population of Australia — an audience whose sheer size is beyond the comprehension and ambitions of its founders in 1785. That single statistic tells you that there is a discerning audience for news.

The operative word is discerning. To compete today, you can’t offer the old one-size-fits-all approach to news.

The defining digital trend in content is the increasing sophistication of search. You can already customise your news flow, whether by country, company or subject. A decade from now, the offerings will be even more sophisticated. You will be able to satisfy your unique interests and search for unique content.

After all, a female university student in Malaysia is not going to have the same interests as a 60-year-old Manhattan executive. Closer to home, your teenage son is not going to have the same interests as your mother. The challenge is to use a newspaper’s brand while allowing readers to personalise the news for themselves — and then deliver it in the ways that they want.

This is what we are now trying to do at The Wall Street Journal. The journal has the advantage of having a very loyal readership … a brand known for quality … and editors who take the readers and their interest seriously.

This helps explain why the journal continues to defy industry trends. Of the 10 largest papers in the United States, the journal is the only one to have grown its paid subscriptions last year.

At the same time, we intend to make our mark on the digital frontier. The journal is already the only US newspaper that makes real money online. One reason for this is a growing global demand for business news and for accurate news. Integrity is not just a characteristic of our company, it is a selling point.

One way we are planning to take advantage of online opportunities is by offering three tiers of content. The first will be the news that we put online for free. The second will be available for those who subscribe to wsj.com. And the third will be a premium service, designed to give its customers the ability to customise high-end financial news and analysis from around the world.

In all we do, we’re going to deliver it in ways that best fit our readers’ preferences: on web pages they can access from home or work … on still evolving inventions like Amazon’s Kindle … as well as on cell phones or blackberries.

In the end, we are left with where we began: the bond of trust between readers and their paper. Much has changed since I walked into the Adelaide News in 1954. Presses have never been faster or more flexible. We have computers that allow you to lay out multiple pages in multiple countries. We have faster distribution. But none of it will mean anything for newspapers unless we meet our first responsibility: earning the trust and loyalty of our readers.

I do not claim to have all the answers. Given the realities of modern technology, this very radio address can be sliced and digitally diced. It can be accessed in a day or a month or a decade. And I can rightly be held to account in perpetuity for the points on which I am proven wrong — as well as mocked for my inability to see just how much more different the world had become.

But I don’t think I will be proven wrong on one point. The newspaper, or a very close electronic cousin, will always be around. It may not be thrown on your front doorstep the way it is today. But the thud it makes as it lands will continue to echo around society and the world.

Thank you for listening.

Broder: Hillary Clinton Bad Choice for Sec. of State

David Broder of the Washington Post, suggests Hillary Clinton is not the best choice for Secretary of State. Hillary as the nation’s top diplomat is “not a good fit for her talents or the next President”. What Obama needs, he suggests, is an experienced diplomat. Read

New York Times Backs Obama

In not the greatest surprise, the editorial board of The New York Times has strongly endorsed Barack Obama for President. This after the Washington Post, conservative Chicago Tribune, Los Angeles Times, Colin Powell and Chris Buckley Jr., son of arch conservative William F. Buckley Jr., lined up behind the Senator from Illinois.

Warning that the “future hangs in the balance,” the board wrote that Obama has “met challenge after challenge” while McCain has “retreated farther and farther to the fringe of American politics, running a campaign on partisan division, class warfare and even hints of racism.”

New York Times endorsement of Barack Obama

Colin Powell Endorses Obama; Palin “Not Ready..”

Key quotes:

Obama’s “steadiness, intellectual curiosity, depth of knowledge..” makes him “ready to be President on Day 1″.

“Sarah Palin is not ready to be President..”

“Disappointed with some of the approaches Senator McCain has taken..” He specifically refers to Bill Ayers as well as the “robo calls”. “(it) goes too far and makes McCain campaign look a little narrow..”

Colin Powell also spoke strongly against both the incorrect insinuation that Barack Obama is Muslim, (he’s Christian), and the idea that there’s something wrong with being Muslim in America.

Bottom Line: Colin Powell is highly respected on both sides of the aisle and his endorsement of Barack Obama is about as significant to foreign policy credibility as William Buffet’s endorsement is to his understanding of the economy. It also comes at a critical moment – when many Americans are beginning to lock-in their vote.

Video of Colin Powell Interview with Tom Brokaw:

1-800-FLOWERS.COM