After successful print tests in Orlando and Los Angeles, the Tribune Co. is planning more orders of paper from China's Shandong Huatai Paper Company. Tribune representatives are impressed with the "runnability and printability" of the Chinese paper, reports Editor and Publisher. Along with being "priced extremely competitively," says Tribune Co. Senior Manager of Newsprint, John Cannizzo, the paper from China "has really, really excellent formation," with "very consistent fiber distribution throughout the sheet." Gannett is also testing newsprint made in China.

Continue ReadingTribune Co. Continuing Tests With Chinese Paper

Citing cost concerns, three-quarters of U.S. wireless phone users failed to sign up for mobile data services other than text-messaging during the third quarter of this year, according to a survey of teens and adults by technology research firm IDC. Text messaging, meanwhile, continues to see rapid growth. Nearly half of those surveyed sent or received at least one SMS message in the third quarter, while SMS subscription plans have crossed the 50% mark.

Continue ReadingSurvey: Mobile Data Services Still Too Expensive

Call it Tennessee Idol -- contestants this week will compete at Nashville's newest White Castle hamburger restaurant for a 12-hour recording session at the city's East Iris Studios. The event, billed "Slyder Superstar," is being cross-promoted on cable TV and radio, and in print ads and podcasts in Nashville's alt-weekly, according to a company release.

Continue ReadingWhite Castle Singing Contest Promoted in Nashville Scene

The AIDS Healthcare Foundation has purchased full-page ads in this week's editions of The Village Voice and LA Weekly, alleging that Pfizer's marketing of Viagra encourages unsafe sex. The ads, which highlight the dangers of mixing the erectile-dysfunction treatment with methamphetamine, will also eventually be placed in publications in South Florida and San Francisco, according to the Associated Press.

Continue ReadingAIDS Org Critiques Pfizer in Alt-Weekly Ads

Many large dailies, including those with falling circulations, will raise ad rates in the new year, reports Media Life. The hikes reflect pressure from Wall Street to maintain profit margins even as the industry suffers increased competition from electronic media. Getting advertisers to pay the new rates, however, may prove more difficult than printing new rate cards: "If a newspaper says it's going to increase advertising 3 percent irrespective of circulation, that doesn't necessarily mean that everyone is going to pay a 3 percent increase," Len Kubas, a Toronto-based consultant, tells the Web site.

Continue ReadingPapers Gamble With Rate Increase in ’07

Voice art critic Jerry Saltz (pictured), dance critic Deborah Jowitt, and film critic J. Hoberman each took top honors in a poll of artists and industry insiders commissioned by Time Out New York and conducted by Samir Husni, chairman of the department of journalism at the University of Mississippi. Critics were rated in eight different categories; the Voice was the only New York publication to win three first-place awards.

Continue ReadingThe Village Voice Grabs Three Golds in NYC Critics Round-Up

The country's leading newspaper companies realize it is time to join their new-media competitors, not fight them, reports Rick Edmonds of Poynter Online. Representative of the coming industry "transformation" is Gannett's decision to train 362 print journalists as videographers by the end of January. Edmonds also highlights increasing collaboration between newsprint chains and Internet search giants Yahoo! and Google. Such developments are markers "that newspaper companies have moved beyond merely wringing their hands at the rise of these potent competitors and are figuring out ways to make money together with them."

Continue ReadingNewspapers Woo Investors With Looming “Transformation”

As big-city dailies increasingly face cutbacks that threaten their ability to cover local affairs, civic leaders are expressing disquiet over the impact the downsizing has had on their communities, reports Governing magazine. From St. Louis to Los Angeles, prominent residents are concerned that the dailies' withering newsrooms and declining local coverage are doing damage to their cities. "If the people who live in a community are going to understand the way city hall or the county commission or the school board shapes their lives," writes Rob Gurwitt, "they need journalism that is there for the long haul and not just the occasional shout in the dark."

Continue ReadingDailies Aren’t Telling Citizens the Things They Need to Know