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."
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."
After writing about Detroit's cultural underground for seven years, Sarah Klein has developed a "hate-hate" relationship with the city and has decided to flee it for the sunny climes of California. "People are leaving Detroit -- in droves," she says, driven away by crime, lack of city services and a bad economy. Although she loves the Motor City and its "incredible people," she has had enough: "I'm tired of struggling, and I'm exhausted -- emotionally and physically. I'm ready to go."
So says Metro Times founder Ron Williams, recalling the recently deceased journalist "who made an important contribution to the newspaper in its formative years." Kaplan was the Detroit alt-weeklies' news editor from 1989 to 1991, when "she wrote about urban issues with ... gritty detail," according to the paper. The 53-year-old writer and University of Washington assistant professor died last month of an apparent heart attack.
The first president of the Czech Republic, who won Off-Broadway's highest honor for plays he wrote in 1968, 1970 and 1984, was feted this week at New York's Public Theater. "Havel was previously unable to collect his Obie Awards in person," says the Voice, "because, following the New York opening of (his 1968 prizewinner) The Memorandum, he returned to his home in Prague, where he was almost immediately placed under house arrest by the then Soviet-controlled government of Czechoslovakia." The Voice's chief theater critic and current Obie committee chairman, Michael Feingold, presented Havel with a special certificate attesting to the three awards.
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