The 3rd District Democratic primary in Kentucky is a lively competition between four men, says David Hawpe with The Courier-Journal. Candidate John Yarmuth, who founded the Louisville Eccentric Observer (and wrote its political column until a few months ago), is "extremely well connected, as well as very well known," but he risks being seen as "a mere son of privilege." The Courier-Journal has received a complaint that Yarmuth made a campaign appearance at a drug court graduation, but Hawpe notes, "hey, those people (along with all the clerks, judges and other courthouse workers who were in the vicinity) vote, too, don't they? Maybe we have a real campaign."

Continue ReadingLEO Founder’s Congressional Race Heats Up

Or perhaps "speculates" would be the proper way to describe Savage's remark, which was made at the beginning of a presentation promoting his most recent book, "The Commitment," at the Tattered Cover book store in Denver. Apparently Mr. Savage Love and the editor of Westword went out for a couple of drinks prior to the speech. Unfortunately, Savage's other slanderous allegations cannot be published on this family-friendly Web site. For the 20-second MP3 version, click here. And if the kids are out of the room, you can listen to the entire speech here.

Continue ReadingDan Savage Claims Patty Calhoun Slipped Him a ‘Roofie’

Widespread and unrelenting competition both online and off have left "the large-market alternative weeklies ... bleeding from dozens of little cuts," according to the 2006 report issued earlier this week by the Project for Excellence in Journalism. The report also notes that while national advertising has declined, the industry has "regained upward momentum in circulation" and alt-weeklies in secondary markets continue to grow. The potential threat of a journalism venture from Craig Newmark and the possibility of more mergers fill the crystal-ball portion of the report, which concludes: "The biggest issue on the horizon for the alternative weeklies is the Voice/New Times merger. Despite talk in recent years that the world of the weeklies has been conglomeratized, there is still a lot of room for mergers among the owners that remain."

Continue Reading‘State of the News Media’ Offers Mixed Forecast for Alt-Weeklies