The radio industry is slowly coming out of the slump that has plagued the medium for most of the first half of the year. According to figures released Monday by the Radio Advertising Bureau, radio advertising rose 3 percent in July, with national continuing to lead the way with a 12 percent gain. Local advertising, which accounts for 80 percent of all radio revenue, was flat for the month.
The Republican-controlled Senate dealt a blow to the Bush Administration today, voting to rescind new Federal Communications Commission rules that would allow large media companies to get even bigger
The Alternative Weekly Network announces six new members, including the Times Shamrock Alternative Newsweekly Group's four alt-weeklies, which moved over from the Ruxton Group. Three of the papers -- San Antonio Current, Detroit's Metro Times and Orlando Weekly (all except Baltimore City Paper) -- were former AWN members that shifted to Ruxton when their parent company, Alternative Media, Inc., was purchased by Times Shamrock in 1999. "They’re back now…and we could not be more pleased," AWN says in its September newsletter.
American kids, teenagers, and young adults, aged 8 to 21 years, have annual incomes totaling $211 billion, according to latest projections based on the findings of Harris Interactive YouthPulse, an online study of the Generation Y population. Results show that this group is spending at a rate of approximately $172 billion per year and is saving at a rate of $39 billion per year.
Citing weak job growth and economic risks including war, terrorism, and rising federal and private debt, newspaper economist and consultant Miles E. Groves lowered his forecast for 2003 newspaper ad spending but raised his outlook for 2004.
He's done drugs, participated in orgies, and doesn't hold a grudge against a Nazi war criminal. No wonder he's doing well in the polls. Sacramento News & Review's staff looks into the life of actor-turned-candidate Arnold Schwarzenegger and came up with 30 things voters should know about the man who would be California's governor.
The Newspaper National Network (NNN) has hired a cable industry veteran as it prepares to expand from four to 15 the number of national ad categories it will target in an attempt to grab share from television, particularly cable.
