The Solomon Scandals A Washington newspaper novel by David Rothman

28Aug/100

Solomon Scandals hyperlocal series so far: A list for latecomers

Late to the hyper­local series in the Solomon Scan­dals blog? In reverse order, here’s a list of key parts.

imageHow hyper­local jour­nal­ism can help big media grow closer to local com­mu­ni­ties, just posted today.

TBD D.C.-area news site not a steady riser in early Alexa stats. But let’s wait for the full story.

Crisp, lively Web pages from promis­ing new TBD hyper­local site—but D.C.-oriented lead story is a BIG yawner here in Alexan­dria, VA.

TBD’s hyper­local judo is smart and eth­i­cal: How should rivals at the Wash­ing­ton Post and else­where respond to all the link­ing ahead?

imageRx for Patch’s hyper­local sites? Down­play McMaps and beef up some of the writing—and pho­tos and story placement.

Wash­ing­ton Post vs. Patch.com and Examiner.com

Smile! You’re on TBD TV—at least if you’re an affil­i­ated blog­ger with Skype and the news gods beckon

How Wash­ing­ton Post and New York Times could out­gun hyper­local sites like TBD and Baristanet.

George­town Dish joins TBD blog net­work: Deju vu angles—in Wash­ing­ton Post’s backyard.

How TBD could use hyper­local jour­nal­ism to kick the Wash­ing­ton Post’s butt.

TBD, meet NYC’s West­side Inde­pen­dent: Role model for SOME neigh­bor­hood blog affiliates?

imageWash­ing­ton Post vs. Allbritton’s TBD Web startup plans: BOTH sides could do better.

Hyper­local jour­nal­ism: George­town pub­lisher robbed—and eager to tell neigh­bors about it. Les­son for the Wash­ing­ton Post?

‘What Would Google Do’ with my old steel­town news­pa­per in Lorain, Ohio? Here’s what I’D do.

Please I’ve avoided a for­mal approach, so you won’t see “Part One” and so on.

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28Aug/102

How hyperlocal journalism can help big media grow closer to local communities

imageUpdate: Other hyperlocal-related posts here.

I killed my Wash­ing­ton Post sub­scrip­tion sev­eral years ago, one of mil­lions of Amer­i­cans to give up on printed news­pa­pers.

My Rea­son #1 was the trash fac­tor. But many read­ers have other, less friendly expla­na­tions. More than a few trust the press about as much as they do HMOs, banks and big busi­ness in gen­eral. For some, the local daily might as well be a giant paper Pinoc­chio. Just this week, a futur­ist was say­ing that news­pa­pers would be irrel­e­vant in 12 years, thanks to such prac­tices as Web-based crowd-sourcing. Wish ful­fill­ment for many readers?

Hyper­local jour­nal­ism, how­ever, could at least help the Wash­ing­ton Post and other estab­lished news orga­ni­za­tions regain trust by grow­ing closer to their com­mu­ni­ties with good, ver­i­fi­able con­tent and oppor­tu­ni­ties for read­ers to speak back. Ide­ally it could grow rev­enues, too. In the era of Google News and sto­ries from thou­sands of sources, all over the planet, why not focus on com­pelling local sto­ries? Why not encour­age neigh­bors to care about neigh­bors, not just about distant—in more than one sense of the word—politicians and movie stars? Already flag­ship news­pa­pers reel in a mere 56 per­cent of the read­er­ships of cer­tain major met­ro­pol­i­tan media com­pa­nies, per­haps partly reflect­ing hyperlocal’s grow­ing importance.

image But how to do hyper­local prop­erly and max­i­mize syn­er­gies between it and other activ­i­ties within a news­pa­per com­pany or broad­cast­ing one, while reduc­ing redun­dan­cies? Ahead I’ll share my spe­cific ideas with estab­lished news orga­ni­za­tions in mind, fol­low­ing up on ear­lier hyper­local sug­ges­tions for them. My biggest goal for this series is to lay out hyper­local strat­egy options for every­one, not favor the giants; and, in fact, The Solomon Scan­dals novel fea­tures a large, col­or­fully dys­func­tional news­pa­per. The big guys and media monop­o­lies in particular—even and espe­cially in small towns—have their sins, includ­ing a fix­a­tion in some cases on lucre at the expense of jour­nal­is­tic qual­ity. Gor­don Gekko would be proud.

Still, “big” has its glo­ries, too. Well-financed chain papers, for exam­ple, with the right peo­ple in charge, can bet­ter resist neigh­bor­hood car deal­ers enraged by local­ized sto­ries about safety recalls. That’s not all. Often—it’s hard to generalize—the very best hyper­local jour­nal­ism can’t hap­pen for long peri­ods of time on the cheap. And even the most gung-ho of the small-fry stand a good chance of burn­ing out eventually.

I recently sold a small e-book Web site, which, although focused on a topic-related com­mu­nity, not a geo-based one, beset me with many of the chal­lenges described here.

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16Aug/100

Media pieties debunked: Even NYT and WaPo pick up SOME rumors—and I’m glad they do

image Here’s a ques­tion that the debut of TBD.com, the new hyper­local site writ­ten up in Howard Kurtz’s media col­umn today, makes all the more timely.

Just when should a rep­utable Web site—or maybe even a paper newspaper—publish rumors?

TBD’s peo­ple have expressed a strong inter­est in guid­ing read­ers to the truth; and the oper­a­tion is not a rumor site. But with an empha­sis on fast-breaking local sto­ries, the  line between news and rumor at times may be thin, just as it is on even the best news radio sta­tions. The answer is to be trans­par­ent and share with read­ers the gaps in news sto­ries and invite cor­rec­tions, exactly what TBD is doing. 

Psst! Think TBD is impure? Even the New York Times men­tions rumors or spec­u­la­tion on occa­sion despite all jour­nal­is­tic pieties to the con­trary. So does Kurtz’s employer, the Wash­ing­ton Post. And I’m glad that the Times and Post do, as long as they abide by cer­tain com­mon­sen­si­cal rules and doesn’t make rumors the main show. Among the other rules—or fac­tors to consider:

1. Iden­ti­fi­ca­tion of rumors as rumors—rather than solid facts.

2. The source. Sony may well be about to release some new e-book read­ers, accord­ing to Sony Insider, and hav­ing con­sid­ered the source, the CNET tech net­work feels com­fort­able in report­ing the story with a ques­tion in the head­line. On the other hand, I sus­pect that CNET would prop­erly have ignored the report if it came from a news source unknown to it.

image3. Pos­i­tives for soci­ety in gen­eral vs. the neg­a­tives for the peo­ple writ­ten about. Or maybe the opposite—the risk that the pub­li­ca­tion involved will play into the hands of hype artists like stock-market scam­mers and cor­po­rate fraud­sters. Take the pos­si­bil­ity of a bank fail­ure. Does the Web site or other pub­li­ca­tion risk set­ting off a panic? Or, via the hype, enrich­ing unscrupu­lous Wall Street spec­u­la­tors? Just how widely should the infor­ma­tion, what­ever its nature, be shared?

4. Whether you may hurt the sub­ject of the rumor by not print­ing the truth. The sup­posed Al Gore sex scan­dal was cir­cu­lat­ing online in the wake of a National Enquirer story—and the media had to write about it. At the same time the MSM peo­ple could and did raise ques­tions. I’m just sorry that cer­tain pub­li­ca­tions such as the Wash­ing­ton Post and Politco—owned by Allbrit­ton Com­mu­ni­ca­tion, the peo­ple behind TBD—didn’t pub­lish more detail in ques­tion­ing the rumor.

5. The promi­nence of the person—how close he or she is to, say, the pres­i­dency of the United States? Leonard Downie, for­mer exec­u­tive edi­tor of the Wash­ing­ton Post, revealed in a video inter­view with Carol Joynt that the Post has an excel­lent rule. Don’t run ugly exposes of the per­sonal lives of city coun­cil can­di­dates. Peo­ple at the Gore level are a dif­fer­ent story since they may end up with their fin­gers on The But­ton. So the thresh­old for report­ing a rumor would be lower.

6. In a related vein, the rel­e­vance of the rumor to the person’s role in pub­lic life. In The Solomon Scan­dals novel, I write of a gos­sip colum­nist whose employer delib­er­ately sets out to wreck her career with rumors about her per­sonal life. Even if the rumors are fact—and I leave that ques­tion open—I myself would not print the infor­ma­tion. Gotcha moral­ity is one way crooked cor­po­ra­tions and gov­ern­ments try to black­mail activists into sub­mis­sion. It is no coin­ci­dence that some of the most cor­rupt soci­eties are also among the offi­cially most puritanical.

7. The nature of the pub­li­ca­tion itself. An oft-updated site like TBD will prob­a­bly have a lower thresh­old than the paper edi­tion of the New York Times. Often the new media in effect use con­ver­sa­tion mixed with nar­ra­tive. That is why a reporter-blogger at the Rock Hill Her­ald went with a cred­i­ble rumor about a CVS Phar­macy being built near a Burger King, with the reporter men­tion­ing a call placed to Burger King for con­fir­ma­tion. In other words, the read­ers would more or less be learn­ing how the facts unfolded—a form of nar­ra­tive. And via com­ments, they could par­tic­i­pate in a conversation.

Doug Fisher, a senior jour­nal­ism instruc­tor and online newslet­ter pub­lisher at the Uni­ver­sity of South Car­olina, ques­tioned the reporter-blogger’s deci­sion. Defend­ers of the reporter-blogger said no harm was done and the nature of the online medium pro­vided for an easy correction—and yes, the reporter was right about the CVS. I think this is a pretty gray area. Like the Fisher fac­tion, I’d love to have known more about how the Burger King peo­ple knew that a CVS was on the way. First-hand info? I will say that I would not have printed the pos­si­ble news—pre-verification—in a paper newspaper.

Foot­note: Just to be clear, the Kurtz col­umn is a gen­eral dis­cus­sion of TBD—including links to mem­bers of a blog network—and not a con­dem­na­tion of its prowess at get­ting at the truth.

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9Aug/100

Free paper copy of ‘The Solomon Scandals’ if you come up with the best replacement for ‘L Street’ and ‘WaPo’

imageWash­ing­ton Post alum enjoys The Solomon Scan­dals blog but won­ders why the devil I use “L Street” when refer­ring to the Post. After all, isn’t the paper at 1150 15th Street, N.W.?

Well, once upon a time, the Post’s offi­cial address was in fact 1515 L Street. And, maybe in trib­ute to Lon­don­ers’ old “Fleet Street” nick­name for the press, the “L Street” ref­er­ence found its way into the Post news­pa­per some years ago. What a great link between the tan­gi­ble and the jour­nal­ism I grew up read­ing; a neigh­bor of mine even helped put out the edi­to­r­ial page. That is how “L Street” ended up in the Solomon Scan­dals blog. Some might say the street ref­er­ence con­tin­ues to work. Think of a par­al­lel. Cer­tain writ­ers still say Fleet Street when refer­ring to the Lon­don press despite the actual news­pa­pers’ hav­ing moved on. It’s a lit­tle like men­tion­ing K Street when talk­ing about Wash­ing­ton lob­by­ists’ turf after the actual firms have relo­cated elsewhere.

imageIn this era of vid­cams and Net-enabled hyper­local news, how­ever, I need to mod­ern­ize. The story I have from one Post employee, as well as a sec­ond, in pub­lic rela­tions, is that the Post phys­i­cally com­prises at least two build­ings joined together. When the Post put up the sec­ond with a more impos­ing front, among other advan­tages, the loca­tion was on L Street rather than on 15th. The Google map charm­ingly pre­serves the ves­tiges of the 1515 L Street address—well, assum­ing we can believe it, not always the case (scroll down this post for a scary story about the risks of out­dated or incom­plete elec­tronic maps). Got it now? But where does that leave me? I still need a sobri­quet for the Post—my child­hood read­ing, not just cur­rent jour­nal­is­tic fare—even if it’s a news­pa­per rather than a human and the edi­to­r­ial page is too neo-con these days for a guy reared on the old Post in the L Street era.

image So here’s the deal. The reader of this blog who comes up with the best sub­sti­tute for ”L Street” will win a free paper copy of The Solomon Scan­dals (warn­ing: salty city-room lan­guage and req­ui­site cyn­i­cism, although the news­pa­per involved is most def­i­nitely not the Post). I mean some­thing good: there’s a cer­tain QC thresh­old you must cross. “15th Street,” for exam­ple, some­how lacks the same ring of “L Street.” Maybe writ­ers sim­ply pre­fer let­ters over num­bers. And for­get about the oft-used “WaPo.” Sounds too much like an intel­li­gence agency or util­ity com­pany.  I’ve used it, but only for want of some­thing bet­ter. Email me at davidrothman@pobox.com. Other than mem­bers of my fam­ily or indi­vid­u­als asso­ci­ated with Twi­light Times Books, any­one on Planet Earth may enter, Wash­ing­ton Post Com­pany peo­ple included, past and present, from Don­ald Gra­ham on down. Deadline—how’s that for a news­pa­per word?—is 5 p.m. East­ern Day­light on August 31.

Note: Just to be clear, this is not in the least an offi­cial Wash­ing­ton Post con­test. I have no busi­ness con­nec­tion with the paper other than hav­ing free­lanced for L Street occa­sion­ally in the dis­tant past.

(Updated to address the “WaPo” issue. Also, I’ve extended the dead­line for con­test entries.)

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5Aug/100

How to enjoy a preview of ‘Scandals’ in iPad-style splendor—and what this means for geeks, book publishers, authors and news people

image image Own an iPad? Go to this post if you’re not read­ing it on your Pad already.

In iPad-style splen­dor, you can see an overview of The Solomon Scan­dals (Twi­light Times Books). Also enjoy sam­ple chap­ters, an author bio, and some slightly obso­lete buy­ing infor­ma­tion for the trade paper­back and elec­tronic edi­tions. Not men­tioned is that Scan­dals is on sale at the Apple Store via iBooks (as well as at the Kin­dle Store or through Barnes & Noble’s e-book arm).

This is an exper­i­ment with a new Word­Press plug-in called Pad­Pressed, which lacks all the Web nav­i­ga­tion fea­tures that will even­tu­ally show up. Also, social media fea­tures may or may work. but look, in effect, I’m giv­ing you a pre­view not just of the book but also of the future. To think that I wrote the first draft of Scan­dals on an elec­tric typewriter.

For geeks and news peo­ple: Pad­Pressed is sig­nif­i­cant since it makes a Web site look like an iPad app. This con­cept has pos­si­bil­i­ties not just for pub­lish­ers and authors, but also for the news media. No need to ask for the Apple App Store’s bless­ing! As we know from past cen­sor­ship of a Pulitzer-winning car­toon­ist, the Store is hardly a cham­pion of free­dom of the press. While you don’t need to sell through the store now, this is poten­tially one more attrac­tive way to reach iPad owners.

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