The Solomon Scandals A Washington newspaper novel by David Rothman

29Jul/100

Washington Post vs. Patch.com and Examiner.com

imageThe Patch neigh­bor­hood news net­work—the screenshot’s from a New Jer­sey site—is com­ing soon to some Vir­ginia and Mary­land sub­urbs. Yet another sign that the Wash­ing­ton Post needs to get more seri­ous about hyper­local? And how about the growth of another hyper­local net­work, Examiner.com? Or the lat­est book on the Post, which, although a “valen­tine” on the whole, also por­trays some dis­turb­ing vulnerabilities?

Among the first Vir­ginia sub­urbs to be Patched in are Annan­dale, Burke, Reston and Wood­bridge. In Mary­land the ini­tial tar­gets are Col­lege Park, Hyattsville and Riverdale Park-Uni­ver­sity Park.

image Should the Post be wor­ried, espe­cially with AOL as a Patch investor? Page views per Patch vis­i­tor have shot up in recent months, accord­ing to Alexa.com sta­tis­tics, and the com­pany is aim­ing for kudzu-fast growth. But the sites tend to be bland, and the network’s traf­fic is still a speck of that for Washingtonpost.com, even with all of Patch included from eight states. In the place of the Post, I’d worry more about the TBD.com local news startup and the Examiner.com network. 

TBD and its blog­ging net­work can lever­age its con­nec­tions with its cor­po­rate par­ent, Allbrit­ton Com­mu­ni­ca­tions, the own­ers of NewsChan­nel 8, while Examiner.com is con­trolled by Philip Anschutz, the same bil­lion­aire behind the dead-tree Wash­ing­ton Exam­iner. He has yet to tap all the pos­si­ble syn­er­gies. Although most of the writ­ing on Examiner.com doesn’t awe me, the net­work is draw­ing some nice num­bers and uses a for­mula sim­i­lar to the one planned for TBD—a mix of geog­ra­phy and an appeal to read­ers’ pas­sion for sports or hob­bies. The chart is apples and oranges since it pits the entire net­work against the Washingtonpost.com and doesn’t fac­tor in the Post site’s advan­tages as a pres­ti­gious set­ting for ads, but keep in mind that most of the Post’s Web vis­i­tors are from out­side the D.C. area anyway.

imageIn a related vein, I’ll soon be pub­lish­ing my ideas on how estab­lished news­pa­pers and broad­cast oper­a­tions can use the hyper­local approach to grow closer to their home­town read­ers, both directly and through their off­shoots. Mak­ing the topic all the time­lier is Morn­ing Mir­a­cle, Dave Kindred’s insid­ery new book on the Post. Wash­ing­ton Post Com­pany CEO Don­ald Gra­ham in the past has noted the impor­tance of local read­ers to the Post’s sus­tain­abil­ity. At one point, says Kin­dred, a for­mer Post sports colum­nist, Gra­ham observed that two thirds of the Post’s ad rev­enue came from the approx­i­mately 15 per­cent of its read­ers who were local. So what hap­pens if hyper­local net­works start drain­ing off some poten­tial rev­enue? Not the best news for L Street.

image If the Post’s cov­er­age keeps diss­ing Alexan­dria, VA, and nearby areas, I myself will dras­ti­cally cut back the time I spend at Washingtonpost.com and prob­a­bly make up for it by way of the sites of local and hyper­local rivals. And for me to keep up with the world beyond Wash­ing­ton, there’s always the New York Times.

While the Post has closed domes­tic bureaus, the Times just keeps chug­ging along with national and inter­na­tional cov­er­age that is more thor­ough and bet­ter orga­nized than the Morn­ing Miracle’s. Maybe the Alexa.com com­par­i­son with the Times won’t be so dis­ap­point­ing after a Web-site makeover, per­haps aided by the NYT’s forth­com­ing pay wall, a sure­fire way to drive off read­ers. But for now, national and inter­na­tional are much iffier than local for the Post, given such strong com­pe­ti­tion. Beware of the Madonna Effect, the ten­dency of the stars to crowd out the rest. I’d like to see the Post regroup locally and use the rev­enue to be more com­pet­i­tive at all lev­els. Don­ald Gra­ham and oth­ers at the top have made it clear they’ll use only so much money from the prof­itable Kaplan divi­sion to prop up the Post.

image The Post is still very, very repairable if the will exists; L Street just needs to get more seri­ous about local cov­er­age, among other things. That means good jour­nal­ism daily (as opposed to the flashy but oft-problematic con­test kind), not merely rev­enue growth. I want action­able infor­ma­tion on local and hyper­local issues such as taxes and zon­ing. I won’t buy the argu­ment that the Post is around just to cover Metro-area high­lights. Tech­nol­ogy and skill­ful crowd-sourcing can take care of that. Besides, Kin­dred notes that in 2009 the Post’s “shrunken newsroom…still had two hun­dred more peo­ple than in the Water­gate years.”

If the Post can’t improve locally, per­haps the Wash­ing­ton Post Com­pany may want to con­sider sell­ing off the first two words in its name. Keep in mind the invest­ment pref­er­ences of Post Com­pany board mem­ber War­ren Buf­fett for com­pa­nies with moats (PDF). Could the Post build a new-style moat in the D.C. area to deal with the TBDs and Patches? I believe so, just as I can also think of strate­gies that com­peti­tors could use against the Post. The Post shouldn’t wave good-bye to national and inter­na­tional cov­er­age. But hasn’t the com­pany already backed off some­what by shut­ting down the domes­tic bureaus? A mixed mes­sage? Why is cov­er­age of Alexan­dria so skimpy despite this sup­posed change in pri­or­i­ties, com­plete with a reminder from Exec­u­tive Edi­tor Mar­cus Brauchli that “we are not the national news orga­ni­za­tion of record serv­ing a gen­eral audience”?

image imageFor a some­what cheerier assess­ment of the Post than mine, check out Peter Osnos’s thoughts, at TheAtlantic.com, on both the news­pa­per and the Kin­dred book. An ex-Post reporter who became a book pub­lisher, he notes that the Post is recon­fig­ur­ing its Web site, has reduced the newspaper’s finan­cial losses and just pub­lished the Top Secret Amer­ica series. I hope he is right. But tell me, Peter, isn’t there some­thing wrong when on cer­tain days the front page of the Post metro sec­tion doesn’t men­tion the word “Vir­ginia,” or at least not in a news­stand edi­tion I picked up in my home­town of Alexan­dria? Don­ald Gra­ham, check out “DC MD VA M2” (Metro sec­tion iden­ti­fier) in the paper edi­tion for July 21. The only “VA” I see is in the iden­ti­fier. By con­trast, NewsChan­nel 8 always runs promi­nent home page links to Vir­ginia sto­ries, and I haven’t the slight doubt that Allbrit­ton Com­mu­ni­ca­tions will be as con­sci­en­tious when the cable chan­nel rebrands itself as TBD and uses a new for­mat to boost its now-anemic num­bers. Will the Post be up to the chal­lenge if TBD catches on?

I even won­der about the Post’s Cof­fee­house News­room exper­i­ment, which has its place but which is no sub­sti­tute for sto­ries that arise more nat­u­rally; because the news­peo­ple should already be rep­re­sen­ta­tive of the geo and demo­graph­i­cal com­mu­ni­ties covered.

But what to do, in more detail, to grow closer to read­ers? My forth­com­ing com­men­tary will offer some ideas for both news­pa­pers and broad­cast oper­a­tions. This growing-closer issue is no small mat­ter. I wrote The Solomon Scan­dals, my D.C. news­pa­per novel, to tell a story rather than preach. But along the way, Scan­dals is about dis­con­nects, not just within a fic­ti­tious news­pa­per but between it and the rest of the planet, espe­cially at the neigh­bor­hood level. Hyper­local jour­nal­ism, done well, could be at least a par­tial cure, and as a reader I want both the Post and rivals to suc­ceed with it. 

Related: Rim Rieder’s review of Morn­ing Mir­a­cle in the Post.

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2Jul/108

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

imageYou already know if you’ve been fol­low­ing the Solomon Scan­dals blog.

My name is David, I’m a newsa­holic, and I’m cheer­ing for the TBD news startup to thrive here in the Wash­ing­ton area.

But will top­ics like sports and food elbow aside civic mat­ters at times because of the per­sonal pas­sions of TBD’s affil­i­ate blog­gers? Here’s to balance!

So what’s a well-rounded neigh­bor­hood blog like? TBD, meet the West­side Inde­pen­dent in New York City. Good local and hyper­local blogs exist in the D.C. area, but the Inde­pen­dent is still a great poten­tial role model, with a stel­lar mix of grass­roots cov­er­age and pro­fes­sion­al­ism. So it seems at least, from some 250 miles away.

image Click on the Inde­pen­dent link above. The orange nav­i­ga­tion strip at the top will speed you to cov­er­age of sub­jects rang­ing from “Food” to “Busi­ness,” “Devel­op­ment” and “Edu­ca­tion.” On the home page itself, you’ll see a gem: Proof that the New York Times is More Pop­u­lar than the Wall Street Journal—Among Thieves, with the low­down com­ing straight from the Star­bucks at 73rd Street and Colum­bus Avenue. Now that’s a full-service neigh­bor­hood blog. Hob­by­ist blogs, too, can be worth­while for both read­ers and cre­ators, as I’ll make clear later on. I’m just point­ing out the differences.

In the strictest sense, the Inde­pen­dent is a site rather than a blog; it even includes a sub­blog. Still, we’re not talk­ing big bucks for seri­ous site oper­a­tors with a touch of Web savvy. The Inde­pen­dent runs on the omnipresent and free Word­Press just like the Solomon Scan­dals blog, except that the own­ers have added a Rev­o­lu­tion­ary Mag­a­zine theme ($95?) to jazz it up.

imageNot all TBD affil­i­ates can or should strive to be the Upper West­side Inde­pen­dent. But ide­ally TBD will encour­age inter­ested blog­gers to aim for the Independent’s mix of com­pre­hen­sive­ness, live­li­ness and pro­fes­sional pol­ish. Only 22 or so of the 82 blogs in the TBD net­work seem to be gen­eral neigh­bor­hood blogs or are civic-oriented in other ways, if you assume that TBC has men­tioned them all on its site. Per­haps the Inde­pen­dent can inspire TBD-network blog­gers, allow­ing, cer­tainly, for lim­its of time, resources and experience.

Granted, the Inde­pen­dent could be more inter­ac­tive and serve up mul­ti­me­dia, and in the inter­est of sus­tain­abil­ity, more adver­tis­ing wouldn’t hurt. Still, Edi­tor Avi Salz­man (“a native New Yorker liv­ing on the Upper West Side with my wife and our Labrador/Shiba Inu mix”) shows us the breadth of cov­er­age that even small neigh­bor­hood sites can strive for.

Within the TBD blog net­work (just part of the oper­a­tion from Allbrit­ton Com­mu­ni­ca­tions) I’d espe­cially like to see more one-city or one-neighborhood sites with a civic focus like TBD affil­i­ate Rockville Cen­tral’s. If enough bal­anced neigh­bor­hood blogs don’t hap­pen on their own, then per­haps TBD can use some extra finan­cial incen­tives, as well as expand the planned size of the approx­i­mately 50-person staff to fill in the gap.

imageimageBrad Rouke (left photo), a blog net­work and pub­lic affairs vet­eran who pub­lishes and founded Rockville Cen­tral, says his asso­ci­a­tion with TBD already will be worth it for him; and Cindy Cotte Grif­fiths, the edi­tor, is like­wise enthu­si­as­tic about the net­work. “TBD.com,” he writes, intends to pro­mote “indi­vid­ual arti­cles through­out their site, based on geocod­ing.” It is “explic­itly say­ing that blog­gers’ con­tent remains on their blogs. Some­one plunks in 20850 as their ZIP Code, and they’ll see a bunch of Rockville Cen­tral articles—and the links will come back to us. I antic­i­pate an upswing in traf­fic.” He prefers the shared ad model to pay-per post and notes there is “no cap to the upside.”

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