Newspapers Lost $18.7 Billion From 2006 to 2008
"Much attention has been focused on the decline of major American newspapers, and it’s common knowledge that print advertising revenues have plunged over the last couple of years. But exactly how much money have newspapers lost in their print operations? An estimated $18.7 billion from 2006-2008," Erik Sass wrote¬†Wednesday for the Media Daily News.
"Those calculations are based on annual and quarterly figures from the Newspaper Association of America.
"To put $18.7 billion in perspective, it’s more than the gross domestic product of Iceland, pegged at $17.55 billion by the International Monetary Fund in 2008. On the other hand, it’s only about one-third of the value of Bernie Madoff’s securities fraud, estimated at around $50 billion.
"Many in the newspaper industry have counted on their online operations to salvage the bottom line, but that may be quixotic. During 2006 to 2008, total Internet revenues amounted to $8.9 billion — less than half the losses on the print side. What’s more, after anemic growth of $500 million from 2006-2007, Internet revenues actually declined in 2008, subtracting about $50 million."
- Ed Bark blog: Two Dallas Morning News layoff casualties rebound as backpack journalists for "The 33" news
- Hamilton Nolan, Gawker.com: NYT Asks International Herald Tribune Staffers to Donate Salary, Vacation Days to the Company
- Ed Sealover, Denver Business Journal: Ex-Rocky Mountain News staffers to try again with online news project
"Thank God we are not competitors for the same jobs — yet," Sam Fulwood writes of himself and his daughter, Amanda. (Photo credit: Marvin Joseph/The Root/The Washington Post
In Unemployment, a Dad Bonds With Graduating Daughter
"When Amanda Fulwood accepts her well-deserved sheepskin Sunday at the University of Virginia, I’ll be the proudest father on campus. Since the day my daughter was born, I’ve dreamed of this moment, when I could look through teary eyes at her toothy smile and send her off to find a career and make her way in the world," Sam Fulwood III wrote Thursday on theRoot.com.
"I never in a million years thought I’d be out there trying to make my way with her. Like many seasoned professionals hit by the recession, I am out of work. By one reliable account, nearly 16,000 journalists — including me — lost their jobs through layoffs and buyouts at U.S. newspapers in 2008. So far this year, almost 9,000 more have been let go.
"Amanda’s job prospects are similarly discouraging. Just as she entered her senior year, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the number of unemployed people with college degrees rose to 1.413 million from 1.411 million the previous month.
"So now Amanda and I find ourselves in the job market together, each consumed by our bleak prospects. This isn’t exactly the kind of father-daughter bonding I thought we would be engaging in at this point in our lives. But, oddly, it’s not too bad. We’ve actually become quite a team."
Fulwood, left the Cleveland Plain Dealer in November and returned to Washington, where he had worked in the Los Angeles Times Washington bureau.
 
NAHJ Names Rivera, Duron, Gonzales to Hall of Fame
Three enduring pioneers for equality and truth in storytelling will be inducted into the National Association of Hispanic Journalists’ Hall of Fame during the NAHJ Annual Convention in San Juan, Puerto Rico next month where hundreds will converge to create a critical mass of journalists skilled in multimedia.
"Geraldo Rivera, host of Fox‚Äôs newsmagazine ‘Geraldo-at-Large’; KRON "Weekend Morning News" anchor Ysabel Dur??n; and founder and editor of El Tecolote newspaper and professor of journalism at City College of San Francisco Juan Gonzales will be inducted into the NAHJ Hall of Fame. This year‚Äôs Hall of Fame Gala starts at 7:30pm on Friday, June 26 at the Puerto Rico Convention Center during the 27th Annual NAHJ Convention and Media & Career Expo in San Juan set for June 24-27, 2009."
 
Media "Challenges Are Immense" on Afghan Border
"We see how daunting it is to work as a journalist in a region torn by militancy, where both the militants and the state want to control the message. You are always between the devil and the ditch because your mandate is to speak the truth on behalf of people reduced to collateral damage. Reporting on a region where the fate of the international ‘war on terror’ will be decided is not a job for the faint of heart."
So says Aurangzaib Khan, manager of media development for Internews, an international media development organization. Khan, based in Peshawar, Pakistan, was describing one of the world’s most insular regions, the North West Frontier Province and the Federally Administered Tribal Areas, a focus of Taliban activity on the border of Afghanistan and Pakistan.
"But there are several success stories," he continued. "radio newsrooms are coming up that offer news and information in local languages, more people are joining journalism schools and many more are taking up media as a career despite the growing insecurity and direct threats to their well-being.
"The challenges are immense. First of all, low media density: creating and supporting media space in a tribal region — there are only 4 FM radio stations in FATA for a population of four million and just 11 FM stations for a population of 20 million in NWFP. Then there is a lack of professionalism — few trained journalists and major technical inadequacies that are stunting professionalism.
"Also, the region boasted more suicide bombings and terrorism-related casualties in 2008 than Iraq and Afghanistan combined. Growing security woes are feeding into the xenophobic tribal mindset that frowns on information-sharing and investigation as suspicious activities."
- Jalal Ghazi, New America Media:¬†America Creating ‘Talibanization’ in Pakistan, Say Arab Media
- Denver Westword: Amy Herdy’s Pakistan travel diary, volume one¬†
"Nearly Half of Children Under Age 5 are Minorities"
"The 2008 census results are out! And scanning local headlines, it looks like minority populations are growing at warp speed," Jane Kim wrote Friday in Columbia Journalism Review.
‚Äú’El Paso County population at 742,062; Hispanic majority grows to nearly 82%’ is the headline at the El Paso Times. ‘Hispanics fuel Nevada‚Äôs recent growth,’ writes the Reno Gazette-Journal. ‘Wisconsin‚Äôs Hispanic population increases 48%,’ reads the headline for the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel. The New York Times, adopting the local paper mantle to cover New York City, trumpets, ‘Hispanic Population‚Äôs Growth Propelled City to a Census Record.’ Fuels. Propelled. Record. Tie back your hair; these are full-speed-ahead headlines.
"The following characterizations, meanwhile, suggest that while the car is still moving forward, it‚Äôs also shifting into second gear: ‘Growth of Hispanic, Asian Population Slows Unexpectedly, Census Reports’ (Associated Press); ‘Asian and Hispanic Minorities Growing, but More Slowly’ (The New York Times); ‘Downturn Slows Growth of Hispanics, Asians in U.S.’ (The Wall Street Journal).
"Different papers, different pictures. That’s not all that surprising, given that increases in local minority populations are more likely to resonate with local readers than analyses of an overall slowdown in growth. Meanwhile, the latter gets touted in national headlines because of its implications for, among other things, assessing the tipping point of the majority minority — for demographers, the almost mythological moment at which the minority population will become a majority in this country."
"But it’s interesting to see what each camp tends to exclude. . . ."
- U.S. Census Bureau: Census Bureau Estimates Nearly Half of Children Under Age 5 are Minorities 
- U.S. Census Bureau: Orange, Fla., joins the growing list of ‘majority-minority’ counties
Vu Nguyen, education reporter at the Torrance (Calif.) Daily Breeze, interviews Pau Gasol of the Los Angeles Lakers at an elementary school on March 16. (Credit: Brad Graverson/Daily Breeze)
California Reporter, 34, Hospitalized and in Coma
"Daily Breeze education reporter Vu Nguyen, who suffered cardiac arrest during a weekend soccer game, remained hospitalized in a coma Thursday in Harbor City and was not expected to survive," Larry Altman wrote  Thursday in the Torrance, Calif., newspaper.
The 34-year-old Long Beach resident’s wife of six months, his parents, brother and friends kept vigil at his bedside in the critical care unit at Kaiser Permanente Medical Center.
"’The doctor said most likely he will not wake up from this,’ said his wife, Heather Hua. ‘It’s very hard to let go of him.’"
"Nguyen kicked two goals while playing a soccer game with friends Sunday in a Santa Monica park and collapsed as he ran with his arms outstretched like an airplane down the field.
"Friends tried to revive him and summoned paramedics from a nearby fire station. Nguyen, who had shown no signs of ill health, suffered irreversible brain damage.
". . .Born in Saigon, Vietnam, on Feb. 20, 1975, Nguyen was 2 months old when his father, attack pilot Chuyen Nguyen, and mother, Ngoc Thuy Nguyen, were among the first refugees to escape and come to the United States.
Raised in Garden Grove, Nguyen decided early on he wanted to be a reporter. An editor at Rancho Alamitos High School in Garden Grove, he went to work as a reporter for the Seattle Times, Orange County Register, Nguoi Viet 2 in Westminster and The Associated Press in Springfield, Ill.
"The Daily Breeze hired him in August to cover South Bay school districts. His most recent stories have chronicled the financial struggles of school districts dealing with significant cuts in funding."
Nominations Accepted for 2009 Ida B. Wells Award
Nominations are being accepted for the 2009 Ida B. Wells Award, presented annually to a media executive, manager or journalist who has made outstanding contributions toward making American newsrooms and news coverage more accurately reflect the communities they serve.
Administered jointly by the National Association of Black Journalists and the National Conference of Editorial Writers, "the award seeks to give tangible and highly visible recognition to an individual or group of individuals who have provided distinguished leadership in increasing access and opportunities to people of color in journalism and improving coverage of underrepresented communities," the judges say. Nominations should be made by June 1.
"First bestowed in 1983, the award is named in honor of the pioneering 19th and early 20th century editor and publisher who was a champion of integration and whose crusade against lynching earned her acclaim on two continents. Professors at the Medill School of Journalism serve as curators of the award.
"Eligibility: Any news executive, manager or journalist who has made significant contributions to newsroom diversity and/or improved coverage of communities of color is eligible for the award.
"Nominations: Any person may nominate a candidate for the award by completing a nominating form and submitting it along with supporting statements to m-awards@northwestern.edu
"Presentations: The award is presented alternately at the national conventions of the sponsoring bodies. The 2009 award will be presented at the 33rd annual convention and career fair of the National Association of Black Journalists, which will be held Aug. 5 – 9 in Tampa, Fla."
To download the nomination form, click here
Short Takes
- "Iranian American journalist Roxana Saberi arrived in Vienna this morning days after she was released from prison in Iran following an appellate court suspension of her sentence on an espionage charge," Borzou Daragahi and Julia Damianova reported¬†Friday for the Los Angeles Times. "’I came to Vienna because I heard it was a calm and relaxing place,’ said Saberi, smiling and at ease after arriving at the airport, in comments broadcast by Austria’s ORF television. ‘I know you have many questions, but I need some more time to think about what happened to me.’"
- Another source of local advertising revenue took a hit when "General Motors Corp. on Friday told about 1,100 dealers, or nearly 20 percent of its U.S. network, that they will be fired by the automaker late next year because their sales are weak," as the Associated Press reported¬† That follows Thursday’s announcement that "Just over 20 percent of the Chrysler LLC dealerships operated by minority owners have been earmarked for closure, as Arlena Sawyers reported for Automotive News, including 33 of the 158 minority-owned dealerships that sell Chrysler, Dodge and Jeep brands. Radio One President/CEO Alfred Liggins said¬†this week,"Our radio automobile business dropped by 57 percent compared to last year."
- CNN’s "American Morning" executive producer Janelle Rodriguez¬†is moving to prime time and will become the executive producer of Campbell Brown’s 8 p.m. ET hour, Steve Krakauer reported for TV Newser. "Jamie Kraft, currently senior broadcast producer of "American Morning", takes over as interim EP June 1, when Brown returns from maternity leave."
- "Members of the Congressional Black Caucus and Congressional Hispanic Caucus have sent a letter to House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers requesting a hearing examining the impact performance royalties for local radio airplay would have on minority-owned broadcast stations," Radio Online reported, In Detroit, where a rally protested Conyers’ sponsorship of the bill, "Councilwoman Martha Reeves said she wants to receive royalties. Reeves of Motown fame said she’s a part of a group of about 300 artists who helped initiate Conyers’ bill," Deb Price reported¬†for the Detroit News.
- "A Cuban independent journalist was sentenced during a summary trial on Tuesday to three years in prison on charges of "disrespect," journalists in Havana told the Committee to Protect Journalists today," the press-freedom group reported¬†on Thursday. "According to the foreign-based Cuban news Web site Cubamatinal, Albert Santiago Du Bouchet Hern?°ndez, director of the Havana-based independent news agency Habana Press was also charged with distributing enemy propaganda, although CPJ could not confirm the charge or whether he was convicted of it."
- "Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Alphonse Fletcher University Professor and Director of the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research at Harvard University, is the recipient of the 2009 Ralph Lowell Award, public television’s most prestigious honor," the Corporation for Public Broadcasting announced on Thursday. "A renowned scholar and educator, Professor Gates is the producer, writer and host of the critically acclaimed PBS documentaries African American Lives (2006), Oprah’s Roots: An African American Lives Special (2007) and African American Lives 2 (2008)."
- "Acting FCC Chairman Michael Copps Thursday said it was time to do away with the eight-year, ‘postcard’ station license renewal process and replace it with a three-year renewal with public interest obligations attached," John Eggerton reported¬†on Thursday in Broadcasting & Cable. "He also pledged to add a fifth, nondiscrimination principle to the FCC’s four Internet freedoms." Veteran broadcast observer Harry A. Jessell critiqued¬†the speech on his TV Newsday site.
- "Albinos and Their Place in the Sun" is the next topic on Philip Martin’s "Color Initiative"¬†series on Public Radio International’s "The World." "In Panama, among Panamanian Indians, those known as albinos are revered. But in Tanzania and Burundi they are hunted down like animals. Albinos, whose skin colors are essentially the same regardless of race, face both discrimination and ‘positive exceptionalism’ in their respective societies," an explanation begins.
- "The Florida Association of Black-Owned Media, which includes black owners of radio, TV, newspaper, magazine and Internet media companies from South Florida to the Panhandle, met with Gov. Charlie Crist on April 30 for a discussion focused on racial disparities, advertising, the stimulus package, and politics," the St. Petersburg (Fla.) Weekly Challenger reported on Thursday.
- Cary Clack, columnist for the San Antonio Express-News, has produced "Clowns and Rats Scare Me," published by Trinity University Press. Reviewer Jennifer Roolf Laster wrote in the Express-News that it "features everything from an elegant 1996 tribute to politician and educator Barbara Jordan to the writer’s 2008 admonition to men everywhere to flee the dance floor at the first sounds of ‘I Will Survive.’ (Yes, Clack acknowledges, the Gloria Gaynor hit is ‘a song so irresistible that Egyptian mummies have been recorded nodding their heads and tapping their feet to it.’ But, it’s a ‘cleansing tribal dance for women to exorcise the demons of bad relationships,’ so butt out, boys.)"
- "The editor of the Zimbabwe Independent Vincent Kahiya and News Editor Constantine Chimakure were arrested on Monday on the orders of the Attorney-General, Johannes Tomana, a cabinet minister told parliament on Wednesday, the Zimbabwe Independent reported on Thursday. "Giles Mutsekwa, the co-Minister of Home Affairs, told the House of Assembly that the arrest was effected without his knowledge or that of Police Commissioner-General Augustine Chihuri."
- A correspondent for the Standard Times in Freetown, Sierra Leone, "is still recuperating from shock and injuries he sustained after he was manhandled by a police officer" after he attempted to photograph the officer smoking marijuana. "I saw the officer smoking cannabis with his colleague. When he learnt that I wanted to take his picture, he rushed out and clutched me on my neck, handcuffed my hands and tied me up. I called on the regional crime officer to come to my rescue and when the assailants saw the team of police officers on their way all of them ran into the nearby bushes leaving Conteh behind," Fayia Amara said, according to Mohamed Massaquoi , writing in the Concord Times.