Evan Serpick's picture
March, 17th 2011

New York Times Introduces Digital Subscriptions

Today The New York Times announced that it would begin requiring heavy users of its website to buy a digital subscription, which range from roughly $15 to $35 per month. The letter to readers from Arthur Sulzberger is below.

It's not quite what David Simon had in mind when wrote in the The Columbia Journalism Review that the Times and The Washington Post should "build a wall" and require users of digital content to pay for it—The Times will still allow people to use it's website and mobile/tablet aps for free, up to 20 articles a month—but it's a major step in that direction. The question remains whether the strategy will spread and help other beleaguered newspapers, including the Sun, regain their footing.

 

An important announcement from
the publisher of The New York Times
 
Fine Print
 

Dear New York Times Reader,

Today marks a significant transition for The New York Times as we introduce digital subscriptions. It’s an important step that we hope you will see as an investment in The Times, one that will strengthen our ability to provide high-quality journalism to readers around the world and on any platform. The change will primarily affect those who are heavy consumers of the content on our Web site and on mobile applications.

This change comes in two stages. Today, we are rolling out digital subscriptions to our readers in Canada, which will enable us to fine-tune the customer experience before our global launch. On March 28, we will begin offering digital subscriptions in the U.S. and the rest of the world.

If you are a home delivery subscriber of The New York Times, you will continue to have full and free access to our news, information, opinion and the rest of our rich offerings on your computer, smartphone and tablet. International Herald Tribune subscribers will also receive free access to NYTimes.com.

If you are not a home delivery subscriber, you will have free access up to a defined reading limit. If you exceed that limit, you will be asked to become a digital subscriber.

This is how it will work, and what it means for you:

  • On NYTimes.com, you can view 20 articles each month at no charge (including slide shows, videos and other features). After 20 articles, we will ask you to become a digital subscriber, with full access to our site.
  • On our smartphone and tablet apps, the Top News section will remain free of charge. For access to all other sections within the apps, we will ask you to become a digital subscriber.
  • The Times is offering three digital subscription packages that allow you to choose from a variety of devices (computer, smartphone, tablet). More information about these plans is available at nytimes.com/access.
  • Again, all New York Times home delivery subscribers will receive free access to NYTimes.com and to all content on our apps. If you are a home delivery subscriber, go to homedelivery.nytimes.com to sign up for free access.
  • Readers who come to Times articles through links from search, blogs and social media like Facebook and Twitter will be able to read those articles, even if they have reached their monthly reading limit. For some search engines, users will have a daily limit of free links to Times articles.
  • The home page at NYTimes.com and all section fronts will remain free to browse for all users at all times.

For more information, go to nytimes.com/digitalfaq.

Thank you for reading The New York Times, in all its forms.

Sincerely,
Arthur Sulzberger Jr.
Arthur Sulzberger Jr.
Publisher, The New York Times
Chairman, The New York Times Company

10:37 am Tags: Press Check
Evan Serpick's picture
February, 1st 2011

New Icon on Bmag Stories

hAs we announced yesterday, Baltimore magazine is a media partner for an innovative media experiment called NewsTrust Baltimore, where readers can review and rate stories from local media and help the best local journalism come to the fore.

Today, we've added a NewsTrust button, pictured here, to the bottom of all the stories posted to our website, including the blogs. We hope that after you read a story, you'll click on that link and review it (you'll be required to sign in to NewsTrust - it's free and takes about 30 seconds using your Facebook account). There's a bustling community of readers sprouting up over there. We' hope you'll join the fray with us.

4:35 pm Tags: About Eyes on the Street
Evan Serpick's picture
January, 31st 2011

A Great Baltimore Media Experiment Begins Today!

For the next two months, Baltimore magazine will be participating in a democratic media experiment designed to help people find and promote good local journalism.

NewsTrust, a national non-profit that helps people share and promote good journalism from various news sources, has just today launched NewsTrust Baltimore, it's first ever local site. At the site, users can post stories about Baltimore they want to share with others, and also read, rate, and comment on stories that others have posted. The best stories will be promoted to the top of the home page. Several local news organizations, including Baltimore magazine, The Baltimore Sun, and WYPR have agreed to partner with Newstrust to promote the experiment. In addition, several local high schools and colleges will be using the site as a teaching tool to learn about journalism.

We're really excited to excited to be involved in this project, which is supported by a grant from the Baltimore-based Open Society Institute. Sign up at the site (it's free), start exploring, and stay tuned for more information.

5:01 pm Tags: About Eyes on the Street
Evan Serpick's picture
November, 18th 2010

Ex-Sun Editor Monty Cook Fired in Chat Scandal

Just eight months after Montgomery Cook resigned as top editor of The Baltimore Sun to accept a job as a journalism professor at the University of North Carolina, his alma mater, he has been forced to resign from the new position for sending sexually explicit G-chat messages to a student. According to a report on the UNC journalism school's news website, it is the second time in Cook's short tenure there that he has been accused of engaging in appropriate chats, although the identity of the woman in the first incident has not been confirmed.

Cook, who is married and has two children, spent a rocky 15 months at The Sun, overseeing massive staff reductions and making a negative impression on many staffers.

[photo via]

12:20 pm Tags: Press Check
Evan Serpick's picture
October, 6th 2010

New York Times Unloads on Sun Bosses at Tribune Co.

Anyone who cares about The Baltimore Sun must read the shocking story on the front page of today's New York Times, "At Sam Zell's Tribune, Tales of a Bankrupt Culture".

In it, superb Times media reporter David Carr uses more than 20 sources, many inside the Tribune Company, to detail the sexist, incompetent, and callous leadership of the media conglomerate, which owns The Sun, as well as The Chicago Tribune, The Los Angeles Times, The Orlando Sentinel, and The Hartford Courant.

The story, which lists The Sun as one of "the most important newspapers in the country," opens with a jaw-dropping story about Randy Michaels, the former shock jock and radio executive with no newspaper experience that Sam Zell appointed CEO of Tribune Company soon after he bought it in 2007. It describes how Michaels, at a lunch meeting with other top executives at Tribune  offered a waitress $100 to show him her breasts. Unfortunately, this is only one of a series of stories detailing how Zell, Michaels, and the cronies they brought in from their years in the radio business brought a boorish and despicable attitude to the storied Tribune Company and its properties.

Beyond its tawdry behavior, the leadership displayed complete ignorance of the newspaper industry, using various ostensible redesigns and innovations at its properties as covers for cost-cutting:

James Warren, the former managing editor and Washington bureau chief of The Chicago Tribune, said: “They wheeled around here doing what they wished, showing a clear contempt for most everyone that was here and used power just because they had it. They used the notion of reinventing the newspapers simply as a cover for cost-cutting.

Those sentiments echo those we reported in our 2009 cover story about The Sun, in which one laid-off staffer referred to "the wacko guys in Chicago," who had tons of terrible ideas to save money, but "none of them are journalism-based."

Worse, even as the company shed 4,200 jobs as cost-cutting measures, the top executives who were ruinng the company took home millions in performance-based bonuses:

Despite the company’s problems, the managers have been rewarded handsomely. From May 2009 to February 2010, a total of $57.3 million in bonuses were paid to the current management with the approval of the judge overseeing the bankruptcy. In 2009, the top 10 managers received $5.9 million at a time when cash flow was plummeting.

The whole story, even at about 4,000 words, is worth reading. The hard-working people putting out the paper under these conditions deserve better. Baltimore deserves better.

10:28 am Tags: Press Check
Evan Serpick's picture
September, 28th 2010

WYPR to Launch Transportation Series

Local National Public Radio (NPR) affiliate WYPR (88.1 FM) will launch a news series on transporatation in the Baltimore region that will, to quote a press release  "address challenges and opportunities from MARC to better roads, bus lines to funding and will also highlight areas of contention, debate, progress and partnership." The series will be funded by a $30,000 grant from the Goldseker Foundation.

The new series, expected to launch some time next month, comes on the heels of the WYPR news department's excellent 2009 series on at-risk youth, "Growing Up Baltimore," which earned a Best of Baltimore award for "Best News Series."

Transportation has been a hot topic in Baltimore in recent years, as a chorus of experts seem to agree that the lack of a comprehensive transportation system is holding the city back. Although the press release fails to mention it specifically, the series will likely discuss the "Red Line," the controversial proposed rail line to run east-west through Baltimore City. Also, I hope it will address whether or not the free Charm City Circulator is having much of an impact. There will plenty of time to get to these and other issues: The series is expected to last through April, 2011.

“We hope this series will make a strong case, especially to elected officials and civic leaders, of how important an efficient transportation network is to creating and sustaining a more competitive Baltimore region," Dr. Timothy Armbruster, the Goldseker Foundation’s President, said in the release.

10:47 am Tags: Press Check
Evan Serpick's picture
September, 24th 2010

City Paper Loses Suit, Owes $350K—Not a Problem, Says Publisher

City Paper yesterday lost a defamation suit brought by a Miami restauranter who CP's Van Smith incorrectly identified in a 2008 story as a federal fugitive (Press Check detailed the case earlier this week). The alternative weekly has been ordered to pay defendant Ionnas Kafouros $350,000 for defamation and actiing with negligence. They did not find that Smith or CP acted with malice, and so the defendent is not entitled to punitive damages.

Press Check got in touch with City Paper publisher Don Farley this afternoon and asked if the the $350,000 judgement would affect the alt-weekly's survival or ability to continure publishing, he said, flatly, "No."

"The outcome was certainly disappointing," said Farley. "When you're dealing with a jury and what a jury believes, as far as money, that's where we ended up."

Farley added that he and City Paper's lawyers haven't decided whether or not they will appeal the decision. He also declined to say whether or not the alt-weekly, which is owned by Scranton, Penn.-based Time-Shamrock Communications, had insurance that would cover the damages.

 

 

3:23 pm Tags: Press Check
Evan Serpick's picture
September, 21st 2010

City Paper Goes to Court

City Paper senior staff writer Van Smith appeared in U.S. District Court yesterday to testify in a defamation case brought against the alt-weekly by Miami restauranteur Ioannis Kafouros, whom Smith mistakenly identified as a federal fugitive of the same name in an August 2008 City Paper story. The Daily Record has the whole story (subscription only).

"City Paper didn't do its job," said Joshua Treem, an attorney for Kafouros in an opening statement. Kafouros claims the story has put his life in danger, forcing him to increase security for himself and his family, and is asking for $1 million in damages.

The midtaken identity came in a story about the August, 2008 raid of six Baltimore properties associated with Milton Tillman Jr., a convicted felon facing federal tax charges. Iannnis "Crazy John" Kafouros, who owned one of the properties, was thought to have skipped town a decade ago to avoid theft charges. Van Smith sought to locate Crazy John and a Google search turned up a Iannis Kafouros in Miami. Smith doubted that a man on the run from the law would have such a public life, but he called Mykonos, the Greek resturant that Kafouros was associated with and reached his son, Alexios. In his story, Smith claimed that the son confirmed that "his father is the same Ionnis Kafouris as the one from Baltimore, and [that] his mother, Diane Kafouris, lives in Baltimore."

"I thought it was extrememly odd, but Alex had said what he had said," Smith testified in court yesterday.

Alexios hasn't testified yet, but the Kafouris family claim he never confirmed the false information. The family's attorneys pointed out that Smith never called the restaurant back or contacted lawyers in the case against Crazy John. "You don't get to break the rules when you're breaking news," said Joel S. Magolnick, another lawyer for the family, and Smith agreed.

Among the lessons for journalists here: Google and other search engines are great investigative tools, but information found there needs to be confirmed by multiple sources—especially in so sensitive a case as this. Also, as I was once told by a great journalist, if a scoop seems too good to be true, it probably is. And finally, any case with a main character called "Crazy John" might be better off left alone.

The trial is expected to last the rest of the week.

2:37 pm Tags: Press Check
Evan Serpick's picture
September, 17th 2010

Baltimore Media Shine in Hopkins Coverage

The eyes of the world were on Baltimore yesterday, during the tense armed standoff at Johns Hopkins Hospital that left the gunman and his mother dead and one doctor wounded. And our local media, particularly Sun staffer Justin Fenton and the staff at WBAL, shined.

Less than an hour after Paul Warren Pardus shot Dr. David B. Cohen, apparently in frustration over his mother's condition, both Fenton and WBAL's Jennifer Franciotti and Dave Collins were on the scene. Fenton was a tweet machine, passing along crucial information as it came to him, whether through official sources, his own observations, or overheard chatter on police scanners and conversations. His dozens of tweets in the hours after the shooting providing the most accurate real-time account of what was happening. Fenton was interviewed on CNN fairly early in the ordeal and became the outlet's best source for accurate info.

As The Sun's Dave Zurawik details today on his excellent blog, Z on TV, WBAL really shined among local outlets, with Franciotti breaking news of the gunman's death before police announced it. And CNN, apparently because of its affiliation with WBAL and WMAR provided excellent footage and national coverage.

During a dark and disturbing day in Baltimore, it was great to see our local media on top of the situation.

[photo: Justin Fenton for The Sun]

 

 

 

11:53 am Tags: Press Check
Evan Serpick's picture
September, 13th 2010

Sun Magazine Debuts

The Sun re-launched its Sunday magazine as promised, left. I'm curious to hear what readers thought of it.

It opens with a one-page rundown of Fall events, and follows with four features. The first is a four-page photo spread on Fall fashion, the next an "At Home With" piece on Sally Thorner, detailing the decor of her homes in Baltimore County and New York City. "Generation Rx" features mini-profiles of 10 local doctors under 40, while in "Thoroughly Modern Julie," Best Columnist Jean Marbella profiled Ruxton native Julie Bowen, star of "Modern Family."

To me, it seems like a fairly lightweight affair, particularly when compared to The New York Times Magazine, The Washington Post Magazine, or even the old Baltimore Sun Magazine, which ceased publication in 1996. The material feels even more slight when one considers that this is a quarterly. The product presented here is supposed to represent three months of work. Instead, it looks and reads like a quick sideline job for the six-member editorial staff, which is undoubtedly already quite busy with its work putting out a daily newspaper. One might hope that over the next three months, they'll have time to put together a more solid product, with at least one or two pieces with some heft. Sun editors have mentioned that they hope to make the magazine a weekly product again. Based on this quarterly effort, it's hard to imagine what kind of product they would be able to produce on a weekly basis.

 

4:45 pm Tags: Press Check
Evan Serpick's picture
September, 7th 2010

New Blog, New News...

Welcome to Press Check, a new blog where we'll cover the local media, keeping tabs on Baltimore newspapers, TV stations, magazines, radio stations, websites, and blogs.

It occurred to us that Baltimore's media landscape is going through some major shifts, from the existential questions faced by our paper of record, to the emergence of truly vital news outlets on the web. It seems that this industry—which impacts local residents more than most others—doesn't get the coverage it deserves. We aim to change that here.

To get rolling, let's start with some news at The Sun:

+ After several years of shedding pages and sections, The Sun seems to intent on building new content vehicles lately. Our favorite addition has been the return of the Friday "LIVE!" section (which won "Best Comeback" in our August Best of Baltimore issue), but Sun editors have also added a stand-alone business section and a Monday-only "Sunrise" section. This Sunday, The Sun revives its Sun Magazine. At first, the glossy feature-oriented supplement will be a quarterly, but editors hope to increase its frequency, and we hear that ad sales have been fairly brisk, which means that might happen quickly. Jean Marbella—a Best of Baltimore winner for "Best Columnist" and a true local treasure—is working on a feature for the debut issue.

+ In semi-related news, one of the prime movers of the "LIVE!" section, entertainment reporter Sam Sessa, gets a promotion today, becoming The Sun's entertainment editor (or something like that—read his explanation). This means that he will hand over the reins of his nightlife blog, "Midnight Sun"—one of the paper's most popular, and a runner-up for "Best Blog" in our Readers' Poll—to new Sun hire Erik Maza, a recent University of Florida grad who previously interned at the Orlando Sentinel (which, like The Sun, is owned by the Chicago-based Tribune Company). Newly-married Sessa says going out two to three nights a week to cover nightlife had become a bit of a grind. "I'm happy to take a desk job and let Erik have all the fun," he says. We'll miss Sessa's always-sharp observations and his tireless promotion of Baltimore arts and culture (check him out on NPR's "Sound Opinions," at about the 8:45 mark), but we wish him the best in his new role.

Got a media tip? E-mail me at sevan@baltimoremagazine.net.

 

1:52 pm Tags: Press Check
Evan Serpick's picture
May, 20th 2010

Sun Taps Local Mary Corey for Top Editorial Position

Mary Corey, a Baltimore native and 23-year veteran of The Baltimore Sun who got her start as an intern at the paper, has been named senior vice president and director of content, The Sun's top editorial position. Corey becomes the first woman to lead The Sun newsroom in its 173-year history, replacing Montgomery Cook, who left the paper earlier this year. Unlike Cook, who many Sun staffers disdained as an unqualified outsider in our 2009 story on the state of the paper, Corey is generally well-liked in the newsroom. [Photo courtesy of The Baltimore Sun]

1:56 pm Tags: Uncategorized
Evan Serpick's picture
May, 13th 2010

Crab Derby Upset!

As part of the pre-Preakness festivities, the 20th annual "Crab Derby" was held at Lexington Market today. Local celebs like 92-Q's Konan, 98 Rock's Stash, and WMAR's Kelly Swoope each competed in the races, trying to coax a snappy blue crab—fresh from the Faidley's stand nearby—across the finish line. WJZ's Stan Saunders (left) was one of many who simply couldn't motivate the snappers, despite ample water-spritzing and toy-dangling. The odds-on favorite was Fox Sports 1370-AM reporter Anne Boone-Simanski, who won two of the past three years and cruised to the finals again this year, with a controversial technique that looked suspiciously like poking the crustacean (if that isn't a euphemism for something, it should be). Joining her in the finals were Konan, West Baltimore developer Ron Kreitner, and Michael Filipelli of 100.7 The Bay. At the starting pistol, longshot Kreitner—a perennial contender, never a winner—watched his crab take off, crossing the finish line in seconds. "The trick this time was, I talked to the crab," Kreitner said after the victory. "He said he likes a sloppy track, so I just gave him all the water he needed."

The race for second place took considerably longer. Filipelli frequently checked his watch, while his lay-about seafood played dead. He ultimately lounged on the Market floor (left), waiting for his contender to get back in the race. Ultimately, Boone-Simanski took second and Filipelli claimed third. Let's hope the horses show a little more spunk...

12:46 pm Tags: Uncategorized
Evan Serpick's picture
May, 7th 2010

Solar and Wind Expo This Weekend

By Amy Mulvihill John F. Kennedy once said, “The time to repair the roof is when the sun is shining.” I don’t think anyone would argue with the logic of this. Who wants to be perched on a roof during a driving rainstorm, furiously trying to minimize damage that could have been wholly prevented had we acted with a little more foresight and initiative? I think about this quote a lot whenever I hear U.S. environment policy being debated. To belabor the metaphor, it seems to me that for far too long, with regards to our environmental practices and policies, we have been that house with the gaping hole in the roof and ignored the storm clouds looming on our horizon. And then, lately, it’s started to rain. With literally millions of gallons of oil currently sloshing around in the Gulf of Mexico, not to mention the much-discussed geopolitical ramifications of a fossil fuel driven economy, it seems like now is a perfect time to embrace cleaner, greener energy alternatives. An opportunity to do just that can be found this weekend at the Maryland State Fairgrounds in Timonium where the 2010 Solar and Wind Expo opened today. The expo, which is co-sponsored by, among others, the U.S. Department of Energy and Baltimore magazine, aims to “make green a reality by matching home and business owners with producers, financiers, and top experts in the field of green technologies.” According to event organizers now is an optimal time to make the switch to green living for numerous reasons: “Both state and federal governments are providing unprecedented incentives to encourage home and business owners to utilize green technologies,” the events website thesolarandwindexpo.com says. Plus, as the—believe it or not—wealthiest state in the union and one of the top ten greenest states, Maryland “has both the desire to eliminate its carbon foot print and the financial means to do so.” The expo runs through Sunday and features numerous speakers, including a keynote address tomorrow at noon by Bob Dixon, the Mayor of Greensburg, Kansas, a town that was completely leveled by a tornado in 2007 and has rebuilt itself using green building practices. All lectures and seminars are free with admission, which is free for children under 12 and $12 for adults. There are discounts available, however, for purchasing tickets online (no paper), arriving by Light Rail (less gas consumption), and bringing any article or ad referencing the expo (um, not sure how this is green, but, hey, it’s still a discount!). And anyway, what’s $12 when you think about what’s at stake?

2:32 pm Tags: Uncategorized
Evan Serpick's picture
May, 6th 2010

Utz: You're Dead to Utz

The connection between Utz potato chips and Baltimore is legend. Yes, as many a would-be smarty parts will tell you, they're manufactured over the border in Hanover, PA, but Baltimore was the first major market to embrace the Utz brand, founded by Will and Salie Utz in 1921. As Wikipedia tells us, "After Salie cooked the chips, Bill delivered them to local grocery stores and farmers’ markets in the Hanover and Baltimore, Maryland areas." For years thereafter, our own Lexington Market was the primary distribution point for Utz products. Utz embraced its Baltimore connection with its Old Bay-seasoned "Crab Chips." Utz even made a cameo on The Wire! We owned you, Utz!

Well, not anymore. Consider yourself disowned. Feel free to hangout with your soulless Yankee friends and all their bought-and-paid-for championships. But remember this Utz: New York doesn't care about you. You may have made some Miltonian deal to become the "Official Snack Food of the New York Yankees," but New Yorkers will never claim you the way we have. To them, you're just a second-rate Dorito. And now, that's all you'll ever be.

3:33 pm Tags: Uncategorized
Evan Serpick's picture
April, 27th 2010

O'Malley Launches Campaign in Fells Point

Governor Martin O'Malley launched his re-election campaign just before noon today at the Bond Street Wharf. Before the event began, I ran into City Councilman Bill Henry—always up for a chat—who joked that he was looking up at the Wharf building's windows for one or two lanterns, to see if the Governor would be arriving by land or by sea. After introductions by Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, Senator Barbara Mikulski, and Lt. Governor Anthony Brown, O'Malley arrived by land (above, left) with his wife and kids, and offered a stump speech citing his administration's achievements on education, crime, and the economy, all-too-frequently punctuated with his new campaign slogan, "Moving Maryland Forward." The slogan is an inherent jibe at his returning Republican challenger Bob Ehrlich, as O'Malley made clear when he said, "Some run for public office to take Maryland back, I run for office to move Maryland forward." There were a few protestors at the event. Three held up signs urging the Governor to save Maryland's film industry (above, right). "When Governor O'Malley came into office, Maryland offered $6 million dollars [a year] in tax incentive [for the film industry]. We were sorta holding our own," says Michael Davis, a set-builder based in Highlandtown. "Now, it's down to $1 million." As a result, he says, filmmakers that once flocked to Maryland are going elsewhere. Davis worked four days in Maryland in all of 2009 (on David Fincher's Social Network, about the founder of Facebook, which briefly filmed on Johns Hopkins' campus). "If it weren't for that, I wouldn't have had a day of work in Maryland for the first time since 1986," he says. See our story on the state of the Maryland film industry, "Flicked Off," in the current May issue of Baltimore. And on the next dock, there was a lone protestor referring to the Governor as "Owe Malley," lampooning him for "the largest tax increase in history." I could be wrong, but I would bet that O'Malley is likely to see more of this kind of protestor on the campaign trail than film industry advocates.

12:19 pm Tags: Uncategorized
Evan Serpick's picture
April, 16th 2010

Harbor East Monument a Focal Point of Polish-American Grief

katynBy Jeanne-Michele Vigna

The National Katyn Memorial in Baltimore's Harbor East has become an impromptu meeting spot for mourners of President Lech Kaczynski and his wife, who died in a plane crash along with 95 others, including several cabinet ministers and legislators, in a devastating plane crash early Saturday morning.

Mere hours after the crash—which occurred shockingly close to the site of the massacre marked by the memorial—a group of approximately fifty formally-dressed people gathered around the site, an event that kicked-off a week of nightly vigils there.

On hand that Saturday, were members of the Polish League of American Veterans Ladies Auxiliary outfitted in matching navy blue blazers. Senator Barbara Mikulski, among others, sported red clothing, while some simply held the Polish flag. A representative from the Polish embassy, donning an armband, began to explain the significance of Katyn in Polish.  A member of the crowd shouted out that all Poles know the history, so it would be better if he just spoke in English. After a speech by Mikulski, the assembled sang the Polish national anthem and said prayers for Poland and victims of the crash. Flowers and wreaths were laid at the feet of the memorial and candles were lit.

After the ceremony, some mourners moved on to the Polish National Alliance Lounge for shots of the popular Polish honey liquor, Krupnik, in honor of the fallen President and others on the plane.

3:20 pm Tags: Uncategorized
Evan Serpick's picture
March, 23rd 2010

Monty Cook Out at The Sun

2356The Baltimore Sun has announced that top editor Monty Cook will resign from his position to accept a job at the University of North Carolina, his alma mater. 

Cook will step down in April after a stormy 15-month tenure during which he oversaw 61 layoffs at the paper, as reported in our September, 2009 cover story

[photo courtesy of the Baltimore Sun]

2:26 pm Tags: Uncategorized
Evan Serpick's picture
March, 19th 2010

'Po Editing

NYT2A couple months ago, we gave Baltimore Suneditors a lot of grief over a pretty atrocious front-page error. This morning, we noticed an equally egregious error in The New York Times (left). Granted it wasn't on the front page, but the Times' error is even more laughable. Is "Po Basketball" what poor people play in the South?

Also, given that media-watching blog Gawker recently reported that the minimum salary forTimes staff reporters is $90,500, I think they ought to at least get their section headers right. Of course, I know that reporters aren't responsible for those, but if they've got that kind of money to throw around, you'd think they could afford to hire people to make sure they don't embarrass themseleves—and maybe even to stop laying people off

9:03 am Tags: Uncategorized
Evan Serpick's picture
March, 3rd 2010

Cardinal Gibbons to Close

CGThe Cardinal Gibbons School—one of Baltimore's oldest and most storied Catholic high schools—announced about an hour ago via its Facebook page that it will close its doors at the end of the current academic year. The move comes as the Archdiocese of Baltimore rolls out its plan to consolidate the city's Catholic schools progams, which has suffered in recent years from dwindling enrollment and contributions.

The school, opened in 1962, occupies the same space as St. Mary's Industrial School for Boys, which dated back to 1886 and counted George Herman "Babe" Ruth among its alumni. The field where Ruth played high school baseball is used by Cardinal Gibbons athletes today. The school counts several other prominent players among its alumni, including 1970s NFL star Jean Fugett and NBA players  Quintin Dalley and Norman Black.

2:56 pm Tags: Uncategorized