Press Publish 10: Tiffany Shackelford on the future of alt weeklies after the Boston Phoenix
Publisher |
Harvard University
Media Type |
audio
Categories Via RSS
Publication Date |
Apr 03, 2013
Episode Duration |
Unknown
They face many of the same financial challenges as their daily peers — how many alt weeklies can navigate a path to sustainability?

shackelford.jpg" alt="tiffany-shackelford" width="300" height="400" class="nakedrightimage">It’s Episode 10 of Press Publish, the Nieman Lab podcast! My guest this week is Tiffany Shackelford, executive director of Association of Alternative Newsmedia, until recently known as the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies. They’re the trade group for alt weeklies in the U.S. — your Village Voices, your Chicago Readers, your Seattle Weeklies — and until recently, the Boston Phoenix.

The legendary Boston alt weekly surprised the publishing world last month when it announced it was closing after 47 years. That led to a new round of concerns about the future of alt weeklies, which have seen a lot of the same revenue declines that dailies have over the past decade. And when daily newspapers were strong, it was easy to know who the alt weeklies were an alternative to; now there’s no shortage of alternatives to the alternative.

publish-logo.png" alt="press-publish-logo" width="314" height="195" class="nakedrightimage">Tiffany believes that alts still have a solid future ahead of them, particularly in markets smaller than Boston. We talked about how their revenue mix is shifting, how some alts are changing their publication cycle and becoming more heavily digital, and who are the model players that other publishers should be watching. If you’re interested in the future of some of America’s most prominent newspaper brands, give our conversation a listen.

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Show notes

@tiffanyshack Tiffany’s LinkedIn profile Association of Alternative Newsmedia 2012: “Alt weeklies eye an AP of their own with a content exchange” The Boston Phoenix, R.I.P. end-boston-phoenix-publishes-final-issue-today-statement-from-publisher-stephen-m-mindich.aspx">Phoenix publisher Stephen Mindich’s goodbye The Independent in Lafayette, Louisiana Long Island Press American Independent News Network Franklin Center for Government and Public Integrity Stateline.org Barbara Mandrell, “I Was Country (When Country Wasn’t Cool)” Capitolbeat, the Association of Capitol Reporters and Editors Ernie Smith, “Alt-weeklies may struggle but don’t count them out” Rachael Daigle, “Alt-Weeklies Are Dead; Long Live Alt-Weeklies” Dan Kennedy, “The Boston Phoenix comes to the end of the road” “The Boston Phoenix closing is another sign that glossing up print doesn’t work miracles” the-boston-phoenix-kept-its-readers-but-lost-its-advertisers078.html">Dan Kennedy, “How the Boston Phoenix Kept Its Readers But Lost Its Advertisers” DigBoston Allyson Bird, “Why I left news” Job listings at AltWeeklies.com Arkansas Times’ Arkansas Blog Walter Hussman’s pro-paywall position OC Weekly Willamette Week WW’s Candidates Gone Wild The Media Consortium Seven Days Creative Loafing’s neighborhoods project with the Home Depot Foundation The Reader of Omaha East Bay Express Charleston City Paper Voice Media Group The Stranger of Seattle paper-to-cease-publication-january-31.html">The Other Paper in Columbus closing The Times of Acadiana (owned by Gannett) New Haven Advocate SouthComm Boise Weekly Chicago Reader Now in Toronto Gambit in New Orleans

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