Newspaper dot-coms dominate Online Journalism Award finalists

The Online News Assocation today named USA Today’s website as a finalist for four Online Journalism Awards, leading all news organizations. The New York Times on the Web earned three finalist designations, as newspaper-affiliated websites dominated the honors. The awards attracted 694 entries for the 18 categories this year, according to ONA executive director Lori Schwab.

The Online Journalism Awards will be presented on October 7, during the ONA’s annual national conference, which will be held this year at the Capital Hilton in Washington, DC. The awards are administered by the University of Southern California’s Annenberg School of Communication, which also publishes OJR.

An OJR analysis of the offline media affiliations of the finalists in the non-student categories shows that newspaper dot-coms led the way, earning 38 finalist honors for 27 sites, including that of the Associated Press. Magazine-published websites earned eight finalist awards. Cable television networks earned five honors, while over-the air networks earned three and one local television station (Indianapolis’s WTHR) earned a finalist nod.

Ten websites not affiliated with an offline media partner earned 12 finalist honors, though that number includes Slate, which is now owned by the Washington Post, and The Smoking Gun, which is owned by the cable TV network Court TV. [Editor’s note — Numbers corrected to note that Gulf Coast News is not affiliated with a newspaper.]

Finalists in each category are listed below, along with the finalist’s offline media affiliation. The designation between “large” and “small” websites is determined by the individual domain’s monthly visitors, and does not reflect the size of the news organization behind the site.

General Excellence in Online Journalism (Large)

MSNBC (cable network)
The New York Times (newspaper)
Star Tribune (newspaper)
USA Today (newspaper)
Washington Post.com (newspaper)

General Excellence in Online Journalism (Medium)

New West (not affiliated)
Orlando Sentinel (newspaper)
Roanoke.com (newspaper)
Spokesman Review (newspaper)

General Excellence in Online Journalism (Small)

The Center for Public Integrity (not affiliated)
Congressional Quarterly (magazine)
LJWorld.com (newspaper)
Speaking of Faith (broadcast network)

Breaking News (Large)

“London Terrorist Bombings”, CNN (cable network)
“NYC Transit Strike,” New York Times (newspaper)
“Hurricane Katrina,” NOLA.com (newspaper)
“Hurricane Wilma,” Sun Sentinel (newspaper)
“Hurricane Katrina,” USA Today (newspaper)

Breaking News (Small)

“The 404 Debate,” CFO.com (magazine)
“Hurricane Katrina,” Sun Herald (newspaper)

Online Commentary (Large)

“The Drive-In with James Hill,” BET (cable network)
“BorgBlog,” Jim Borgman, Cincinnati.com (newspaper)
“David Pogue on NYTimes.com,” New York Times (newspaper)
“Architecture,” Slate Magazine (not affiliated, though owned by a newspaper company)
“Moneybox,” Slate Magazine (not affiliated, though owned by a newspaper company)

Online Commentary (Medium)

“Stuck in the 80s,” TampaBay.com (newspaper)
“Stacy Haddox,” TheDay.com (newspaper)
“Survivor: Treasure Coast Blogfest,” TCPalm.com (newspaper)

Online Commentary (Small)

CJR Daily (magazine)
“Get on the Bus,” Scott Elliot (newspaper)
“Good Morning Silicon Valley,” John Paczkowski (newspaper)
SeeingBlack.com (not affiliated)

Outstanding Use of Multiple Media (Large)

“London Attacks,” BBC News (broadcast network)
“Hurricane Katrina,” MSNBC.com (cable network)
“Going Down the Crooked Road,” Roanoke.com (newspaper)
“2006 Winter Olympics in Torino, Italy,” USA Today (newspaper)

Outstanding Use of Multiple Media (Small)

“An Enduring Mystery,” Herald Tribune (newspaper)
“Montgomery Boycott,” Montgomery Advertiser (newspaper)
“Tallahassee Bus Boycott Anniversary,” Tallahassee Democrat (newspaper)

Specialty Journalism (Large)

Business Week (magazine)
“Taking back the Web: New generation, technologies return Net to social roots,” CNET News.com (not affiliated)
“ESPN Insider,” ESPN (cable network)
NOVA Science NOW (broadcast network)

Specialty (Small)

Bicycling (magazine)
“Azerbaijan Elections 2005,” EurasiaNet.org (not affiliated)
Fine Woodworking (magazine)
Lawrence.com (newspaper)
McKinneySports.net (not affiliated)

Service Journalism (Large)

“The Mercury Menace,” Chicago Tribune (newspaper)
“Identity Crisis: Myth vs. Reality in ID Theft,” CNET News.com (not affiliated)
“Walk This Way Challenge,” Prevention (magazine)
“License to Harm,” Seattle Times (newspaper)
“Couples and Their Cash,” USA Today (newspaper)

Service Journalism (Small)

“Quality Counts at 10: A Decade of Standards Based Education,” Education Week (magazine)
“Toxic Legacy,” The Bergen Record (newspaper)
Gulf Coast News (not affiliated)

Enterprise Journalism (Large)

“A Million Little Lies,” The Smoking Gun (not affiliated, though owned by a cable network)
“e-Qaeda,” Washington Post (newspaper)
“9/11 Loans,” Associated Press (newspaper)

Enterprise (Small)

“Cause for Alarm,” WTHR 13 Eyewitness News (local TV)
“Conflicts on the Bench,” Muckracker.Org (not affiliated)
“Power Trips,“ The Center for Public Integrity (not affiliated)
“Toxic Cargo,” Press Enterprise (newspaper)

Knight Foundation Award for Public Service

“Hurricane Katrina: The Storm We Always Feared,” NOLA.com (newspaper)
“Toxic Legacy,” The Record (newspaper)
“Fire Alarm,” Newsday (newspaper)
“Mortgage Fraud: The new street hustle,” Chicago Tribune (newspaper)
“Hurricane Katrina,” Sun Herald (newspaper)

Student Journalism

“Chasing Crusoe,” University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Journalism and Mass Communication and the Universidad de Los Andes, Facultad de Comunicación
“My Blue Eyed Girl,” Heather Gehlert, School of Journalism, University of Berkeley
“Peavine Explorations,” Reynolds School of Journalism
“Rezoned,” Jeff DelViscio and Khody Akhavi, Columbia School of Journalism
“The Ancient Way,” School of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of North Carolina, the Department of Journalism at the University of Santiago de Compostela (Spain) and the Faculty of Communication at the Universidad de los Andes (Chile)

The judges for the 2006 awards were:

  • Mary Lou Fulton, VP Audience Development, The Bakersfield Californian
  • Sue Gardner, Senior Director, CBC.ca
  • Mitch Gelman, Senior VP and Executive Producer, CNN.com
  • Rich Jaroslovsky, Executive Editor, Government and Economy, Bloomberg News
  • Chris Jennewein, Director of Internet operations, Union-Tribune Publishing Co.
  • Anthony Moor, Editor, OrlandoSentinel.com
  • Laura Sellers, Online Director, East Oregonian Publishing Co.
  • Michael Silberman, Vice President and Editorial Director, Rodale Interactive
  • Jonathan Weber, Founder and Editor in Chief, New West
  • Online media's 'Californian' adventure

    The Bakersfield Californian behaves for all the world as though it has forgotten it is a daily newspaper company.

    The Kern County, California daily has expanded its online core, Bakersfield.com, in a burst of Web and print product launches and software development that would stagger even the edgiest of New York City multimedia studios.

    Online, the Californian puts out staff blogs, produces podcasts and fields reporters with camcorders to augment its robust array of news stories, photographs and local guides. The hard-copy version just underwent a dramatic redesign with a strong use of color and graphics that bucks current newspaper design trends.

    But just in the past two years, the parent company has also kicked community-driven online development into overdrive. It

    • launched three new citizen-journalism-fed community newspapers with strong online counterparts
    • developed text-messaging products
    • started selling licenses for Bakomatic, a social-networking/citizen-journalism software platform, which is now pulling 400,000 page views a month, and
    • spread the umbrella of a new division called Mercado Nuevo over all of it.

    The company plans to use the new bases of users and advertisers developed by these “outside” products to explore even more new business opportunities.

    In short, the Californian has transformed itself into something that many American newspapers are barely struggling to conceive: A post-dot-com information company fueled by an active, engaged and fast-growing audience.

    For more than a decade now, online newspapers have been struggling for legitimacy, mindshare, usability and that most elusive of values — audience stickiness. A number of factors have hastened the almost logarithmic slide of print audience: The proliferation of social-networking media and practices and the rise of blogging and cable TV plus YouTube and other on-demand multimedia have eroded mindshare for media audiences, prompting people to spend less time and money on newspaper content.

    The Californian has taken that trend as a road map toward future stability rather than a harbinger of the paper’s demise:

    “I think that newspapers … have the best shot at success as anyone in this new digital realm,” said Mary Lou Fulton, the Californian’s Vice President of Audience Development. We have the audience, we have a trusted local brand, we have a relationship between our readers and advertisers. Our problem is we’re afraid to use those building blocks in so many ways: We’re afraid we’re going to cannibalize our business, we’re afraid somebody’s going to say something in our Web sites that we don’t approve of or agree with – and you know what? They will, I promise you that. We have to get comfortable with trying things that may not always be successful.”

    Unlike many more-traditional newspapers’ attempts at digital-age retooling, the Californian’s drive to experiment came from the top: Publisher Ginger Moorhouse has been encouraging innovation for quite some time, beginning in 1995 with the formation of an “online committee” and followed a few years later by founding of “Area 51,” the paper’s ongoing innovation group.

    Area 51 was launched with funding, a mandate to innovate and white monogrammed lab coats worn proudly by its staff. Over the years, Area 51 members have devised hardware solutions such as wireless newsbox monitors for detecting low-newspaper levels, and early text-messaging products for the mobile market.

    Fulton, who had served several years on the paper’s board of directors after working in online editorial development for the Washington Post and AOL, said that Moorhouse asked her about two years ago to look into launching a community newspaper that would serve the fast-growing, upwardly-mobile northwest area of Bakersfield saying, “Because if we don’t, someone else will come along and do it.”

    They began talking about inviting readers to contribute content — an idea that had been tried before, though not quite successfully. “My feeling was — worst-case scenario — we know how to make a traditional newspaper, we can do that,” Fulton recalls. “Best case — what if we can really create a critical mass of people to write their newspaper — how cool would that be? How awesome would that be?”

    Thus was born the Northwest Voice — a biweekly tabloid and online paper driven today almost entirely by contributions from unpaid users.

    Fulton and her team spent three or four months evangelizing for the paper — inviting school sports teams, church groups and community organizations to see and use the Northwest Voice as their place to speak and share information. To date, about 25 semi-regulars and a host of less-frequent contributors are submitting about 200 items a month.

    After launching NorthwestVoice.com in May, 2004, they began developing a suite of Web tools that would allow contributors easy access to upload photos and text to the site — a content-management and social-networking application that eventually evolved into “Bakomatic.”

    In January, 2005 came the launch of Bakotopia.com — a social-networking site much like MySpace that lets users post their profiles, photos, event listings and classified ads, among other things. The site features “Bakotunes Radio,” a slick Flash-based podcast jukebox featuring songs uploaded by Bakersfield musicians that’s sponsored by one of the city’s largest music-gear retailers.

    Users can now post blogs of their own, send each other messages, sign guestbooks, browse topic-keyword “clouds” showing the most popular topics, browse profiles by “interests” and add each other to their rosters of “friends.”

    In August, 2005 came the launch of Más, a bilingual, weekly glossy-covered newsprint tabloid on the streets and a robust site online delivered weekly for, and written by some of, Bakersfield’s 42 percent Latino population.

    Just last April, the Californian launched the Southwest Voice, which mirrors the behavior of the Northwest Voice with its own region’s audience-generated content, and it took off like a shot, Fulton recalls. Submissions are already up to about 100 a month, and eight contributors have become regulars.

    “Within days, we had dozens of articles and pictures, because people had already heard of Northwest Voice,” she said. “They understood that this was participation, and they welcomed it. They were eager. You don’t hear people asking for new newspapers every day of the week. We like that.”

    Meanwhile, in February, the team had launched two other new sites: TehachapiNews.com, for the resort town’s weekly, and NewtoBakersfield.com, an online guide for newcomers.

    NewtoBakersfield is packed with more-static content — guides to everything from restaurants and movie theaters to dog parks and farmers’ markets — but right up front is the key to the Californian‘s strategy, the same interface found on its other sites: three big, friendly buttons that invite users to register, sign in and post their own profiles and content.

    “Citizen journalism” is the buzzword addling the heads of many a newspaper new-media director these days, but that’s not quite Mercado Nuevo’s focus, Fulton said.

    “It’s really about participation, and participatory media. Participation is at the heart of the Internet. The Internet is a social medium, primarily,” she said. “It’s not really a question of whether newspapers can figure out citizen journalism, it’s more that newspapers have to learn how to participate, because people on the Internet already know how to do that.”

    As the social-networking sites began to gain traction, the Mercado Nuevo team began retooling the newspaper’s own site, Bakersfield.com, rebuilding its registration system to allow easier collection of demographic information, adding 15 staff blogs and launching the Bakomatic profile for the site’s users. Blog capabilities are soon to be added for all users there, as well.

    In the course of its growth, the Californian last year brought on Howard Owens, the former director of media at the Ventura County (Calif.) Star, which won the Online Journalism Awards for General Excellence among small sites in 2004, to be Vice President of Interactive in charge of Bakersfield.com.

    But Owens left the Californian May 31, after a little more than 10 months’ service, and was replaced by Logan Molen, the paper’s managing editor.

    Neither Owens nor Fulton would comment about his departure but Owens points to a post on his personal blog which details some of his accomplishments in Bakersfield, including the Bakersfield.com redesign and the push for making site registration into a social network.

    Meanwhile, the past two years have seen the newspaper bump its own internal online staff to five, make the Web director a department head and begin a series of brown-bag lunches to train newsroom staffers how to produce multimedia. Fifty-two of the paper’s 75 news staffers have now participated in or helped to produce a multimedia package for Bakersfield.com, Molen said.

    Molen said the staff is turning out at least two video packages and an audio package a day, and already has more than 500 multimedia packages in the archive, he said.

    “There was some initial resistance, and there still is some,” Molen said. “But I think that in the last year we’ve come a long way … It really sent a strong message that we’re serious about the Web, and we’re going to give it time and attention.”

    While Mercado Nuevo is still running in the red, there’s a strong corporate-development strategy behind it, bolstering the paper’s goal of making it profitable within two to three years.

    That strategy goes deeper than simply building an audience and selling it effectively to advertisers, Pacheco said: The Californian is building communities of interest, gathering data from registration and cookies and loading it into a central database that can be used, without compromising users’ privacy, to let advertisers narrowcast their messages to specific audience sectors.

    If users are the first to adopt the Bakomatic philosophy, and advertisers among the later adopters, there’s plenty of room for exploration and innovation, he said.

    “I would love to see advertisers deal with the truly interactive stuff in a social way,” Pacheco said. “Right now, I can have my friends on my profile in Bakotopia, why not have my favorite business? I’m now advertising them, I’m now recommending them to others, advertisers will pay for that as well, if they can. It’s something we’re talking about.”

    As Pacheco walks through some of the other current and future Bakotopia features — instant-blogging buttons, future text-messaging products and the decidedly unconventional vision of one Bakomatic user’s profile icon — an animation expert eating a baby’s head — he summed up the potential of what seems on the surface to be rampant experimentation:

    “It’s as far away from newspapering as you can get. [But] we have increased page views by 30 percent from these six separately-branded products. Bakotopia is now getting about 400,000 page views a month, which for a town of 330,000 people is pretty dang good.”

    * * *

    Additional reading: You can find a presentation by publisher Ginger Moorhouse outlining the Californian’s product- and audience-development strategy, dated March 1, 2006, here.

    Making the jump from one-man blog to community website

    Over the past three years, Kevin Roderick’s LA Observed has become the go-to source for links and insight about life in the Los Angeles, California not populated by stars, agents and studio executives… or wanna-be stars, agents and studio executives. Roderick, a native Angeleno, worked as a staff writer and editor at the Los Angeles Times for two decades and writes as for Los Angeles magazine in addition to publishing LA Observed, which he started in 2003.

    This month, Roderick expanded his site, adding three additional blogs and a slew of contributors, shifting LA Observed from a one-man blog to an emerging community portal. Roderick answered questions about the changes in a telephone interview with OJR.

    OJR: What has changed at LA Observed, and why?

    Roderick: I had done LA Observed for three years as a solo practitioner. But for the last few months, I have been trying to find a way to enlarge the footprint for LA Observed a bit, in terms of being a source of original writing, and in some cases, more news and information about Los Angeles. So what I decided to do — and it’s the first of many things that I think will be coming in the near future — to open up LA Observed to contributors who I approached and asked if they would be interested in joining the blogosphere through LA Observed. And these are, for the most part, people who had not been bloggers before. But most of them are writers of some kind, or have been journalists, or otherwise have written for public consumption. But they just hadn’t been online.

    OJR: It sounds a little bit like a Huffington Post model.

    Roderick: Well, in a way, it might be, with some significant differences. One is that it’s focused on Los Angeles. And it’s not about politics, primarily. And it’s not just people with known names, who are venting about something that’s on their mind, or something that’s bothering them, or a political cause that they want to advocate. I’m hoping this will be more interesting than that. And I think The Huffington Post is great, actually. And it’s a great thing that they’ve created there. But there’s hundreds of people contributing there. And I think for me, it’s just a little bit loud, in that sense. It’s hard for me to parse through it, and to get a real sense of the personality of the site.

    OJR: Talk a little bit about managing these new contributors. Because there is a bit of a jump to go from a one-person publication to assuming the role of the editor managing a bunch of other writers. Now, obviously, you’ve had some experience in that in the past that I assume you’re gonna be drawing upon. But, how do you see that playing out in the blog?

    Roderick: Well, first of all, it’s kind of fun to be back in the editor’s seat a little bit more directly than I have been lately. But the way I’ve set this up is, the contributors are going to mostly contribute to new blogs that are kind of operating as sidebar blogs to LA Observed. All of them will have sign-on passwords to the site, and be posting themselves. I’m not editing the content of the blogs. These are meant to be contributions from people who I trust to put up on the site unedited and unfiltered, for the most part.

    OJR: What’s in it for the contributors? Are they being paid? Are they getting an ad share? Is it just for the publicity? What did you use to get them on board?

    Roderick: Well, they’re not being paid. And – you know, LA Observed is primarily a personal site that is supported to a limited degree by advertising and sponsors, who paid for the expenses of keeping the site up. And that will continue to be necessary, and even more so.

    I went to people and said, you know, “I have this website.” All of these contributors were regular readers of LA Observed, and I essentially offered them an outlet and a place on which to come online and kind of fly their flag, in a supportive environment where they didn’t have to start their own blog from scratch.

    I’ve also promised them that there will be not only no editing, but they will also retain all rights to what they write on the website. So that if they they post something that they can turn into a magazine article or a book or whatever, go for it. It’s not my property. It’s a place for them to come on and be online, rather than it’s something that I’m creating.

    OJR: Is there any worry that perhaps some of them will get particularly popular, then take off and do their own thing in competition with LA Observed?

    Roderick: Well, it’s not a worry, but it’s something that I hope happens. I expect that some of the contributors will develop followings, and go off and at some point spin off, and decide to go try it fully on their own. And they’ll do that with my blessing.

    I think one of the experiments is to have a very experienced business journalist, Mark Lachter, the former editor of The LA Business Journal, and a former Forbes correspondent, writing about LA business every day. Well, there are no other blogs devoted to LA business. And I think he’s bringing a lot to that already. He’s only been doing it now for three days. He’d never blogged before in his life. And he really was looking for an outlet. We had had a conversation some months ago about what he was gonna do after he left The LA Business Journal. And staking a claim online was one of the things that interested him a lot.

    It wouldn’t surprise me if someday down the road he becomes so successful with what he’s doing that he wants to take it up, and become his own blog. Or even his own blog empire. Who knows? And that would be fine. And then, you know, we’ll cross that bridge when it comes to it. But that is part of the model here. These are not employees. This is a community. And community members can come and go.

    OJR: About opening up the side of the community, have you given thoughts to bringing back comments, or adding discussion boards, or doing other things that might bring readers into the community as writers and publishers as well?

    Roderick: I’ve given a lot of thought to it, actually. I think there will be more opportunities for reader participation than there has been up to now. As you know, I had comments for the first year, or year and a half of the website. Just got bogged down by the spam assaults that come because of the software I used, Movable Type. And also, because the community that was forming around the comments of the website was not particularly attuned to the community that was forming around reading the website. They were different groups. And it was taking an awful lot of time to manage that side of things.

    So, I cut it off at some point. I guess it was about two years ago now. I still don’t think that the software filters are far enough along that – you know, you can open up full comments on the side like this, and not have to deal with a lot of spam. And I’m not too interested in that form of reader participation, as an art form. I think there’s better ways to do it, and I hope to hit on that. We may do some kind of a hybrid of a letters page, where people can send in things they want to say about what’s on LA Observed, but they’ll have to sign their name to it. Another way to do it may be to set up some kind of free posting community of invited commenters, the way that the Gawker networks have done it. Or to set up something like Romanesko does, where he posts letters from people that are kind of screened. He actually filters his a little bit more than I might, and picks and chooses the ones that he wants. Sort of in the way that a Letters to the Editor page does at a newspaper.

    If I do it, I want it to be a plus.

    OJR: Let’s talk a little bit about the technological side of this. How’s that going?

    Roderick: Well, I keep saying that I’m hitting the outer limits of what I know, in dealing with software and things like that. But then I keep finding I’m going a little bit farther. So, this web – LA Observed and all of these sidebars are published on Movable Type, at a discount hosting service that’s located in Wisconsin. Total Choice Hosting, which I’m pretty happy with. I anticipate – you know, the website probably outgrowing both of those things. Both Movable Type and Total Choice at some point. And I’m kind of dreading that point, of having to do any kind of major conversions. But this did involve, for me, deciding whether to create these new blogs, as separate blogs, or as essentially categories of LA Observed. And the software allows for categorization and customizing of categories. I decided to go the blog route. And it also makes them a little bit more transportable, if they break off. It’ll be easier to send them on their way. It also makes it easier for the contributors to sign on. And they all have passwords, and there is a learning curve for them, in learning how to use Movable Type. So, that’s an interesting facet of this. In that I’m dealing with people who have not been bloggers in the past. And have not been posting in any form to the Internet in a way that would make them instantly comfortable with filling out a blog form on Movable Type.

    OJR: How much time have you spent training yourself on blog software, and what kind of resources have you used?

    Roderick: Well, I’ve been learning it as I go along. I did read a book on how to use HTML early on, so that I felt comfortable with that. My kind of favorite for that, because of its usability, is Elizabeth Castro’s HTML for the World Wide Web. The Fifth Edition is what I have. That’s been very helpful. And then there’s also a community of websites that support users of movable type. And that has been invaluable to me. You know, that’s where I learned that you can do certain things that I didn’t know you could do. In this case, I converted what was an HTML site to PHP, which I had not done before, and had been intimidated about doing before. You know? And I realized that it will open up a number of possibilities to me that are interesting and valuable, especially with the use of scripts. And perhaps even switching from static pages to dynamically-built pages might help a little bit, in some cases. But it’s allowing me to simplify the spreading out of the website’s design onto new blogs. That’s just something I wouldn’t have known how to do six months ago. So, that’s one reason that I’m doing this now, and that I’m able to do it now.

    OJR: What are some of those community sites?

    Roderick: Well, the one that I tend to fall back on, it’s called Learning Movable Type, by a woman named Elise Bauer, up in the Bay Area. And she has put together just a very invaluable collection of tips, tutorials, and advice on how to both build and use and modify a Movable Type blog. And she has pointers to a number of others. Frankly, the Movable Type documentation and support you get from the creators of Movable Type is not very good. You need to have somebody translating it for you. And she does a pretty good job, for me.

    There’s also support forums on the Movable Type website, where I’ve in the past asked questions.

    OJR: I think one of the things that so many people like about LA Observed is that it isn’t this kind of outsider’s stereotypical view of Los Angeles, but rather something that’s far more informed by a native’s outlook. We haven’t had a major, locally-owned English language newspaper in Los Angeles for the past six years. Do you think that that’s created a void that LA Observed has stepped into? Do you think LA Observed could be as successful as it is if we still did have a locally-owned English language newspaper in this town?

    Roderick: Well, you know, I don’t think the geographical location of ownership matters that much to the newspapers that we have here. I mean, none of the newspapers changed their sense of what they knew about LA when the new ownership came in. They did have some changes of editors, for instance at the LA Times, and there was kind of a rethinking of local coverage for them. Some in a good way, and some in a way that thinned things out considerably. I think LA Observed is a much different animal than any of the newspapers here, obviously. But I do think it is filling some sort of a niche for people who are looking for a very locally-oriented take on the news. Who are looking for a little bit more detail and nitty-gritty about local affairs and local events than they get in the newspapers anymore these days, which are squeezed in space. You know, the newspapers are trying to serve people across the region, the 15 million people. And I can devote my intentions to a much more narrowly-drawn group.

    People tell me all the time that they used LA Observed as kind of one of their guides to deciding what’s important in the news. Having a very strong Los Angeles sensibility is appealing to a lot of people in Los Angeles. And I think that is a complaint that I hear about the newspapers, and the television stations, and even the radio stations. That they don’t feel as rooted in Los Angeles as some of the blogs do.

    And then there’s other blogs doing the same thing, who are also telling the story of Los Angeles, in their own way. I think you’re gonna see more and more of that. I do think that that’s a big part of the advantage that websites and blogs have over old-style media — the ability to do things in a kind of a hyper-local way. And one of the things you’re gonna see at LA Observed is some spin-off, side blogs, I’m calling them, that are going to be focused more specifically on areas of the city.

    OJR: Do you think that traditional media should have been doing more of what you’re trying to do? Not just in terms of providing the hyper-local round-up, but also getting the other voices online?

    Roderick: Yes. I do think they should have, and I think it will be seen as a missed opportunity by some of the other local media outlets. I mean, if you look at The LA Times, for instance, which does have a number of blogs now, on its website. But it doesn’t have many blogs devoted to the news and public affairs and politics and gossip of Los Angeles. I guess the closest thing to that now would be the School Me blog that Bob Sipchen does, which is covering very intently the attempts by Mayor Villaraigosa to take over the school system. For a while there, Mike Hiltzik blog was touching on local affairs, but it really was a national business blog that was tending toward joining the national political blogosphere.

    Not to pick on The Times. The Daily News, a paper that at least fancies itself as being more attuned to the local situation because it doesn’t have foreign bureaus, and it doesn’t have people around the country – they have a number of blogs, too. But they tend to be feature-y, and they’ve put more emphasis, as does The Times, into the Hollywood space than they do into covering just the community where their readers live. And it’s curious, because that’s a complaint leveled at both newspapers. You don’t get a sense of real Los Angeles that people live in by reading The Times or The Daily News.