Pulitzer finalists named today: Finalists for the 2009 Pulitzer Prize will be announced today at 2 pm CST. Unlike previous years, nobody’s leaked the finalists list to Editor & Publisher, leaving Joe Strupp to again speculate. He again states that in the first year online-only news outlets are eligible a website is likely to get at least a finalist spot. Among the five sites Strupp names in his latest handicapper piece are two locals, the Minnesota Independent (we submitted our multimedia coverage of the Republican National Convention) and MinnPost. Getting no love from E&P is The UpTake: its executive director, Jason Barnett, confirms the videography group submitted an application, too. Update: The Pulitzer winners and finalists list was released and… no online news operation got the nod.
Minnesota’s Jewish paper goes biweekly: After nearly a century in business, Minneapolis-based weekly the American Jewish World is switching to a biweekly production schedule. Founded in 1912 as the Jewish Weekly to “tell the Jewish story and to be a catalyst for Jewish unity and cultural vitality” (it got its current name in 1915), the paper has been hard hit, like many community papers, by the recession. Anticipating a long-term downturn in advertising, publisher and editor Mordecai Specktor — only the fifth person to hold that position in the paper’s history — writes that the new schedule begins May 1. “The plan is to publish on a biweekly basis and deliver a more substantial newspaper to our loyal subscribers,” he told me in an email. He says he’d like to improve the paper’s website, but first he’s getting ready to announce publication of the annual AJW Community Guide, a directory of Jewish business and services, which will be published on the site and, in November, in print. (A bit of trivia: Someone well-versed in the struggle to make media sustainable is involved with the publication: MinnPost founder Joel Kramer is Specktor’s partner and a board member on the paper’s parent organization, Minnesota Jewish Media, LLC.)
N.D. journalist sentenced in Iran: Journalist Roxana Saberi, a North Dakota native, was sentenced to eight years in prison for espionage by Iranian authorities. The 31-year-old, who was born to an Iranian father and Japanese mother in Fargo, has lived in Iran for six years, where she’s done reporting for National Public Radio and the BBC, among other outlets. Saberi’s father says that Roxana testified that her “earlier confessions were not true and she told me she had been tricked into believing that she would be released if she cooperated.” With pressure from the Obama administration, Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has urged the top prosecutor in Tehran to review the case.
Happy B-day, TCDP: The Twin Cities Daily Planet is turning three and celebrating at a community happy hour, May 1 at Bedlam Theatre.













1 Comment »
Comment posted April 22, 2009 @ 5:07 pm
So the Pulitzers don’t like the interwebs?
Like the rest of us thinking that if we could only get
house prices to rise forever we can borrow our way to prosperity, the PU prize hopes that
if people see that the print media is sooooo goooood from getting prizes and stuff we will all
reject the real news on the web and go back to the media print gods
that told us what to think and when to change our minds.
The newspapers are walking dead and like zombies they want our brains.
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