

Fort Worth Weekly has a long, fairly unbalanced story on the Fort Worth Star-Telegram's plan to turn their Monday A1 in August into an all-promo page. This is certainly a radical move and there are interesting issues here, but the writer can't be bothered to find more than one person to offset all the doom-sayers (many of whom, it should be noted, have probably never seen prototypes). Also, the writer can't get past his snide, alt-weekly tone to go into much depth.
Maybe the Star-Telegram's head ed has been watching too many beer commercials. Tastes great? Less filling, for sure. Maybe he's copping Fort Worth Weekly's front page, which, magazine-style, plugs the articles and reviews inside. Or did the second-hand smoke from all those reefers - more journalese for a line that refers readers from one page to another - get to him?
I don't have any inside dope about the Startlegram, but I have worked at newspapers that have been written about (poorly) by the local alternative weekly. And this story fits so well into the typical alt-weekly template of The Dumbing Down Editor and His Minions vs. The Long Suffering Reporting Staff Who Just Want to Write In-Depth Stories About Important Things that it feels a bit like the story's been hammered into that shape whether it fits the facts or not.
A second group, composed largely of mid-level editorial managers and those above them, seem enthusiastically behind Witt's plan. "There are some high-ranking editors who [have] deeply bought into this and think newspapers are failing to get young readers particularly - that unless we make drastic changes, we'll be dinosaurs,'' a staffer said. "That's the message that has gone out, and a lot of people are buying into it."
Well, newspapers are "failing to get young readers particularly." Should newspapers not strive to do something about this? The writer tries to go here, quoting Kenny Irby:
"If there is a surprise, it's that there have been so many holdouts," Irby said. In his view, many news stories are too long and jumps too hard to find. "Visual journalists in the newsroom have wondered why their writing colleagues have not heeded their concerns. Not wondered, but agonized over."But then he slaps it back into another standard knee-jerk template: The Flashy Visual Types Who Couldn't Care Less About Content vs. The Long Suffering Reporting Staff Who Just Want to Write In-Depth Stories About Important Things.
What's happening at the Star-Telegram may also be the result of an ongoing struggle in many newsrooms across the country between writers on the one hand and photographers and designers on the other. The dominance that wordsmiths enjoyed in newsrooms 20 years ago has faded as newspapers, pushed by the flashier visuals of television and the web, have given increasing prominence to photos, graphics, and other artwork.Could it not be that an increasing emphasis on finding different ways of presenting the news than 30-inch thumbsuckers and 10-story-start front pages has actually forestalled even bigger readership losses? Could it not also be that at many newspapers it is not a "struggle"? That many "wordsmiths" realize that finding other ways to present some news opens up more real estate to devote to more important, in-depth stories?
I'm not saying the Fort Worth plan is a good idea; I don't know anything more about this than what the Fort Worth Weekly tells me. Problem is, it's not telling me very much.
*UPDATE: The Star-Telegram editor's whole memo is now at Romenesko.
On Monday, we'll really be radical in that approach - no stories out there at all (so of course no jumps!) Monday is a really hectic day, you're getting back to work after two days off, you have to get the kids off to school, you have to fix breakfast, really not much time to read. So the Monday 1A will be a full page of reefers, teases and summaries. At the bottom will be a look at the week ahead, with some suggestions for what you need to pay attention to.By the way, the Fort Worth Weekly had this memo, why didn't they at least post it on their site? Would have helped readers get a fuller picture of what's going on. Maybe that didn't fit into their template.The "light reader'' can read this page and know all they want to about what's going on. No need to read any further. The "serious reader'' will know exactly where to go to find what they want, and what they'll see when they get there.
Don't misunderstand - there will still be complex stories in the paper and interesting stories in the paper where we decide to write LONG. That form of writing is not going away. But I do hope we do a better job of figuring out how to decide when to do it and how to do it better (the Storytelling committee is working on that aspect).
>More sizzle, less steak [Fort Worth Weekly, via VisualEditors.com]
>Fort Worth Star-Telegram memo [Romenesko Memos]
Maybe I am an elitist who loves the Times, Believer and New Yorker, but I hate it when newspapers announce they have to cater to the "light reader." This inevitably leads to the dumbing down of the copy and most likely the photos and design. When I pick up a paper, I want long in depth stories that stand on their own, independent of graphics and photos. I like innovative design, I just don't like it to come in the way of copy.
Another point unclear to me is that if you are targeting the "light reader" category who "really doesn't have much time to read," how much time do you think you reader is going to spend looking at ads? Maybe the Star-Telegram will start running only ads disguised as news stories on the front page.
Posted by: secaucus at July 23, 2004 8:54 PMSome somments on the memo...
"Research has long shown that readers detest having to follow a jump."
(That doesn't seem to bother the magazine readers...)
"There are several techniques to get around that - the first, of course, being to write shorter stories that hold to the cover.
(Which leads to readers complaining the paper looks like USA Today. That is the main comment I've heard after the Louisville CJ&T redesign. Of course, all it takes to get that response is to have cute section skyboxes.)
"Another would be to put the complete story inside the paper, and tease to it from the front page in a clever, engaging way."
(Isn't that a magazine table of contents?
Personally, I like the idea. I'd love to see my daily newspaper printed in a magazine format.)
Posted by: Chuck Welch at July 27, 2004 6:41 AM