The Fix / Amélie Reichmuth
What The Kyiv Independent learned from launching an online store →Before the store, Ukraine’s most prominent English-language outlet was getting 70% of its revenue from reader contributions. “We learned that we need to constantly put something fresh and launch new collections if we want people to stay engaged and come back to our store regularly.”
A Media Operator / Jacob Cohen Donnelly
Are multi-publisher subscription bundles a good idea? →“As
I wrote in 2020, The New York Times is a competitor to all local newspapers. For the cost, you get much more value with a subscription to NYT than you would with a local newspaper, except for that one variable: local. The deal would be that Dallas residents get all the local news they need from [the Dallas Morning News], but if they want national/international news, they head over to the Times.”
The New York Times / Megan DiTrolio
How the New York Times website got its URL →“Then an editor for the Science section and a personal computers columnist, Mr. Lewis recalled predicting that by the millennium, Times articles would be read on personal computer screens, in cyberspace. ‘I recall Artie dismissing me with a wave,’ Mr. Lewis wrote of [Times editor Arthur] Gelb.”
The Atlantic / Yair Rosenberg
The Wall Street Journal / Justin Baer, Alexander Saeedy, and Alexa Corse
CommonWealth Beacon / Gintautas Dumcius
The empty seat inside the State House press gallery →“One of the things that was always a source of pride and a real source of power and authority was its 50-state footprint. A big driver of that was its presence in all 50 state houses. The reality is, though, with the contraction of revenue industry-wide, the AP, like most other news organizations, has been forced to cut back its staff and reshape its priorities. In this day and age there’s a huge emphasis on digital and video coverage, and that is now the top priority for the AP in each state.”
Aftermath / Riley MacLeod
Financial Times / Anna Nicolaou
The podcast bros who helped put Trump back in the White House →“Unlike Hollywood actors or journalists, who exist studiously out of reach, these new stars are defined by how available they are. They’re in your ear while you’re doing the dishes or driving to work; they’re on the TV in the background while you work or eat dinner. Every week there’s another hour — or two or three — of content. They respond to your comments. They’ll even read them on air. They speak informally, crudely.”