Today I am so pleased to share my latest project — a complete re-design of The Cordova Times. When the editor of The Cordova Times bought her own newspaper in August I shot her an email wishing good luck. But I never expected three months later I would be staying up all night putting the finishing touches on the re-launch of the newspaper complete with a new look.
In the process leading up to the redesign we talked a lot about the tight-knit community of Cordova and what it wanted out of it's newspaper. Even though it's a small weekly tab, we decided to create faux section fronts for Schools, Fisheries and Lifestyles. As well as a weekly standing doubletruck called Around Town. The whole paper is big on local content and big on advertising too, for a publication of it's scale. The community really stepped up and told the editor, "we want our paper to survive, how can we help." It re-invigorated my faith in the future of journalism. Local, local, local.
We did something unusual. There were companies in who care about Cordova's access to local news, but didn't necessarily have a huge stake in advertising their name in Cordova. And some who simply wanted to support the newspaper above and beyond their regular advertising commitment. So we offered "sponsorships" of sort. Yearlong advertising commitments that included logos directly tied to content like tide tables in the Fisheries section and Kid Corner in the Schools section. We tried to keep it strictly to somewhat neutral content.
We completely re-mixed the Classified with big headers, a splashy Photo of the Week and free listings under a certain word count — on a space available basis — for newspaper subscribers. The old Cordova Times commonly had no Classifieds at all on any given week, and often had only two or three listings.
I'm completely proud of this project and think it looks even better in print that on screen. What do you think?
Showing posts with label news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label news. Show all posts
Wednesday, November 23, 2011
Friday, November 11, 2011
Kern This: First Alaskans October-November edition
Check out what's new on Kern This Studio: Some of my favorite pages from the October-November edition of First Alaskans magazine. I'm so proud of this one because we pulled it off in a crazy short timeline after Calista decided to liquidate all it's publications. Then First Alaskans Institute swooped in and saved the magazine by purchasing it and putting together a kick-ass team to keep it going. Things are moving along on the next edition and I'm so thrilled to be a part of the action.
Also, it's T-Minus one week until the official RE-LAUNCH of The Cordova Times. We are hitting the streets next Friday with a fully re-designed newspaper. #ilovemyjob
Also, it's T-Minus one week until the official RE-LAUNCH of The Cordova Times. We are hitting the streets next Friday with a fully re-designed newspaper. #ilovemyjob
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
Insert metaphor about doors and opportunities here
Thursday was my last day at Alaska Newspapers. They will shut their doors for the last time on Aug. 31. With the exception of the Seward Phoenix Log, which publishes one more time this week, I was there for the final run. After production that day several colleagues collected at a bar downtown to share pitchers and memories.
Above I'm holding my last set of newspaper proofs for an indefinite period of time. Hopefully not forever. I love journalism and will always be a journalist. But I'm going to try something new for a while.
This Thursday I start as the marketing coordinator for a construction management and consulting company. The company has overseen some pretty recognizable projects in Alaska including renovation of the Anchorage Museum, Dena'ina Center, and remodels of the Anchorage and Fairbanks airports. The exciting part is I still get to design and edit ... the kind of work I love, only applying them to a whole new field.
I am sad for my company closing down, hopeful for the new owners of a couple of the publications and those staying on with the new versions of those publication, and wishing the best for those job hunting. Insert appropriate metaphor here.
Fun fact: My first ever photo byline is on the front page of the final Tundra Drums.
Above I'm holding my last set of newspaper proofs for an indefinite period of time. Hopefully not forever. I love journalism and will always be a journalist. But I'm going to try something new for a while.
This Thursday I start as the marketing coordinator for a construction management and consulting company. The company has overseen some pretty recognizable projects in Alaska including renovation of the Anchorage Museum, Dena'ina Center, and remodels of the Anchorage and Fairbanks airports. The exciting part is I still get to design and edit ... the kind of work I love, only applying them to a whole new field.
I am sad for my company closing down, hopeful for the new owners of a couple of the publications and those staying on with the new versions of those publication, and wishing the best for those job hunting. Insert appropriate metaphor here.
Fun fact: My first ever photo byline is on the front page of the final Tundra Drums.
Labels:
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design,
journalism,
media,
news,
stuff i made,
work
Tuesday, July 26, 2011
Stories must be told. People must be heard.
I've spend the last year designing editorial, ads, collateral, making graphics and doing the occasional commercial print design for Alaska Newspapers, First Alaskans magazine and Camai Printing. On Friday, our parent corporation announced they will be closing the doors to this company on August 31. The board voted to liquidate the entire operation in the interest of it's Native shareholders.
Here's the ADN story.
While I was stunned but the news, I wasn't surprised by the decision. This is a difficult time for publications everywhere and, really, a difficult time for any kind of business. Most of us were not blindsided by the announcement.
I only have good things to say about the employees here and the work they do. I would personally vouch for each and every one of the great journalists and business people here who chose the road less traveled and in some cases, the location you cannot reach by road at all. Our in-boxes and voice mails have been flooded with condolences, offers for support and sadness for the loss of the service we provide rural Alaska.
I truly believe in community journalism and the mission of the rural newspaper chain. We were telling the stories of people who otherwise might not have their stories told. Printing newspapers for people that might not read the news elsewhere online. Some of our papers reached places where internet service can be slow and unreliable. Our magazine was truly one-of-a-kind, covering business, culture and lifestyle of Alaska Natives. The only publication dedicated to that community's stories. Stories that are numerous and important to this state.
I wonder who will tell these stories in the future. Who will bring news to the most remote corners of Alaska where print is not only still alive, but loved in a way you don't see everywhere?
The company has offered tremendous of support to the nearly 40 employees who will be searching for work. Severance packages, unemployment counseling, resume critiquing and use of company time to attend job interviews.
I am circling my resume through the local media industry and am feeling optimistic. I cannot thank my friends, family, and colleagues past and present who have called to offer their support and encouragement during this time of questions and confusion. I also hope to pick up some more freelance work during any interim to help bridge any gap in employment.
I feel greatly for all my friends and colleagues in newspapers who have experiences layoffs or closures of their companies. This is not enough to shake my values or devotion to this career I love. I still believe in community journalism and print newspapers. I hope to see new or replacement ventures spring up to replace the need for news and information in these communities. Stories must be told. People must be heard.
Monday, May 2, 2011
Media Monday: bin Laden front pages
I love taking a moment to peruse Newseum on a big day in news like today. It's always interesting to see what kind of choices editors and designers made on deadline. Last night I was picturing headlines as I watched the cable new networks try to fill the minutes at 1 a.m. EST. I prefer headlines that focus on reaction and project the story forward, instead of just stating the fact that he's dead. But those were far and few between today. And really we probably didn't have the stories written to support a headline like that. Tomorrow with tell more.
Any that used "justice" were nice as that seems to be the catchword of the day after the President used it in his speech:
Some fronts were simply shocking:
Monday, April 18, 2011
Media Monday: Language of news design
Mario Garcia has a simple, eloquent post on his blog today and I thought I would share it too. Garcia is an international leader in news design, doing consulting and redesigns for newspapers worldwide.
His message today:
What are some of those universal values that apply to any publication, regardless of language?
- Make the information easy to find.
- Make the type easy to read.
Well said. Read the full post here.
- Make it attractive.
Monday, April 4, 2011
Media Monday: Alaska Press Club highlights
I attended the Alaska Press Club conference over the weekend and am feeling inspired. Listening to Kim Serverson of the New York Times, Susan Orlean of the New Yorker and John Moore of Getty Images reminded me why I got into this profession and movtivated me to go out there and get 'em! And sometimes you need to have a little time to reflect and feel inspired.
Here are some highlights of the weekend events:
- An audience member asked Kim Severson if she felt bad that a particular food review she wrote closed the restaurant. She answered, "My review didn't cause them to go out of business. The crappy food did." She did acknowledge the challenges of writing food review in a small community with challenges like Alaska's food shipping costs, etc. and the community's effort to support local. You tend to look at everything through a "it's GOOD, for Anchorage" lens.
- Susan Orlean said to always make that last phone call and follow every lead. She told two stories where she followed one last lead that she thought would result in nothing and ended up with the most important part of her story. She emphasized how easy it is to be lazy and how easy that turns into missed opportunities.
- John Moore talked about how much canned tuna he ate while covering the front lines in Lybia, how it feels to be a journalist in the war zone, and how lucky and humbled he was when his replacement was captured as a war prisoner just weeks after he left the country. All while showing slides of his wonderful photos.
- My company is small, but mighty, and took home a slew of awards including best weekly for The Tundra Drums. Congratulations to Alex DeMarban, Roy Corral, Victoria Barber, Nadya Gilmore, Steve Quinn and Wayde Carroll for various wins. I personally took home first place certificates for the following categories: Best Magazine Cover, Best Overall Magazine Design and Best Newspaper Graphic. I am honored.
- A hanger that doubles as an online newspaper office makes an excellent place for a party with a bunch of journalists.
- Hearing the first-hand story from the editor who was handcuffed by a certain Senate candidate's security crew for asking questions at a public (depending on who you ask) event last fall.
Labels:
alaskana,
design,
journalism,
media,
news,
photography,
work
Friday, April 1, 2011
Friday Fun: It's going to be a media-licious weekend
Happy Friday! Sometimes it seems like all the fun stuff is happening at once. This weekend is one of those times. Here's what's on the docket in my world:
- The Alaska Press Club Conference is happening in Anchorage. We have some prestigious names in journalism here in Anchorage to lead workshops, including Kim Severson of the New York Times and Al Tompkins of the Poynter Institute.
- Additionally, my company entered a few pieces I worked on in the Press Club Awards contest and we're going to the awards cocktail reception Saturday night. Cross your fingers for me.
- My dear friend Brielle is in town for the conference and we got to squeeze in some quality time over red wine and delicious food last night. We go back to college, it's always nice to have old friends near.
- We have tickets to see the Anchorage Opera's opening production of South Pacific tonight. The opera is doing one mainstream opera/musical crossover each year and this is it.
- I'm crocheting like a mad woman in every spare second to finish a special project in time. But more on that later since it's a surprise for the receiver.
Do you have any exciting weekend plans? Have a wonderful weekend?
Monday, March 28, 2011
Media Monday: Should we power down?
Seems like everybody is talking about "hyperconnectivity" and information overload in the past few days. Friday night I heard Josh Tesh ask on his radio show if the internet is making us stupid:
Is Google making us stupid? It sounds harsh, but some experts say yes. Neurologists and psychologists have discovered that when we read, our brains process Internet pages differently than they process printed pages. A difference that affects how much we learn – and even alters the way our brains work. That’s because the human brain “rewires” itself depending on how it’s used, something that neurologists call “plasticity."Tesh argues that we need to turn off the computers and allow time for critical thinking and analysis of the vast amount of information we're reading online. Time to process and create our own thoughts and opinions about the subject matter, instead of consuming more and more short blurbs, news-bytes.
Another article on Poynter addresses this issue. The writer, Steve Meyer refects on his South by Southwest Interactive festival saying:
The challenge at an event like South by Southwest is that you spend all your time packing new ideas into your head and not enough time processing them. William Powers, author of “Hamlet’s BlackBerry,” would have told all those people to stop running around and staring at screens, and instead create some mental space to unpack everything they had seen and heard.Meyer also quotes David Carr of the New York Times on "hyperconnectivity" saying he's so busy keeping up with email, twitter and RSS that:
“Lately I’ve been so busy promoting what I do,” Carr lamented, “that I don’t do what I do.”So media friends, what do you think? Do we spend too much time consuming on a superficial surface level and not enough time reaching a deeper level of analysis and critical thinking?
Monday, March 21, 2011
Media Monday: Twitter celebrates fifth birthday
- FIRST POST: "Inviting Coworkers"
- CREATOR: Jack Dorsey
- TWEETS PER DAY: 140 million
- ORIGINAL NAME: twttr
- EMPLOYEES: 400
- NEW USERS EACH DAY: 450,000
- USERS: 200 million
- DAILY SEARCHES: 800,000
Monday, March 14, 2011
Media Monday: State of the Media 2011
The Pew Project for Excellence in Journalism released it's State of the News Media 2011 this morning. It states that the news industry is beginning to recover from the economic downturn but still faces major challenges, not only in adapting to new technology and connecting readers to revenue generating products, but also in it's vast uncertainty.
Wander on over and check out the state of the industry.
"Beneath all this, however, a more fundamental challenge to journalism became clearer in the last year. The biggest issue ahead may not be lack of audience or even lack of new revenue experiments. It may be that in the digital realm the news industry is no longer in control of its own future."The report covers a study on community news websites specifically focusing on Seattle, which is dear to my heart being the big city in my home state, Washington.
Wander on over and check out the state of the industry.
Friday, March 11, 2011
My mind is on Japan and not Friday Fun today
In lieu of a Friday Fun post I'm thinking positive thoughts for the the people affected by the earthquake in Japan and subsequent tsunamis. Especially for my former Daily Evergreen newspaper cronies, who currently reside in Japan. Thanks goodness for Facebook and being the good journalists they are, I've seen posts from both of them letting friends and family know that they are OK, but definitely feeling the tremors.
Above I've posted the USGS earthquake map. This is a really cool interactive map where you can see recent earthquakes in depth and magnitude. Check it out here. I know I'm always visiting this site when we feel Alaskan tremors.
I checked out newseum too, to see which of the West coast papers caught the news before deadline last night. The ADN stripped a story down the left column of the paper that landed on my doorstep this morning. This Hawaii paper stuck out to me:
Have a wonderful weekend with good thoughts and prayers for those in Japan and people affected by the aftershocks and tsunamis worldwide.
Above I've posted the USGS earthquake map. This is a really cool interactive map where you can see recent earthquakes in depth and magnitude. Check it out here. I know I'm always visiting this site when we feel Alaskan tremors.
I checked out newseum too, to see which of the West coast papers caught the news before deadline last night. The ADN stripped a story down the left column of the paper that landed on my doorstep this morning. This Hawaii paper stuck out to me:
Have a wonderful weekend with good thoughts and prayers for those in Japan and people affected by the aftershocks and tsunamis worldwide.
Monday, March 7, 2011
Media Monday: Is Gannett re-branding in poor taste?
Gannett is launching a major re-branding effort today with a new label "A Gannett Company" on all it's publications mastheads. You'll see it on their online sites as well.
Charles Apple has an excellent roundup of the launch including clips from the 100-page re-branding handbook.
His take of the re-branding efforts:
Charles Apple has an excellent roundup of the launch including clips from the 100-page re-branding handbook.
His take of the re-branding efforts:
"The timing of all this, though, seems poor. Given continued furloughs and the additional — and perhaps unexpected — layoffs, is this the right moment to spend an ungodly sum of money for a team of consultants to develop a branding campaign of this scope?IN OTHER MEDIA NEWS: Anyone tired of the media cashing in on Charlie Sheen's media meltdown yet? Do you think it's excessive? It's kind of like watching a trainwreck ... I feel the same way about anything Kardashians. Can't. Look. Away.
I’d rather see the money spent on something that might directly result in better journalism. Something that might benefit the readers."
Monday, February 28, 2011
Media Monday: Rocky Mountain News staff - Where are they now?
John Temple, former editor/publisher/owner of the Rocky Mountain News, has compiled a series of stories on his blog on where the staff is now, two years after the paper's closure. It's an interesting read and fantastic collection of veiw points, reflections and thoughts on how the media industry has changed since the start of the Great Recession. He surveyed the former newsroom and compiled several statistics based on the reponses showing how many have remained in journalism, how many are making more or less than they did two years ago and how many think their quality of life overall is better or worse than before the newspaper shut it's doors on Feb. 27, 2009.
In his main post he wrote:
Perhaps the most surprising finding was that despite the general decline in income, roughly the same amount of people reported that their life was better today than that it was worse. In fact, of those who responded to the question, more said it was much better (12) than much worse (5).The Rocky Mountain News website is still online, and looks the way it does they day the newspaper closed it's doors.
I don't want to take up much more of you time, because today you might just want to head on over to Temple's blog Temple Talk and immerse yourself in his stories and findings.
Monday, February 21, 2011
Media Monday: Anchorage Borders store among about 200 closing
The line extended from the front of the store to the back and began to curl around the other direction at Borders on Sunday. Tables next to the line were littered with books that people changed their minds on buying and discarded on the nearest surface. Everything is on sale at the Anchorage Borders bookstore, one of nearly 200 that are closing after the announcement last week that the company is filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
Borders is in financial turmoil between the pressures of slow consumer spending and expanding e-reader competition such as the Kindle and Barnes & Noble's Nook. A friend of mine posted on Facebook Saturday that Borders was closing, everything was on sale and "it's crazy here."
I called Sunday before we headed out to check on the deals and the sales associate who answered said the store would be operating for up to eight more weeks, depending on a variety of factors.
When we arrived, giant red, yellow and black signs screamed sale prices in all caps. Tables piled high with sale books, while some shelves had gaping openings and looked downright empty. The popular stuff seemed to be selling out fast. I'm sure the sales will get better, but it might be down to quirky, oddball stuff by then. Go-back racks were stacked high and the staff was too busy to keep up with the high traffic filing through the store. It was harder than usual to find specific books since so many hands had dug through shelves and put books back in the wrong place, but we still found plenty of gems.
We purchased seven books, a calendar and a magazine for less than $60. Our wait to check out lasted nearly an hour. We saw friends walk in as we neared the front of the line and advised one to get in line while the other browsed and then switch.
The Washington Post reports the company is getting ready to jump on the e-reader bus:
Borders is in financial turmoil between the pressures of slow consumer spending and expanding e-reader competition such as the Kindle and Barnes & Noble's Nook. A friend of mine posted on Facebook Saturday that Borders was closing, everything was on sale and "it's crazy here."
I called Sunday before we headed out to check on the deals and the sales associate who answered said the store would be operating for up to eight more weeks, depending on a variety of factors.
When we arrived, giant red, yellow and black signs screamed sale prices in all caps. Tables piled high with sale books, while some shelves had gaping openings and looked downright empty. The popular stuff seemed to be selling out fast. I'm sure the sales will get better, but it might be down to quirky, oddball stuff by then. Go-back racks were stacked high and the staff was too busy to keep up with the high traffic filing through the store. It was harder than usual to find specific books since so many hands had dug through shelves and put books back in the wrong place, but we still found plenty of gems.
We purchased seven books, a calendar and a magazine for less than $60. Our wait to check out lasted nearly an hour. We saw friends walk in as we neared the front of the line and advised one to get in line while the other browsed and then switch.
The Washington Post reports the company is getting ready to jump on the e-reader bus:
"It hopes to emerge from Chapter 11 with new focus on e-books and products other than books. A $505 million dollar loan from GE Capital will fund its operations - with 17,500 employees - while it reorganizes."We own Kindles at our house. So we mostly shopped for books high on visuals. A coffee table book on U.S. presidents for Josh, a photography book for me and a guitar instruction book with fret charts for Davin. Perhaps bookstores need to focus on the novelty, specialty and highly graphic if they want to weather the changing technology and consumer spending crisis.
Labels:
alaskana,
getting thrifty,
media,
news,
pop culture
Monday, January 31, 2011
Media Monday: Keith Olbermann and Aaron Sorkin team up!?
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
Earmuffs! What are we shielding our kids from?
Yes, that's right, this is the shield you usually see covering racy headlines on Cosmo. This week Harps grocery stores of Arkansas, Oklahoma and Missouri were protecting their shoppers' children from ...
(Drumroll, please)
... Elton John's baby.
Somebody should tell them it's 2011 already. I can think about SO MANY things I'd be less comfortable explaining to my son than a baby with two dads:
Thanks to Matt Pasetsky's Cover Awards for originally posting on this and to Charles Apple for re-blogging about it. I share in your general shock of this chain's treatment of this magazine cover.
(Drumroll, please)
... Elton John's baby.
Somebody should tell them it's 2011 already. I can think about SO MANY things I'd be less comfortable explaining to my son than a baby with two dads:
Thanks to Matt Pasetsky's Cover Awards for originally posting on this and to Charles Apple for re-blogging about it. I share in your general shock of this chain's treatment of this magazine cover.
Monday, January 24, 2011
Media Monday: Trenta graphic makes online waves
This National Post graphic illustrating the enormous size of the new Trenta drink at Starbucks went viral on the Internet last week. It was so talked about that Anderson Cooper brought it up on his CNN show 360.
I think what everyone finds so compelling is the fact that the drink's size exceeds the capacity of the average human stomach. Yuck, it makes me feel full just thinking about it.
I found the graphic on Charles Apple's blog. You can read about the graphic's initial rise to web popularity and reblogging at the National Post's website.
Monday, January 17, 2011
Media Monday: How to correct a Tweet
The media is having a frenzy over Twitter correction ethics after false tweets reporting Rep. Gabrielle Giffords had died, when in fact she had not. Twitter moves fast and big news can be re-tweeted hundreds of times over quickly.
Regret the Error has a rundown of the false posts and aftermath.
The main concerns:
- Is it ethical to delete a false tweet?
- How do you properly correct a false tweet?
- How do you minimize the impact of re-tweeting?
Damon Kiesow on Poynter suggests a strikeout option. His article end with a video chat on the issue.
Monday, January 10, 2011
Media Monday: Wikipedia turns 10 this weekend
Is that right? Wow. I can remember when Wikipedia was blacklisted as a resource for anything academic. In the site's infancy, it was known among my college professors as the place to get wrong information.
Now it's my first stop for researching pretty much anything I want to know a little more about. I wouldn't say I'd source Wikipedia in an article or essay, but I might use the resource for background information and it's source list for an indication of where to look next.
But mostly I use it to find out more about things I see and hear about and want to know more about. Why did "Studio 60 on Sunset Strip" get canceled? Why are the Kardashians famous? What is the world's largest cut diamond? (A question we had in our daily "Fact or Crap" trivia game at work. I looked it up for more information after we found out the answer.)
Here's an NPR story on Wikipedia's goals and plans as online giant becomes a tween.
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