Manual Judith: A Quoddy Tale

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Table of contents

During the foggy summer months, residents of Lubec take comfort in the symphony of tolling bells and crashing surf along the rocky Maine coast, where Native Americans once hunted seals and generations of fishermen tugged their boats ashore. In this collection of articles, historian Ronald Pesha revives the events and people of Lubec's past, uncovering stories such as the eighteenth-century naval hero and founder of the U. Coast Guard, Hopley Yeaton, and the nineteenth-century Lubec signature quilt. From the Quoddy Belle's California gold mine expedition to the colorful history of the Fuzzy Wuzzy Cat Food house, these tales from Lubec history will delight all readers.

But, more interesting, a headline changes the way people read an article and the way they remember it. The headline frames the rest of the experience. I look at Twitter and I look at Google because they pull all the headlines from other websites. I just want the guests to say things of value. I want them to be interesting and I want them to say things that our listeners will want to hear without being embarrassed or harmed. The secret to being a good conversationalist? No matter how much you prepare, the person is going to surprise you anyway.

They are valuable enough to share with all. Browse the growing archive of more than 1, programs. I stammer. But I sound like a human being. That makes me relatable instead of slick, which leads to a better conversation. Fight hard to get all sides of a story. Get everyone's perspective. Read about the "No Surprises" letter BuzzFeed News sends out to people and institutions targeted in investigative stories. And lots of what you might call dumb questions Since I already knew lots about the subject, these open-ended and sometimes dumb questions also revealed if the interviewee was evasive or not telling the truth.

What you want is one thing leads to the next leads to the next leads the next and the reason why we do that is because once you have any sequence of actions in order of like, this happened and then this happened and this happened that creates narrative suspense because you wonder what happened next. And then how did it really work out. And I always asked the same question: What happened today? You were there. You were covering it. What happened?

Grimm polled colleagues about the best way to take notes during interviews and shares their advice. For every answer you get, ask five more questions, says Banaszynski. Stay in the moment and peel it back. I can't stand it when people don't have an ability to do that. How can questions open doors to information, shed light on important subjects and invite subjects to open up? Bruce Nussbaum, Bloomberg Business, On what happens when the interviewer considers herself the expert and ignores the audience. But she was fired after enduring months of harassment, including sexist comments from supervisors and a lewd sticker.

Oral history differs from journalism; for example, Blue's interviewees checked their transcripts before publication. But some of the techniques used by oral historians, such as letting a source speak freely for as long as they want, are worth considering for difficult interviews. Originally published by the Star Tribune.

Christian Miller, senior reporter for ProPublica, and Ken Armstrong, writer for The Marshall Project, who peeled back the layers of their Pulitzer Prize winning investigative project. Like so many of their counterparts in other fields, women journalists contend with unwanted presumptions and the threat of gender-based violence.

The Dart Center asked nine leading women in journalism to share their experiences and to reflect on their own best practices. In this in-depth report, Cleveland Plain Dealer reporter and Dart Award Winner Rachel Dissell answers common questions about rape kit testing, and provides useful links, resources and questions that reporters can pose to authorities following the reopening of thousands of sexual assault cases nationwide.

Covering Trump and the new world order, Reinvent editing, Present a more visual daily report, Expand training, Create thematic teams, Get serious about talent, Prioritize diversity and get results, Reinvent features, Redesign the print paper, Beef up the print hub, Launch an innovation team. With Self , the "first step was to eliminate social news writing aimed solely at generating clicks Focusing on quality and differentiation over quantity and empty clicks has increased our engagement. With WWD , "speed matters sometimes ," and a shift to the global fashion industry increased overseas sales Government Executive chose to branch out and to segment the market, launching DefenseOne , covering the defense industry in , and RouteFifty , covering state and local governments in Most news paywalls are full of holes, that allow readers more access.

A how-to for low-budget readers? Some alternatives to the advertising-revenue model "most are repackaged or unsustainable long-term" : Print magazines sharing and renting subscriber lists; advertisers working with publications to produce advertorials and branded content based on the type of readers attracted to the site; recycling content in special-interest issues timed to deaths and anniversaries, benefiting from lower production costs; selling literary tote bags to subscribers; transitioning to, ad-free, scholarly publications the 'white-paper model' for readers who care enough about the content to pay the higher subscription fee.

The new digital monopolies all have hundreds of millions of people creating free content for them. Oh, sure, there are major differences between the old newspaper monopoly distribution model and the digital one. But the similarities are greater. Oh yeah, and Craigslist has your classifieds. Jack Limpert, About Editing and Writing, While the editorial sides of the New Yorker and Sports Illustrated respect their subscribers as intelligent readers, their circulation departments increasingly treat readers as pigeons.

Peeling away sports from other local news coverage seems like a particularly good target for a subscription business, according to Brian Moritz, an assistant professor at SUNY Oswego who studies the economics of sports journalism. The challenge for the Athletic, he said, is in convincing readers that it's making something good enough to justify the pricetag. Ipsy and Birchbox sell beauty products for women, Blue Apron and Home Chef deliver a box of ingredients for a complete meal that you cook at home, Dollar Shave Club sells men's shaving products, Stitch Fix sells fashion If a company can make a subscription box with pleasant surprises, they will continue to sell through as long as the customer maintains an interest in discovering new products.

Gretchen A. But Jane Elizabeth, , director of the Accountability Journalism Program at the American Press Institute, urges reporters to go back to the tenets of journalism. News providers throughout the rich world are starting to charge for content on the web and mobile devices. At the New York Times , which has the world's most popular newspaper website, visitors can read 20 stories a month before being invited to subscribe. All the reader needs do is take a picture of an image.

The Project Gutenberg eBook of America (Volume 5 of 6), by Joel Cook.

Recent studies paint a grim picture of the decline in local newspapers and the impact it has on American politics. From standing on street corners handing out flyers, to adding extra transparency to reporting, and crowdsourcing data and story ideas, Pattani compiles lessons learned by a host of journalists experimenting with ways to better connect with their audiences and restore that trust. What is a local news ecosystem? Why local news matters. Systemic inequity in U. Industry adaptation and innovation.


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Big picture solutions. You see a deterioration of the capacity of government to make the right decisions for their constituents. Local news was essential in exposing the Flint water crisis and in showing how disparities in access to news in neighboring North Carolina counties affected their respective environmental well-being.


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The good news? In Denver, where two major papers once thrived, a host of locally run, community-focused outlets are proliferating.

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One such outlet, Chalkbeat, is reporting from public schools and school board meetings, covering education, one of the biggest casualties of the attrition in local news—and successfully scaling to other states. Nationwide, over 6, philanthropic foundations, as well as tech giants, are now financing media initiatives. Be sure to read the case studies. Yet they're endangered. The Report for America project is part Peace Corps, part Teach for America, part something entirely new -- a new model for saving local journalism, borrowing from national and community service programs.

Major winter storm to hit Maine with rain, snow, sleet and ice after record high temperatures

Newsrooms and philanthropists both contribute funding. The end goal "is that local communities can hold authorities accountable, improve their schools, have clean drinking water. And if there are secondary benefits to the reporter—as with the Peace Corps, the excitement of being part of something bigger—then that is great as well. What has happened to media revenues in general has happened worst, fastest, and hardest to local publications, newspapers most of all.

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Here they report on The Quoddy Tides , the twice-monthly, family-owned and -run newspaper that has a print circulation several times larger than the population of the city where it is based, Eastport, Maine. They downplay social media, considering it a distraction.

They're militant about expenses; if they don't have enough ads to support extra pages, they reduce the size of that day's paper. They have hung on to real estate investments, profits from which support the paper. And the family that owns the paper has "never seriously considered selling out to a newspaper chain or a venture-capital fund.