

- #IS THERE ANYWAY TO CRACK FACADE SIGNAGE ARCHIVE#
- #IS THERE ANYWAY TO CRACK FACADE SIGNAGE PATCH#
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#IS THERE ANYWAY TO CRACK FACADE SIGNAGE PATCH#
Patch has hired real reporters, if newish ones. The five reporters-Park Slope Patch, Bed-Stuy Patch, Carroll Gardens Patch, Fort Greene-Clinton Hill Patch, Prospect Heights Patch-exceed the number of reporters (though not editorial staffers) at the Brooklyn Paper.

Indeed, as Brooklyn Paper founder Ed Weintrob has pointed out, ever-hyping editor Gersh Kuntzman has made the publication personal and entertaining, using new tools like video. The cookie-cutter Patch web site is better than the lame Courier-Life site but not as snappy as the Brooklyn Paper. Now more significant lies regarding Marty Markowitz on EB-5 and KPMG on the AY timetable get ignored.) In 2008, the Brooklyn Paper thought it was big news that Forest City Ratner lied about Frank Gehry being born in Brooklyn. Patch is starting from scratch on Atlantic Yards, rather than swerving somewhat, like the Brooklyn Paper. (That's mainly to their detriment, but not necessarily.
#IS THERE ANYWAY TO CRACK FACADE SIGNAGE ARCHIVE#
The new Patch sites lack the institutional memory, editorial page, and archive that the newspapers can offer. The local Patch sites are competing not with the dailies or blogs but mainly with the Murdoch-owned weekly Brooklyn Paper (updated daily online) and Courier-Life chains.Īnd the Bed-Stuy Patch offers some competition to the established Our Time Press, which has a significant institutional history in the neighborhood but a web site that, though improved, still needs work. They’re well aware that without revenue and profit, there’s no serious chance of consistent and self-sustaining, local news coverage.After all, the New York Times's Fort Greene-Clinton Hill blog, The Local, while doing some worthy work, lost its Times staffer and has become mainly an outpost of the CUNY Journalism School, which means the staff waxes and wanes. Patch is serious about the revenue piece of hyper-local’s puzzle. They build a relationship with small business in order to sell them something at a later date. He observed: Intellectual theorizing and to-do list creation from the incumbents only provides Patch more time to marshal small armies of sellers to get in front of every mom and pop business in sight.Taylor added: Patch is now building local advertiser directories, using good old fashioned face-to-face client calls. And while Brooklyn has a lot of blogs, most are not serious businesses.Ĭonsultant Mel Taylor has been following the competition between Patch and local weeklies. Patch is a business plan as much as a journalism effort, so marketing to local businesses and compiling listings does have a geographic component. Then again, Patch did a nice job covering the memorial for former District Leader Bill Saunders-and no other news outlet bothered. I'm not sure what an article on "Rent is Too Damn High" candidate Jimmy McMillan shilling for a New Jersey car dealership was doing on the Fort Greene/Clinton Hill Patch. at the bottom of this CJR post.)īrooklyn lacks such cohesion-even the community boards stretch beyond a single community-so the match is inexact.Īnd Patch is still feeling its way. Indeed, Patch strikes me as optimized for small communities that don't have a newspaper to cover key local institutions like the school board and mayor's office. Patch, self-described as "your local source for news, events, business listings, and discussion," got some semi-skeptical treatment in a New York Times article January 17-an article that ignored Patch in New York but pointed out that the company is focusing on relatively affluent suburban towns that can generate advertising.

(Disclosure: I've done one freelance piece for Patch.)

#IS THERE ANYWAY TO CRACK FACADE SIGNAGE FREE#
What, no Brooklyn Heights or Williamsburg? Maybe those communities were seen as already "taken" by the Brooklyn Heights Blog and culture blogs like Free Williamsburg. Right now there's a Prospect Heights Patch, Park Slope Patch, Fort Greene/Clinton Hill Patch, Carroll Gardens/Cobble Hill Patch, and Bed-Stuy Patch. The editors are assisted by freelancers and other contributors and, in Brooklyn at least, form a bit of a network. The nature of the local new media is changing and, for Brooklyn, there may be some promise in Patch, the AOL-funded enterprise that's hiring do-it-all editors (without offices) in communities around the country-800 so far, with a goal of 1000.
