WildBillyCrazyCat
Member
- Joined
- Feb 19, 2003
- Messages
- 972
Saw this move the other day, and am surprised it hasn't shown up here yet.
The Philly Inquirer is going to have advertisers sponsoring a business column. Sounds like the line between editorial and advertising isn't only blurred, but removed all together.
Another sad day for our industry when a once-great paper sinks to this practice.
By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE
2007 New York Times News Service
PHILADELPHIA -- Starting next week, The Philadelphia Inquirer will run a new column called PhillyInc., written by Inquirer reporters and editors, on the first page of its business section.
What is unusual is that the column will be sponsored by a local advertiser, Citizens Bank. It will carry the bank's logo and be outlined in the bank's distinctive green ink. The bank will also run ads across the bottom of the page and in an upper corner.
Many newspapers are losing advertising revenue these days and have taken steps that they might not have taken when times were flush. But at The Inquirer, everything -- even a joint venture with an advertiser that in other times might have raised questions about editorial integrity -- is being rethought.
The sponsored column is part of the new world here as Brian P. Tierney, a local advertising executive, settles in as the paper's hands-on publisher and promoter in chief for what has become a grand experiment in private local ownership of a major metropolitan daily.
It is being closely watched in the newspaper industry -- still made up mostly of public companies -- where the Tribune Co., owner of The Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune and Newsday, is going private and others are considering such moves, to get away from the harsh, disapproving glare of Wall Street. And it is being watched by journalists to see whether a once-great newspaper with scaled-back ambitions can still fly.
The Philly Inquirer is going to have advertisers sponsoring a business column. Sounds like the line between editorial and advertising isn't only blurred, but removed all together.
Another sad day for our industry when a once-great paper sinks to this practice.
By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE
2007 New York Times News Service
PHILADELPHIA -- Starting next week, The Philadelphia Inquirer will run a new column called PhillyInc., written by Inquirer reporters and editors, on the first page of its business section.
What is unusual is that the column will be sponsored by a local advertiser, Citizens Bank. It will carry the bank's logo and be outlined in the bank's distinctive green ink. The bank will also run ads across the bottom of the page and in an upper corner.
Many newspapers are losing advertising revenue these days and have taken steps that they might not have taken when times were flush. But at The Inquirer, everything -- even a joint venture with an advertiser that in other times might have raised questions about editorial integrity -- is being rethought.
The sponsored column is part of the new world here as Brian P. Tierney, a local advertising executive, settles in as the paper's hands-on publisher and promoter in chief for what has become a grand experiment in private local ownership of a major metropolitan daily.
It is being closely watched in the newspaper industry -- still made up mostly of public companies -- where the Tribune Co., owner of The Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune and Newsday, is going private and others are considering such moves, to get away from the harsh, disapproving glare of Wall Street. And it is being watched by journalists to see whether a once-great newspaper with scaled-back ambitions can still fly.