Connecticut

Post posts about what is happening in the State of Connecticut.

Reactions to Rell Not Running for Re-election

I must admit that the first news I received that Gov. Rell had decided not to run for re-election came in a press release from Stamford Mayor Dan Malloy.

I thank the Governor for her years of public service to the State of Connecticut, and I wish her and her family all the best.

We now know that Connecticut will have a new Governor in January of 2011.

You have to hand it to Mayor Malloy's team for being quick on the response and ever gracious.

The first place I went to get the full breaking news story was CTNewsJunkie. Sure enough, ten minutes earlier Christine had the story up. Of course the serious political junkies at MyLeftNutmeg had been talking about this for half an hour and the folks at CT Local Politics were gearing up for the discussion.

Three minutes after potential gubernatorial hopeful Mayor Malloy sent out his press release, a release came from as yet announced gubernatorial hopeful Senate President Williams.

Gov. Rell should be thanked for her years of public service and work on behalf of Connecticut residents. I wish her and her family well as they begin the next chapter of their lives. In the meantime, the best thing we can do for the next governor - whoever it is - is to work together to grow jobs and help stabilize our economy.

Two minutes later, Connecticut Democratic Party Chair Nancy DiNardo sent off her comments:

I thank Governor Rell for her service and wish her the best. It's not an easy time to be a governor, and it's clear that Connecticut needs - and deserves - a chief executive who goes to bed every night and wakes up every day thinking about innovative and unique ideas to get this state and its people through arguably the most difficult economic climate in a generation. I feel confident that our bench of candidates for this position will bring to the table the kind of ideas and proposals that Connecticut voters will be able to relate to and have confidence in. This is good news for our party, and the people of this state.

Yet it took over an hour before the ripple was heard in Washington where Nathan Daschle, executive director of the Democratic Governors Association, announced

Connecticut voters are looking for a leader with a vision for the future, an understanding of the economic hardships families face, and the courage to make the tough decisions. We are fortunate to have a strong field of Democratic candidates who are well-known public servants, each of whom has the knowledge, leadership, and judgment to guide the state through these tough economic times.

Moving Connecticut into our list of top-tier pickup opportunities means that the DGA will invest in the state to ensure a Democrat wins in 2010.

However, given the uncertainty concerning the future of the Citizens' Election Program, it is unclear what and when the Democratic Governors Association will be able to do in the race here in Connecticut.

Things just got a whole lot more interesting.

(Categories: )

Debunking Digital Publishing and Advertising Myths

Many great speakers presented many great ideas at the Digital Publishing and Advertising Conference in New York City earlier this week. However, some of these great ideas are myths that need to be debunked.

Leading off the list was a comment by Walker Jacobs, Senior Vice President of New Media Ad Sales for Turner Entertainment. In the Keynote Panel, The Media Moguls Address the Digital Content and Advertising Economy, he suggested that all of their content is paid content, the question is who is paying for it. This exposes an interesting myth that takes several different forms about the divide between paid content and truly free, user generated content.

One form of the myth is that the only good content is content that people get paid for. Other forms include the idea that free content is some new creation of the digital world and that people who share free content, perhaps even making money off of this are bad.

So, let’s look at some forms of free content. I don’t know if there were many academics in the audience that have published significant articles in peer reviewed journals. If so, I suspect most of them did not get paid for their content. I know that I have not been paid for articles I’ve written for peer reviewed scholarly journals. Related to this are the chapters that people write for books edited by others. Many of these chapters add significantly to the literature on one topic area or another, but again, it is typically the editors that get paid, and not the people creating the content. Again, I’ve had chapters published in a couple different books which I’ve not been paid for.

There is nothing new about free content being produced, and sold at a profit by book companies, editors, and journal publishers, and much of this content is very high value content.

Of course, all of this is based on a fairly narrow view of what it means to be paid. Free content producers are often paid in social capital; strokes or accolades. I remember years ago, when a friend of mine who wrote for the Wall Street Journal had her first article front paged on that newspaper. She had a party to celebrate. Accolades for financially remunerated articles and for articles where there is no financial remuneration can be a significant payment. I still get a little thrill when one of my blog posts gets front paged on a site where I had not been expecting such an honor.

This takes me to “The Ultimate Digital Content Debate: Paid or Free?” The first piece of free content about the debate at DPAC was from @scanlon_pittPG who tweeted, “Wow what an ego! ‘the debate about pay walls and journalism over’ because of myself and my partner Steven Brill #dpac4” Brill went on to defend his statement with the assertion that “People are realizing that advertising alone cannot support news”.

While Mr. Brill might be ‘realizing’ this, or at least attempting to realize a profit based on this assumption, it is unsupportable in many ways. First, it is based on a “but we’ve never done it that way before” assumption. I’m assuming you know those corporate meetings. Some young creative innovator comes in with a great idea and one of the large old egos sitting at the end of the table says, “But we’ve never done it that way before”. If the innovator is smart and lucky, he leaves the meeting, finds an angel investor and sets up a company to champion the new disruptive approach, taking down the large old egos.

Yes, it is true that in the past, newspapers have had to rely on both subscriptions and advertising to cover their costs. As an example, based on a 2008 10-Q filed by the New York Times corporation, 60% of their revenue came from advertising and 40% came from subscriptions. However, with print versions, there are costs of raw material, printing and distribution that are much more expensive than the cost of web hosting today. In addition, much of the cost of newspapers include significant interest payments covering the debt servicing of leveraged buyouts from corporate consolidation that wracked the market years ago as well as the payout needed to investors and the large salaries demanded by top executives. For a good example of this, look at the bankruptcy filing of the Journal Register Corporation which included a $1.7 million dollar incentive pay plan for 31 officers and key employees.

One needs to question whether a properly set up online news organization without the cost of printing, excessive corporate debt, and excessive executive compensation really does need subscription revenues to survive. Early successes of some online only local news sites give reason to believe that the assumption must be questioned.

Ignoring for a moment the issue above about whether there can be quality free content, @scanlon_pittPG tweets that Steve Brill believes “You should pay for content because reporters have families.” @scanlon_pittPG goes on to observe, “Nice, but that is NOT a business model.” This gets to a very important point. Just because it might cost money to produce something, doesn’t mean that it is valuable or that people are willing to pay, a point that @bjornjeffery made on Twitter.

Yet the place where Brill seems to cling most firmly to outdated notions is the idea that the role of a paid editor to organize and make sense is required. As I walked home from the DPAC conference, I saw news scrolling freely on the side of a building. It announced a report that the Coast Guard’s exercise on September 11th did not violate any policies, but may not have been a good idea anyway. The reason it may not have been a good idea is perhaps because of these paid editors that Brill lauds that decided to run unsubstantiated stories on September 11th, the same editors that decided the Balloon Boy hoax was more newsworthy that the general strike in Puerto Rico on the same day. Just because it costs money to produce something, doesn’t mean what is produced is valuable.

Now this is not to say that there is not some valuable journalism being done where the journalists deserve to get paid. Here in Connecticut, Ted Mann of the New London Day has recently been doing investigative reporting into the Governor’s use of polling help from a UConn professor that is outstanding. This sort of reporting does provide a value; a value that people who care about our state should be willing to support in one way or another. National Public Radio has long produced reporting that people are willing to support and Spot.Us is creating a new model for funding investigative reporting that needs to be considered.

There is a lot of valuable content that is being produced. Some gets paid for, some doesn’t. We need to explore new models to make sure that the most valuable content does get properly paid for. We need to change models so that the overhead in producing and distributing valuable content gets reduced. More efficient ways of selling and purchasing online advertising and data could be a great help. Ways of making this available to smaller publishers would be a great help. However, setting up more paywalls, and supporting overhead like Mr. Brill may just be a step in the wrong direction.

(Originally published at DigidayDaily.)

Random Updates, #DPAC4, Balloon Boy, Swine Flu, the Coast Guard, Google Wave

In case anyone didn’t notice, yesterday, I attended DPAC 4. I sent out about 140 tweets from the conference. I received around 30 replies, many of them retweets of what I had sent out. A lot of the people were old friends from other conferences, but I ended up following about a dozen new people. I had a net growth of five new followers, but that is a little misleading since there is always churn as old fake followers get deleted and new fake followers crop up. I reality I picked up at least a dozen new real followers. More importantly, I had a lot of great discussions and gathered a bunch of interesting new ideas to write about over the coming month. These days, I’m interested in the number of tweets and the changes to followers and those I’m following as a metric on how good a conference is. It actually can be used to analyze how interesting each panel is, as well.

During my train ride into New York, I mostly slept. I’m hoping to build up my defenses and avoid what is going around. My daughter Fiona stayed home sick yesterday and is sick again today. She does not have a fever and I do not believe it is swine flu, or if it is, it is very mild. About 10% of the students at her school are out. The local middle school has about 29% absent, and at least three school districts in Connecticut, in Guilford, Middletown and Burlington have closed because of the swine flu. Meanwhile, I continue read more blogs about how this is just another fake media frenzy driven by evil operatives in the Obama White House. I just want to let people know that tin foil hats has not been proven effective in preventing the spread of swine flu.

As I headed from the conference to the train station in the evening, I saw a heading proclaiming that the Coast Guard exercise on 9/11 this year was ill-advised but did not violate agency policies. I would suggest it was ill advised because, my friends wearing the tin hats to protect themselves against swine flu have a good reason to suspect that the media is driving frenzies and not providing news. The same media that brought you Balloon Boy is bound to bring sensationalized fictitious information about Coast Guard exercises. My tweet, “[Steven] Brill [of Journalism Online, LLC asks,] will you pay for someone to make sense out of all the raw content? Brill thinks so. I don't.” was frequently retweeted. The only surprise is that in this day of Balloon Boy, Mr. Brill thinks there are people that would actually pay for that sort of editorial efforts to make sense out of raw content.

On the way home, I spent more time getting to know the characters that I hope to appear in my National Novel Writing Month novel.

Today, Fiona is still at home, still sick. It will cut into my productivity at a time that I really can’t afford it. I have over 4000 unread emails in my inbox, and a couple computer consulting projects to make headway on, including some work in Joomla. No, I’m not abandoning Drupal, but there are times that I work with clients that use other content management systems.

I also finally received an invite to Google Wave. What looks most promising to me about it is the integration with Google Gadgets. I’ve looked at Google Gadgets before as part of my explorations into Shindig, so when I get some free time, I want to look at Drupal to Shindig to Google Gadgets to Google Wave connectivity. Then, when I finally get around to getting an Android, I can have some real fun. But now, time to start plowing through some of the tasks at hand.

First Reports from Obama and Dodd Visit to Eastern Land Management

This afternoon, President Obama and Connecticut’s Senior U.S. Senator Chris Dodd made a brief tour of Eastern Land Management. Veteran political reporter Ted Mann of TheDay has already filed several press pool reports. In his first report, he notes that “This is likely the first campaign appearance of the 2010 midterm season, for either Dodd or POTUS, with the term ‘grease guns’ stenciled on the wall.”

He leads his second pool report off with the observation that “Eastern Land Management caught the eye of federal officials after negotiating a loan through the Small Business Administration to buy land for a new headquarters in Stamford”. It provides an interesting to an OpEd in USA Today a month ago by New Hampshire U.S. Senate Candidate Paul Hodes who wrote that TARP was a flop because the money went to big banks instead of Main Street families and businesses.

Mr. Mann’s third pool report notes that President Obama and Sen. Dodd have now headed off to the Dodd fundraiser at the Stamford Marriott.

(Categories: )

The Patrick Scully and Joan Hartley Affair

Today, I received an instant message from a friend pointing out a rumor that appears to have been started by Patrick Scully. For those who do not know Patrick Scully, his website states

He recently consulted for the gubernatorial campaign of former Connecticut Speaker of the House James A. Amann as the campaign’s Director of Communications and Media.

Prior to starting Scully Communications, Patrick worked as a public relations specialist for the powerful Sullivan & LeShane firm in Hartford where he worked on accounts as diverse as the Connecticut Beverage Association, the Connecticut Recycling Coalition and the Catholic Archdiocese of Bridgeport.

My interlocutor noted that thanks to the Citizens’ Election Program, Sullivan and LeShane is not as powerful as they might used to be, despite the cheering on of the Green Party’s suit against the Citizens’ Election Program by many corporate lobbyists. Fortunately, the ban on corporate money that the Green Party’s suit also sought was not upheld by Judge Underhill.

The rumor is that one of Former Speaker Amann’s likely competitors for the Democratic Nomination for Governor of Connecticut is considering picking the much maligned State Sen. Joan Hartley of Waterbury as their running mate. This prompted questions about what sort of self-serving rumors Mr. Scully might be starting.

Indeed, other rumors might be just as fun. Is Patrick Scully having an affair with Joan Hartley? Is he receiving under the table advice former Governor and Waterbury native, John Rowland? What are you hearing for rumors?

(Categories: )
Syndicate content