politico


Observer: Politico isn’t a newspaper. But it might be the future of print

Monday, 8 November 2010, 11:28

Peter Preston: "[Politico] is "niche journalism". It employs around 175 people now. It is in profit already. More than that, it seems on the point of launching specialist areas of coverage – niches within the niche – and stowing them away behind a paywall. … Find the right niche – say one that everyone who makes a living out of US government has to be aware of – and you have an audience worth chasing. Most of Politico's cash comes from the Capitol Hill paper it puts out one to five times a week. Print ads have a value the web can't reach yet. But the operation – a brand-new source of multimedia journalism, not a conventional newspaper – has few of print's hang-ups."

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New York Times: Politico’s Creators Plan Local News Web Site for Washington

Thursday, 29 October 2009, 08:52

"Allbritton Communications said its new operation would start with a newsroom of about 50 people — far larger than those of other local news start-ups around the country, though still smaller than the local news staffs of major metropolitan newspapers. … Robert L. Allbritton, who heads the family-owned company, and [Jim] Brady said they had concluded that the venture had to be done on a large scale or not done at all — essentially the same premise that accompanied the founding of Politico."

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Vanity Fair: Michael Wolff on Politico

Wednesday, 26 August 2009, 12:21

"Politico’s news is not like political news has ever been. Its Internet-focused version is some obsessive-compulsive mix of trade journal, Twitter feed, and, quite literally, real-time chat with seniormost newsmakers and leakers."

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Media Money: The lessons of Politico: Someone needs to bankroll the losses of content start-ups

Wednesday, 26 August 2009, 12:18

Peter Kirwan reads Michael Wolff writing about Politico in Vanity Fair: "The means of production of distribution might be free or freely available. But lots of content-based start-ups die because they don’t possess sufficient capital to get through years 1-3. Talent counts for a lot, but it’s not quite everything."

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CJR: Politico Junkies

Thursday, 19 February 2009, 07:12

"The life cycle of a story is no longer the simple reporting-writing-editing-publication; it’s now reporting-writing-editing-publication-syndication-conversation. Which is nothing new, generally speaking—pickup has always been, to some extent, a goal of journalism—but as the Web flattens the relationship between discrete publications, and as the link economy grows, publicity dominates a broader portion of a story’s lifespan. And it becomes an increasingly integral component of news organizations’ business strategies."

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