Archive for January 6th, 2012

January 6th, 2012

Natalie Jacobson to lead new local news site in Worcester

by DickH

A Globe story reporting that former Channel 5 anchor person Natalie Jacobson, retired from Boston TV since 2007, will be featured on a new Worcester-based local news site caught my eye this morning. The venture is not some shoestring operation cobbled together by a few local bloggers. Instead, it is a well-financed operation called Go Local 24 that’s already been in operation in Providence for eighteen months. Jumping to Go Local 24′s own website, I was greeted by this:

Today, consumers are changing how they collect and use information but traditional media is not responding . . .

Good so far. It goes on to explain that at a time when individuals want more local news, traditional media outlets are cutting back (or have already cut back) on the resources needed to produce the desired volume of local news because financially-required layoffs and cutbacks. Those same consumers want to receive their news across all platforms – smart phones, tablets, laptops, email, social media. Go Local 24 claims to provide both.

This article in Behind the Headlines, a Worcester-based blog focused on local media, describes the impact of Go Local 24 in Providence:

GoLocal’s Providence site has made some serious waves in the past year and a half breaking several big stories. The site has pounced on a gaping hole being left open by the Providence Journal. It’s a mix of features, politics, news and voices from the community in the form of non-paid bloggers they call Mindsetters. It’s smart branding. GoLocal dodges the old police scanner and fire beats, choosing instead to concentrate on enterprise journalism.

In the evolving world of local media, this is a very interesting development that bears close watching for obvious reasons.

January 6th, 2012

‘On the Road’ Film Publicity Poster

by PaulM

January 6th, 2012

Chancellor Meehan Speaks @ UML Health & Social Science Building Ceremony

by Tony

“Chancellor Marty Meehan Opening Remarks at Health & Social Sciences Building at UMass Lowell Topping Off Ceremony on December 15, 2011.
The event celebrated the near-completion of the HSSB, which is a $40 million, 69,000-square-foot classroom facility that will provide academic space to help accommodate a 30 percent increase in undergraduate enrollment over the last few years”. (UML YouTube)

This video was originally posted by umasslowell

January 6th, 2012

Voting with polls is the tail wagging the dog by Marjorie Arons Barron

by Tony

The entry below is being cross posted from Marjorie Arons Barron’s own blog.

New Hampshire’s first-in-the-nation primary is supposed to be retail politics at its most pure. The idea is that the candidates meet people from all walks of life, in every conceivable kind of setting, and the people make up their minds based on personal, elemental information gathering. At least, that’s the history and the theory.

Which is why a story on WBUR radio this morning was so disturbing. Reporter Fred Thys quotes N.H. primary voter Karen Eckilson at a Romney rally in Petersborough. She tells Thys “I was actually thinking of Huntsman, but I don’t think he can make it,” Eckilson said. “I don’t think he’s electable — poll numbers.”

If people vote based on polls, that diminishes the primary as a way to breathe life into a solid candidate with real potential for making a contribution, who may not have the money or ground organization to come fast out of the gate. Carry that to a logical conclusion, for that matter, and why have people vote at all? Just declare the winner to be the candidate with the greatest percentage of public opinion survey support on the first Tuesday after the first Monday or some other fixed point in time.

Polling is an inexact science, with wide variations in methodologies and margins of error.  Polls often reflect undeveloped opinions and fail to reflect soft and changeable support for the candidates. Even in the entrance polls in Iowa, more than half those who voted for Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum said they hadn’t made up their minds until a day or less before the caucuses. Rick Santorum was ignored by the press because his poll numbers were so low. It’s a vicious cycle, meaningless polls that often reflect name recognition.

Karen Eckilson is not alone in this wag-the-dog scenario. WBUR quotes a Suffolk University report that “Voters seem to be moving away from the former Utah governor [Jon Huntsman]and Texas Rep. Ron Paul toward being undecided again, as they reconsider their choices after the Iowa caucuses.”

If voters went by polls, Hillary Clinton would have been coronated before the first caucus in 2008. I keep thinking about how the late Minnesota Senator Gene McCarthy took his anti-Vietnam War message to every nook and cranny of New Hampshire. Opinion polls showed him at as little as 10 percent support, but he stuck with it. And many voters stuck with him, despite the polling numbers. When he garnered more than 42 percent, Lyndon Johnson announced his intention not to seek reelection as President.

Learning the party building benefits that accrued to the Democrats in 2008 from a drawn-out primary fight, Republicans this year for the first time have scrapped their winner-take-all balloting for the early stage of the process. The goal was to keep more candidates alive longer and kindle voter interest in the race.

If voters succumb to the polls and fail to vote their hearts and minds this early in the campaign, what else are we losing?

Please let me know your thoughts in the comments section below.