Archive

Daily Archives: January 30, 2012


“I thought it was interesting — the body language between the two,” AP photographer Haraz Ghanbari tells me over the phone. “But frankly, I didn’t think it was going to create this much international interest. People have been talking about this for so long – they’re still talking about it today.”

Ghanbari realized the impact of his photo of President Barack Obama and Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer once the emails and phone calls started pouring in.

“I heard from people I haven’t heard from in 5 or 6 years,” says the 30-year-old photojournalist. “I got at least 50 emails. …I got emails from bosses in New York, from bosses in DC, and from the bureau chief in Arizona. I got emails from people who retired from the AP long ago.”

What’s he going to do with the photo that NBC anchor Brian Williams said “the whole world is talking about”?

“Every picture I’ve taken I’ve kept,” says Ghanbari. “I have everything backed up, and this is going to go with them. I don’t plan to do anything fancy with it.”

* Behind the Obama-Brewer picture, a very attentive photographer
* WP ombud: Was Obama really “testy” with Brewer?
* Earlier: Ghanbari kept a down-on-luck Marine from an anonymous grave

Credit: Imgur

Don’t blame the news staff for this!

That’s what someone wrote on my Facebook wall after I posted the image on the left over the weekend.

“Hey, this is the Honolulu Advertiser, where I used to work,” wrote Christy Strobel. “Paper folded on 6/6/10. This looks like one of the Sunday auto supplements. Those didn’t go through the newsroom copy desk. Just sayin’.”

Don Lee then asked: “Wonder how many people called the paper to say they clicked and clicked and nothing happened?”

Discussion of this newspaper image segued into memories of the CueCat, the handheld scanner introduced a dozen years ago that you plugged into your computer and held while reading newspapers and magazines. You’d scan bar codes in the publications with your CueCat, then be sent to websites about the products you’re looking at. (“Who does their leisure reading sitting in front of a PC?” asked Walt Mossberg. “How many people have their PC next to the easy chair, or bed, or other typical reading sites?) Ian Donnis noted that it was “one of the most ridiculed products of the Internet era.”

HERE ARE SOME POSTS FROM MY FACEBOOK WALL:

Nancy Herrick
Cue Cat was only slightly less preposterous than the idea of giving away the entire content of the newspaper online for free. If I recall, when I heard about each my reaction was “WTF?

Jeff Girod
I remember the “demonstration” at our office. The CueCat representative only had to scan the bar code about 30 times. Finally she gave up and said, “Uh, this will all work flawlessly once we start printing them in the paper.”

Carrie Hartman McDermott
Jeff, i remember we all shook our heads and asked “why do people need this??”

Randy Eli Grothe
As a device to save newspapers, it made a pretty good putter. At the DMN [Dallas Morning News], we had a photog who could take an aluminum shaft and the Cuecat and fashion a putter for presentation to retiring members of the department. Fore!

Curt Chandler
As the emergence of the QR code shows, the Cue Cat wasn’t complete idiocy, just introduced as a bridge between the wrong platforms. It was an expensive lesson, though.

* (10/12/2000) Walt Mossberg: CueCat fails to meet promise of being convenient, useful
* (9/6/2001) Belo dumps the CueCat after investing $37.5 million in it
* (4/10/2003) CueCat founder changes name to J. Hutton Pulitzer

* David Carr: Murdoch says what’s on his mind on Twitter

New York hedge fund Alden Global Capital — one of 32 investors that acquired the Philadelphia Inquirer and Daily News in 2010 — wants to unload its stake in the newspapers’ parent company, according to the New York Post. A spokesman for the papers tells the Philadelphia Inquirer’s Mike Armstrong: “It would not be appropriate for Philadelphia Media Network to comment on a decision that Alden Global is making about their business.” Armstrong writes:

Private companies do not have to disclose when major shareholders increase or decrease ownership stakes. But such activity often occurs. And in general, a single minority shareholder controls only its shares and cannot, by itself, force an entire private company to be sold.

Meanwhile, the New York Times points out today that investors acquired newspapers in several major U.S. cities in the second half of 2011, including San Diego, Omaha and Chicago. Alden bought Journal Register Co. last July.

* Hedger pausing on print, reports New York Post
* Inquirer, Daily News cold be headed for sale
* Online ambitions and a dash of real estate drive newspaper deals