Hark! The Herald! (Listen Up! Edition)

November 5, 2013

From our Walt Whitman desk (Lost in Cyberspace bureau)

It’s no news that the Boston Herald devotes the better part of a news page every day to flacking Boston Herald Radio.

Representative sample from [Monday’s] edition:

 

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Every now and then, though, the Herald surrenders the entire page to self-promotion.

Representative sample from [Tuesday’s] edition:

 

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Boston Herald Radio executive producer Tom Shattuck related his past experience of producing lousy election-night coverage for a real radio station (presumably WTKK) and promises real election-night coverage for his virtual station.

Beginning at 6 p.m. tonight, Boston Herald Radio will air the most comprehensive coverage of the mayoral election available anywhere.

The Herald’s political team of Joe Battenfeld and Hillary Chabot are real reporters and they will serve as in-studio anchors for the evening. Not only do they live and breathe local politics, but they love what they do and they know the subject matter like no one else.

And speaking of resources …

 

And etc.

The hardlistening staff will try to check it out. Not sure how much company we’ll have.

UPDATE: We forgot to listen. Pretty sure we had a lot of company there.


Hail (and Farewell) Caesars!

November 5, 2013

Monday’s Boston Globe went all in covering today’s East Boston Casino vote. The stately local broadsheet started with this front-page piece:

Neighbor vs. neighbor over East Boston casino

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For years, only a wrought iron fence stood between Gail Miller and Pat Benti, a pair of friendly neighbors on Orient Avenue, but now their yards are a testament to the deep political chasm that has opened between them.

Miller has plastered her property with signs urging a “no” vote on a Suffolk Downs casino, fearing it would attract more woes than riches.

Right next door, Benti has put up procasino placards, touting the project as a way to save the historic racetrack and bring jobs to East Boston.

“It definitely has caused some stress among friends and neighbors,” said Miller, who dropped Benti as a Facebook friend “just until this is over.”

With Tuesday’s critical East Boston referendum looming, polling suggests the neighborhood is as divided on the casino as the next-door neighbors.

 

Then there was this streetside sidebar:

As big vote approaches, casino friends and foes take to streets

The chief operating officer of Suffolk Downs clambered atop a desk in a former insurance office to rally his troops Sunday morning.

“We’re in the home stretch, as they say in horse racing,” Chip Tuttle, 50, told about four dozen volunteers and staff packed into an Orient Heights storefront. “We can see the wire.”turner110313METROcasino35

More than 250 canvassers spent Sunday knocking on doors across East Boston and Revere, trying to shore up votes before the Tuesday election that will decide the fate of a $1 billion casino proposed for Suffolk Downs’ site at the border of the communities.

At the other end of East Boston, casino opponents held a rally that drew about 80, many with small children in tow.

Celeste Ribeiro Myers, a leader of the No Eastie Casino group, led an impassioned military-style chant: “We don’t want slots or roulette. Casino is a losing bet.”

 

Cut to the op-ed page for Marcela García’s piece:

Scars in East Boston

The casino vote has caused deep divisions in the Latino community

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THE EAST Boston casino campaign will be a benchmark in the emergence of Boston’s Latino community. But as the race nears the finish line, the casualties and accusations are piling up. Opponents are ripping down each others’ campaign signs with abandon while each side tries to catch the other on video doing it; a casino supporter suffered a broken nose at a contentious rally, and pro- and anti-casino advocates regularly malign each other in Spanish on Facebook.

The animosity may be on the verge of going international, for there are calls to remove the Salvadoran consul for meddling in a local political matter.

That there’s no love lost between the two sides is the understatement of the year, and even though no one knows how the vote will go down, on one level, an ingrained bitterness means the community overall already has lost.

 

Among all that back-and-froth in the Globe, perhaps most interesting was this ad that ran at the bottom of page 4:

 

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Oddly, the ad did not run in the Boston Herald.

Maybe Herald readers have no need to know that Caesars has left the building.

Or maybe . . . what?


Tom Menino Finally Mayor of Two-Daily Town

November 4, 2013

As the hardreading staff noted yesterday, the Boston Globe cleaned up on ads in the paper’s World Series Commemorative Section celebrating the Red Sox championship.

The Boston Herald, meanwhile, got its clock cleaned, with only four ads compared to the Globe’s 34. Especially galling to the Heraldniks must have been the full-page ad Mayor Tom Menino and the Victory Parade sponsors ran in the stately local broadsheet.

But journalistic justice prevailed today, as this appeared on page (lucky) 13 of the feisty local whatever.

 

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Now if the Herald can just chase down those other 29.


Globe Has Staggering Ad-vantage Over Herald

November 3, 2013

Once the Boston Red Sox – sorry, World Series Champion Red Sox – took Game 6, flooded the clubhouse with bubbly, painted the town Red for the rest of Wednesday night, and rode the duck boats into MLB history, it was all over but the touting.

Enter today’s Boston Globe 40-page Special Commemorative Section, which is one giant duck boat for advertising.

Representative sample:

 

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The ads come in three categories: bearded, beardless, and merchandise-hawking.

The bearded:

Mohegan Sun, Bank of America, Gosling’s Rums (“Official Rum of the Red Sox” – who knew?), Sullivan Tire, Budweiser, Fidelity, TD Garden, The Beaches of Fort Myers and Sanibel, Museum of Fine Arts, jetBlue, People’s United Bank

The beardless:

Dunkin’ Donuts, Village Automotive Group, Pepsi, Boston Celtics, Mayor Menino/Parade Sponsors, NESN, Wagner Team of Auto Stores, New Balance, Boston College Athletic Department, Roche Bros., Boston Ballet, Mapfre/Commerce Insurance, MLB, Stop & Shop, Showcase Cinema Deluxe, Xfinity

Merchandise-hawking:

Bob’s Stores, Caseworks International (“Officially Licensed MLB Tall Mirror Back Baseball Display and the Rawlings Official World Series Baseball”), Bradford Exchange (truly awful 30-ounce stoneware stein), Boston Globe (two ads for books ‘n’ collectibles), Dick’s Sporting Goods, Macy’s

The hardcounting staff tallies 34 ads of various sizes, over half of them full pages.

Crosstown at the Boston Herald, the ad count is . . .

Four.

Xfinity again.

 

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Sullivan Tire with a new one.

 

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Bradford Exchange with a new one.

 

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Bradford Exchange with the same awful one.

 

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That’s it.

If the Globe/Herald Daily Bakeoff were a prizefight, they’d stop it.


Boston Herald ‘Press Party’ Crasher

November 1, 2013

Well, more like shaker-upper if you want to get technical about it.

The feisty local tabloid has a new host for Press Party, its weekly media-review webcast, along with a streamlined panel.

The musical chairs featured former Press Party multimedia reporter Katie Eastman taking over the host’s role, while former host (and Herald columnist) Joe Battenfeld moves over to the panel.

 

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(That’s Herald reporter Hillary Chabot and Suffolk University’s Bob Rosenthal in the other two chairs. The fifth chair from previous webcasts is, well, unendowed.)

As for the content of the webcast, we’ll leave that to the hardreading staff at Campaign Outsider.

Meanwhile, in other Herald web news, a splendid reader of Two-Daily Town sent this today:

Have you noticed that they’ve cut the 6 to 9 a.m. slot [on Boston Herald Radio]? If you turn to the radio page in the paper, you’ll see there’s nothing listed. I listened this morning for a bit between 6 and 6:30 and heard an unbelievably lame segment from yesterday’s sports show followed by the beginning of Graham’s Thursday show.

Said radio page:

 

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The rumor mill also has Battenfeld taking over the vacated 6 to 9 slot.

Stay tuned.