Articles for December 4th, 2009

At the DMN Sales Folk Rule the Roost, Ctd.

Jason, who used to work at Belo, brings good perspective. Meanwhile Jim Moroney III is doing damage control. I don’t think the brass saw how this reorganization would be perceived by the outside world. His memo to the staff from late this afternoon is after the jump. The crux of his note, as he puts it: “We are convinced that news and information delivered digitally needs to be disaggregated.” Oh, well. When you put it that way ….

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At the DMN, Sales Folk Rule the Roost Ctd., Ctd.

The consensus around the InterWeb seems to be that the Dallas Morning News has breached a sacred institution with its reorganization. It’s extreme to say that the move is a sign that the paper will become a “glorified Greensheet,” as the Huffington Post claims. The most interesting commentary came from Jim Barnett at the Nieman Journalism Lab at Harvard University, who writes, “as I thought about it a little more, it occurred to me that this is really just another case of the dead-tree news business trying to catch up to what’s going on in the online world.”

At some point in the management structure of all newspapers, an editor reports to someone whose primary concern is generating revenue. That’s usually the publisher, and the publisher more often than not is a former sales manager. All that’s different in what the Morning News is doing is that they’re pushing that publisher-editor relationship down to lower levels of the org chart. (more…)

Burning Man Begot Neiman’s Cupcakes

I love learning that the cupcake cars, which got top billing in most news stories about this year’s Neiman Marcus Christmas Book, were originally designed as a costume for Burning Man.

No one has yet purchased one of the gussied-up motorized wheelchairs, which are priced at $25,000. More from Forbes.com:

Marvin Crenshaw Sues Mayor Tom Leppert

I’m going to try really hard to type this with a straight face. I’m not going to be snarky or mean. It’s the holidays. Goodwill toward all men and so forth.

But so anyway, Marvin Crenshaw, one of the original plaintiffs in the landmark 14-1 voting rights case, apparently needs to spend some time with Ben Roethlisberger on the sideline. Crenshaw, it seems, has suffered a head injury and ought to sit out for a few plays. Because he is suing Mayor Tom Leppert. In a suit filed on November 19, Crenshaw says:

ln his zest to be the first strong arm dictator Mayor of Dallas Texas in the 21st Century and to be the chief flunky for the Dallas Citizens Council, “TL” violated the City Charter, corrupted the City Council, intimidated the City Manager and staff, stole from the budget, lied and betrayed the citizens of Dallas, Texas.

There’s more. You can read it for yourself. It seems to center on that Christmas party in 2007, the one the mayor held with some of the city staff and some councilmembers at Ross Perot Jr.’s pad. Also, there’s a matter involving a city construction deal with Turner Construction, Leppert’s former employer. I’m no lawyer. Maybe that’s why I’m having trouble figuring this whole thing out. Crenshaw seeks injunctive relief. And $75,000.

(I’m sorry for the Roethlisberger joke. I tried. I promise.)

Going Rogue in Plano: The Wrap-Up

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Is DA Craig Watkins Facebooking on the Job?

Tom McGregor over at Dallas Blog has accused District Attorney Craig Watkins of not only Facebooking while on the job but using it to campaign, which would be a no-no. Says McGregor:

As a matter of fact, D.A. Watkins posts Facebook comments when he should be working in his office on weekdays during the hours between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. He even does Facebook campaigning and fundraising from the D.A.’s office, which technically is the property of Dallas County. Hence, his actions raise ethical concerns, since the taxpayers of Dallas County are subsidizing his campaign activities.

My question (and I’ve posed it to McGregor, who didn’t have an answer): how do you know it’s Watkins who is doing the updating? For instance, this post, which is bylined “Tim Rogers” is actually being written by me, Krista Nightengale.

At the DMN, Sales Folk Rule the Roost, Ctd.

Here’s a dispatch from inside the newsroom:

Everybody is disgruntled, to put it mildly, over the newsroom reorganization making editors answerable to ad sales people. It sucks. How could you not hate it? The problem is that a lot of us sit around complaining how bad everything is, but nobody has an idea about how we can save the newspaper. Personally, I think this is a bad idea, but if you ask me to come up with a better one, I can’t, and I doubt any of my colleagues can, either. ..It’s not like any of us can point to a newspaper somewhere else and say, “Look, they’re doing it right — let’s copy that strategy!” My guess is that the Mong memo will convince more writers and editors to get their resumes out there, because they’re not going to want to work in that kind of journalism environment. I get this, but we shouldn’t have any illusions about the situation that the newspaper industry is in. We’re at the brink. Newspapers that want to survive are going to have to start doing things they never imagined they’d be doing in healthier times. Don’t get me wrong, I hate this new strategy. But I prefer doing something bold to sitting back and doing the same old thing, and hoping that things will get better if we just sit tight.

That makes me reflect. You know, it’s easy for the rest of us to react with shock and outrage. But we don’t work there.

Zac Crain Goes Rogue in Plano, Ctd.

This comes from Zac: “Mike Gallagher from 660 AM KSKY is broadcasting live from the store. He went wireless to work the crowd. He said ‘liberal elitists’ would complain about folks in the crowd wearing fur, even in this cold. ‘Real Americans wear fur.’” And he sends more pics.

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Zac Crain Goes Rogue in Plano

Zac is up at Legacy Books right now, trying to put lipstick on Sarah Palin. Or actions to that effect. He sends along these photos and promises a full report upon his return.

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Beal Bank Seeks to Outbid Trump For Casinos

So it looks like Plano-based Beal Bank really was left high and dry by “the Donald” after they’d earlier partnered with him to buy three Atlantic City casinos. Now we have more details.  Trump was satisfied to switch sides in the fight for control of the bankrupt properties in exchange for a 10 percent stake.

Beal is expected to make its own bid today.

DailyCandy Pulls Out of Dallas

DailyCandy does daily editions for 12 cities — or did 12 editions. They are shutting down seven of those cities, of which Dallas is one. Valleywag has the internal memo that went to staffers yesterday. I, for one, will miss the puns.

Fort Worth Man in Drag to Prove Love For Cowboys

The NFL and Plano-based Frito Lay are sponsoring a contest to find “the NFL’s most fanatical family.” The winners get a VIP trip to Super Bowl XLIV in Miami. There’s voting online under way. Among the eight semifinalists is the Collins family of Fort Worth:

Reginald Collins grew up watching the Dallas Cowboys every week after church on TV at his grandmother’s house in Little Rock, Ark. Now that Reginald lives in the Dallas area, his entire family has made it an annual tradition to visit Reginald with their grandmother, so Reginald can treat her to a Cowboys game in-person.

Reginald goes all out in his video soliciting votes. But he’s got some serious competition from the Andersons in Reno, Nevada. An old lady wearing a cheesehead is tough to beat.

David Margulies Offers Some Unsolicited Advice to Tiger Woods

David Margulies, “media relations expert,” had a conundrum: the biggest news story going in the world right now is l’affaire Woods. Margulies’ problem: he has no involvement with the story. Tiger Woods has not retained Margulies’ services. Nor has Elin. Nor has Jaimee Grubbs. Nor the neighbor whose tree so courageously stopped Tiger’s Escalade that night. So what was Margulies to do? How about issue a press release yesterday (in full, after the jump) critiquing Tigers’ publicists’ handling of the situation? Brilliant!

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Dallas’s High Five: One of World’s Strangest Roads

In fact, it is the 16th Strangest out of this Popular Mechanics list of the World’s 18 Strangest Roads. Six of the roads are in the U.S.

Leading Off (12/04/09): Counterfactual Edition

Inspired by our governor, we’re having fun with counterfactuals.

1. Randy Galloway says Nolan Ryan would have been out as team president if Tom Hicks had succeeded in partnering with Dennis Gilbert to buy the Texas Rangers from himself. Where would the team be without the Ryan Express?  Imagine that the Rangers hadn’t signed him as a free-agent pitcher in 1989. The most exciting moment in franchise history never would have taken place.

2. What if Plano-based Frito Lay’s Tostitos brand hadn’t supplanted IBM as sponsor of the Fiesta Bowl in 1996? You think the fellows over at Big Blue spring for a flag football game for our troops in the Persian Gulf? Hardly. IBM probably sets up a fantasy football league for the brave soldiers instead.

3. And if Sarah Palin had been elected vice president of the United States in November 2008, I know there’s one counterfactual that we can — all of us, from across the political spectrum — agree upon: Legacy Books wouldn’t sell nearly as much today.