Tag Archives: city pages

City Pages Launches “cPod.”

What the heck is a cPod? Well, it’s not the City Pages’ new portable audio device:

Welcome to our humble debut episode of cPod - wherein we ask our reporters and editors to talk about the stories they’ve written for the current issue. Check back each week for a new update and for a bit of an inside listen to the voices behind your favorite bylines.

So it’s an audio podcast (or “netcast” if you prefer) of the City Pages staff giving audio and interviews to augment their stories? Nope. It’s not at all.

The “cPod” is a huge pop-up window that only works in your browser with a tiny Flash-based audio player you can only hit “Play” and “Stop” on. It contains audio with the people that wrote articles in the previous City Pages giving a summary of what’s already been written. Did you read the City Pages yesterday? If so, you’ll hear nothing new. It’s basically teasers for what’s already written. Also, there’s a ton of loud background noise as if they did the entire thing at Cuzzy’s, where some CP staff and K-Hoff are regulars. After it concludes, you can listen to that background noise for another minute longer. It’s weird!

You can’t subscribe to it and you can’t aggregate to it, so it’s not a podcast. If it was good content, maybe this would be a problem. This leads me to my latest RSS analogy:

Your content is like a magazine. Your magazine sits in a kiosk (or browser) with a bunch of other magazines and newspapers. If you want some loyalty these days, let people subscribe to your magazine and have it automatically delivered to them in addition to letting them go to the kiosk every single time. Then your content is delivered to their door every time you publish something and it doesn’t cost them the effort to remind themselves that they want to check to see if you have a new issue.

Oh, and for truncated RSS: I can’t imagine anything more annoying than subscribing to a 3×5 card that comes in the mail that tells me to go to the store and pick up a magazine.

I might be joking here: It just dawned on me why City Pages hasn’t ever understood this. Traditionally, in order to get the City Pages, you’ve always had to go to a City Pages kiosk. You’ve never been able to subscribe to it.

P.S. Paul Schmelzer is a nicer, more tactful and eloquent guy than I am (with a pop-up window screenshot in the comments).

P.P.S. Web Editor job opening at the City Pages on Craigslist. [via IM with Taylor]

P.P.P.S. Thanks for the photo credits on pages 3 and 38 of this week’s CP. I do appreciate that.

Par Barred from the Strib, Offered Internship by The Daily Mole

As published by Minnesota Monitor, after Par Ridder was ordered out as the Star Tribune publisher, he was quickly offered an internship by former City Pages editor Steve Perry to work on his new local media startup, The Daily Mole:

Dear Par,

We at the Daily Mole were saddened to hear of your abrupt exit from the Newspaper of the Twin Cities this morning. We can only hope it spells an end to the scorn and mockery you have endured in your time of trial. People can be so judgmental. Especially judges.

As your friends have no doubt pointed out, sometimes the best thing one can do with such adversity is to turn the page. In that spirit, we want to be the first to offer you a chance at clearing the slate and earning back your good name. (And make no mistake: Ridder, under normal circumstances, is a very good name.)

We’re talking work. A job. And by “job,” I mean unpaid internship. If you will agree to sell advertising for the Daily Mole for a period of six months, gratis, we will pledge to consider hiring you full-time.

As a Daily Mole intern, your perks would include a desk (with chair), access to a telephone, and a whole box of business cards. You would need a laptop computer of your own, but we assume that’s not an issue.

Courage!

Best wishes,

The Mole People

Considering he’s on a year long vacation from the Star Tribune publisher position I think he should take it.

Minneapolis Critical Mass

Photo removed.

City Pages: MPLS police administer tear gas, beat down cyclists in Loring Park

WCCO: 19 Arrested In Minneapolis Bicycle Protest

Flickr: Minneapolis Critical Mass Photoset

capthek: View from above

Star Tribune: 19 bicyclists arrested after rally turns into melee

YouTube: Adepter’s Videos [via]

UPDATE Sept 1: Steve Marsh was there and sums it up.

The one big thing I think people are really missing about this story is that this might be more about this than it is about Critical Mass. They, the bloggers and media are all giving CM a bad rap. I think this whole story might be more about the pReNC who decided to join up with CM this time around.

Check out Michelle Gross’ email after visiting those who were arrested.

UPDATE Sept 3: Well, maybe I was on the right track. Jason DeRusha writes:

Heather Brown is working on a story for our news at six, looking at the Republican Welcoming Committee group of anti-RNC protestors. Of all the 19 arrested, about half are connected to that protest group, not Critical Mass. Too bad for CM. It seems that some outsiders are tarnishing a group of people who love riding, and are out for a monthly good time.

The Future of Local Media?

The cats are finally out of the bag now. The former City Pages editor will launch a “Hybrid Web Daily” and the former editor and the former publisher of the Star Tribune is starting an “Online Newspaper.” I’m waiting for MPR to say, “What about us? We’re already here.”

Also check out Ed Kohler’s work-in-progress: a local blog and news aggregator mixed with Digg-like voting: Walleye.MN. This project has potential.

An Open Letter to Al Franken

Mr. Franken-

I’ve recently read tomorrow’s hard-hitting City Pages investigative story about your neighbors’ opinions.

http://citypages.com/databank/28/1393/article15754.asp

I feel compelled to ask you a few questions:

  • Your neighbor Hilary Cheely stated that you were expressing your desire for the Minnesota Twins to do well during a game. Out loud. Are these allegations true? How much of a Twins fan are you?
  • Your pal Hilary also said that she’s caught you in the act of singing out loud with earphones on. Do you think listening to music and singing are appropriate behaviors for a future Minnesota Senator? What unrecognizable music might you have been rocking out to?
  • Another neighbor of yours, Lauren Zeller, accuses you of donning a bumper sticker promoting your campaign on your car. How will you continue knowing that the City Pages has exposed that you are leaning towards voting for yourself? How do you expect voters to react?
  • Your building-mate Zeller also observed you working hard with your exercise regimen. She said you were vocally encouraging yourself to work even harder. If you were Senator, representing the the State of Minnesota, do you think such self-motivation would distract from your ability to “fit in” with senators who may be just as prudish as your neighbors?

Thank you in advance for taking the time to consider my questions.

-Aaron Landry

Tipping Pizza Delivery in Minneapolis

I’ve been following PizzaPizza on Twitter for awhile. He’s an anonymous Twitter user from an unnamed pizza delivery place in or near Minneapolis (and does not deliver to Longfellow, I know that much). It’s his second job and will post about his experiences from his mobile phone while he’s out delivering pizzas. Last night he got stiffed, got a $5 tip from a house with a tree fallen on it and sadly for us, he put in his two weeks notice. For our entertainment and insight into this world I hope he picks up at another pizza joint. If anything, his thoughts on what he thinks is a good tip and a shitty tip (and his reaction to it) are pretty valuable.

Overnight, City Pages’ Pizza Man posted a long tirade on bad tippers but at the end finally gave us the goods we’re looking for: a seemingly fairly accurate tipping guide for pizza delivery with actual dollar signs and figures. Check it out.

UPDATE: I’ve been asked, so I asked: PizzaPizza on Twitter says he’s not the same as CP’s Pizza Man.

Least Dangerous Game in City Pages

City Pages delivers a pretty basic interview with Aric McKeown of Least Dangerous Game. If you’re not at the Pizza Lucé Block Party or the Freedom Jazz Festival at noon on Saturday, you can hunt down Aric. Or if you want to sit on your ass you can add the game’s Twitter feed to your reader to see if you can figure out the clues.

(I’ve found him a couple times before.)