Tag Archives: mpr

MinnPost Announced

MinnPost.com will offer exclusive front-page news stories as well as “posts,” a new format in which professional journalists engage in an informal conversation with readers about what they’re learning and what to make of it. Posts will be a bit like blogs, but unlike many blogs, they will be built around original reporting – not just opinions or links to other people’s work.

MinnPost.com, which will publish Monday through Friday, also will offer daily roundups providing perspective on metro, state, national and international news, stories from selected content partners (currently under discussion), commentary from community leaders and experts, and comment from and involvement of readers.

Joel Kramer’s Announcement this morning as relayed by Brian Lambert. (Now on minnpost.com/news)

I’m not excited. I don’t see yet how this is going to be all that different than startribune.com or twincities.com. It quacks like a newspaper “gone online but a little different.” What would separate this from MPR ramping up their local news site, hiring a few of these journalists and throwing in a little of their “new media initiative” magic fairy dust for a little citizen-involvement twist?

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.

Interviewing Noah Kunin and Britt Bakken



Noah Kunin Sharing Photos, originally uploaded by s4xton. Noah Kunin (L), Doug Belkin (R)

Last night I had dinner with Noah Kunin and his girlfriend Britt Bakken as they were being interviewed by Wall Street Journal writer Doug Belkin at The Times Bar and Cafe.

As Noah and Britt lived closest to the 35W bridge that collapsed, they had some incredible first-hand experience with the event. Noah was actually in the shower when it occurred and went out on his roof to see what happened. With the rush to go out and help people he put on the first set of clothes he could find: a tight biker shirt, shorts and boots.

“There wasn’t any screaming,” Britt said. After it fell, Noah added that all they heard was tires exploding and noises from vehicles.

Britt described the people where they were on the south end of the bridge and how there was “no chaos” and “everyone knew what to do.” They described a man that came out of the water from nowhere and then immediately started to help others. They saw a biker on West River Parkway that came up to the bridge immediately after it collapsed where he literally threw down his expensive bike so he could jump up and give assistance.

They saw another man who’s car was submerged that went back to it, smashed open the passenger side window, and dug around because he “forgot some stuff, like his wallet,” even though the water was black and swirling with gas and oil.

They didn’t see anyone who was dead or severely injured. They assumed there had to have been people that died but didn’t see any evidence of it. People on various parts of the rubble were yelling messages to each other such as “are you okay?” and “do you see anyone?”

After they couldn’t find anyone else to help, Noah took photos of the scene and then gave me his username and password to his blog so I could update it on his behalf. He was bombarded with phone calls while he was being evacuated away from his home. As a result I ended up being his media agent throughout the next day, constantly getting calls and emails asking to get interview time with him and discussing the terms to use his photography. Good thing my work day was otherwise slow.

We had tapas and drank for a few hours. After Noah and Britt were finished retelling their stories, we moved on to talk more about some of the good and bad parts of the media reaction, how various news outlets are more organized than others, citizen journalism, the local blogosphere and our communication infrastructure.

I will update this post if this interview shows up in a piece at the Wall Street Journal.

While Noah as taken about twenty interviews so far, I recommend checking out Jon Gordon’s piece on this from a citizen-media angle (MP3) that also features my pals Erica and Chuck. Noah and Chuck are also in Julio Ojeda-Zapata’s citizen-media piece in the Pioneer Press today.

On American Public Media’s “Future Tense”

I’m in today’s episode (MP3) of Future Tense talking about Twitter.

Producer and host Jon Gordon emailed me through my website asking if I’d be interested in talking. Why he chose me, I’m not entirely sure. We arranged a conversation that lasted about 15 minutes where I continued to stutter and otherwise sound like a Minnesotan: “ya know” “um um yeah.” He was using Grand Central from a coffee shop and we did the interview over VoIP to his laptop and Grand Central saved it as an MP3 for him. So not only does he write stories about technology, he lives it too.

When we were done with the interview, I posted this on Twitter:

Jon Gordon thought it was pretty funny, mentioned that he posted about our interview on his blog and added: “This is such a strange loop of old media / new media / blog / radio / Twitter.” When I read his blog entry, I noticed that he quoted Twitter’s entry in Wikipedia, which I happened to have edited that morning. I bring this up to him “speaking of strange loop…” and he replies: “O M G.”

Heh. He also asked me if there was anyone else he should talk to about Twitter. Without a beat, “Rex Sorgatz,” and then added how he was the self-proclaimed biggest evangelist of Twitter. I mentioned his appearance on G4’s Attack of the Show talking about Twitter the previous day.

After his chat with Rex, he joined Twitter and started using it. You should add him. He needs more friends than just Rex and I.

On a final note, after hearing Future Tense on the radio for years, it was a little treat for me to finally hear Jon Gordon say the word “shit.”

Minneapolis and Saint Paul listeners can hear Future Tense on KNOW 91.1FM weekdays at 8:20 am and 10:30 pm.