Reuters blogger Felix Salmon, who was a Loeb Award judge this year, argues that the Pulitzer Prizes of business journalism still haven’t figured out blogging, and bloggers still haven’t figured out the Loebs.
“To understand why, put yourself in the position of an editor who asks a writer to start up a new blog. The writer agrees, but the blog never takes off. The writer insists on filing carefully honed and balanced self-contained news analyses and does so only every few weeks. After a handful of these things, the blog is abandoned as a failure and the writer continues doing the old-fashioned journalism he’s clearly good at.
“Well, a blog just like that is a finalist for the Loeb award. After filing the grand total of 21 blog entries over the course of all of 2009, Jim Prevor, or his editors, picked the best three and submitted them, along with a $100 check; the blog had already been killed by that point and Prevor has posted nothing this year.”
Read more here.
The following was sent out Friday at Bloomberg News by Anna Kitanaka, Equalities Executive Editor…
The Albuquerque Journal plans to start a daily business section next week, writes publisher William P.…
Ben Leonard, who has been covering health care politics and policy for Politico, is moving to…
Andrew Slade, a Financial Times news editor who worked at the publication for 29 year,…
Hailey Fuchs, who has been covering money and influence for Politico, is moving to the…
CNN has hired Ben Pershing as a supervising editor in Washington. He previously was politics…