Posted on 09/21/2003 4:12:17 PM PDT by Chad Fairbanks
How To Start An Independent Newspaper
First off, let me be blunt: The last time I was involved in anything like this, was during the 1980s when I helped create and distribute a newsletter a cheap little paper printed by a friend at a local print shop in the middle of the night, and distributed by hand in school during the day.
As such, I am posting this article from a perspective having a distinct lack of experience, in order to spark discussions, to learn from others more experienced than I, and to hopefully spark some creative ideas, solutions, and information from other FReepers.
So, without further ado, allow me to lay out some ideas, concepts, and such in order to begin the discussion.
What is an Alternative newspaper?
An Alternative Newspaper is a newspaper that provides news, opinions, or information that one would usually not find in the many mainstream daily newspapers which are published in cities and towns across the country. The term Alternative, is a word in modern parlance that is now devoid of any true meaning. What was once considered alternative is now part of the mainstream culture. For our purposes, the word alternative means something that is different than the mainstream liberal publications, as it pertains to print media.
Why would I want to start one?
Have you ever been at a bus top, subway station, or a music store, and seen free, independent alternative newspapers sitting in racks? Have you ever noticed how often they are left-wing publications? Other than being more extreme, they are often not all that different from the mainstream newspapers. Wouldnt you like to see one that espouses a conservative viewpoint for a change? Well, thats not going to happen by itself. Someone needs to step up to the plate and get involved.
You may love to write, or perhaps you want an outlet for other creative ideas, such as cartooning. Perhaps you are tired of the local mainstream daily newspaper ignoring stories of local importance, or covering it with an obvious bias?
The simple answer is simply, Why not?
What should I do first?
Plan, plan, and plan some more. Creating, publishing, and distributing a newspaper is not any easy job. You must create a plan that will help you determine your goals, what you hope to accomplish, and how you are going to achieve what you set out to do. Much like a Business Plan not only will this plan help to keep you on track, it may also help to secure funding.
Find a group of like-minded people in your area to help you. As you begin to plan, determine what skills they have, in order to determine what their responsibilities and duties will be. Each person will bring unique abilities to the table, and you must find a way to tap into those strengths.
What will your paper be called? What will its focus be? How often will you publish? How will you fund the publishing and distribution? How will you distribute it?
All these question, and many more, will need to be answered in your plan.
How will I pay for it?
Without a secure reliable source of revenue, you will never get your paper off the ground. The best plan in the world will not help you, if you are unable to implement it. So, how would you go about securing the funding necessary to launch your newspaper? There are many ways, and how you go about it may be different than how others do. You may choose to raise money through bake sales, or by approaching small businesses in your area to run ads. You may secure grants through sympathetic foundations or organizations, through donations from private individuals, or by paid subscriptions from readers.
How you intend to fund the venture should be a major part of your plan.
How will I publish my newspaper?
How you choose to print and publish your newspaper is important. Anyone can run to Kinkos and run off 100 copies of a piece of paper. Actually publishing a newspaper, on the other hand, requires a little more work and planning.
One option is to approach a small local newspaper, and pay for a printing job. Many small newspapers perform third-party printing work in order to make extra money. You will be required, usually, to provide a camera-ready work for them to print. There are some software packages that can assist you in preparing a camera-ready work. An example would be Quark XPress, which can provide camera-ready artwork in PDF format.
How you prepare your newspaper copy will be determined by your printer. Many will have specific requirements, and when choosing a printer it is important to determine what their requirements are and whether you are able to meet those requirements.
How will I distribute my newspaper?
The manner in which you distribute your newspaper will again vary, depending on your needs, circumstances, and locality. You may be able to negotiate a deal by becoming an insert within another published paper. Another option would be to pay for placement through a company in your area that provides this type of service. The next time you are in a supermarket, or at a bus stop and you see the newspaper racks, check it out and find the information about the company that provides the racks and the space. Contact them and find out about placement for your paper.
Another option would be mail-order, home delivery, or you and some friends could hand them out to passers-by at a local shopping center.
When distributing, be creative. The more you distribute, the more people you will reach with your message.
A word of warning: Liberals, being intolerant as they are, have been know to steal and destroy as many copies of conservative papers as they can get their hands on. Depending on your area, you may need to take this type of activity into account. Secondly, they have also been known to slip inserts into other newspapers. Again, this may be something you need to watch for.
What are the legal issues involved?
This is a good question one that I have relatively few answers for. The obvious one, which revolve around Libel, is something that I hope any lawyers here can answer. Other issues may include incorporating, LLCs, etc. which vary from locale to locale.
The title SHOULD NOT be something blatently right wing, lest the publications do get stolen and thrown away by rabid leftists as already mentioned. In fact, IMHO, the WHOLE PUBLICATION needs to be very SUBTLE without compromising principle.
Perhaps "The Boiled Frog" (How do you boil a live frog? Very slowly lest it detect the heat and jump from the pot - an analogy to what's happened in America via incremental legislation and judicial activism). "The Toasted Toad" would be similar. Or, how about "Eagles Up"? I'm sure we can come up with lots of other good ideas.
PS: Needs to be generic for distribution in any locale, i.e., "Capitol" won't work in the title.
I've seen some outrageous reporting in alternate newspapers, but these left wing papers get a pass on whatever they say and no advertisers pull away from them.
I'm quite sure a Conservative alternate newspaper wouldn't get the same treatment as a left wing paper. Print one column that "offends" liberals and the liberal double standard would kick in: Advertisers would be pressured to pull out, lawsuits would have to be paid for, and the paper racks would be vandelized.
The definition of "objective journalism" is self-referential.The objectivity of anyone who adheres to the "party line" that mainstream journalists are objective (including of course the mainstream journalists themselves) is never challenged by any (other) member of mainstream journalism. It would be against the rules of the Establishment which is mainstream journalism.
If a Bernard Goldberg does write a Bias, he does not cease being a journalist--he is an unperson who never was a journalist.
The least regulated form of publication is the Internet web site, and it is no accident that you are reading the above subversive description of reality on a web site and nowhere else. Even a newsletter would be subject to more hassles, as Noachian has noted. Broadcast TV is the most Establishment-regulated, followed by big newspapers (Washington Times the only maverick) and cable news (Fox News Channel the only maverick). Radio, where conservative-hosted shows are rife, is remarkably low-regulation, if you don't notice that even the most conservative hosts are interrupted by anticonservative news programs. Rush's EIB network is the greatest conservative address in publishing space currently extant.
My humble opinion is that FreeRepublic.com is superior to anything other than Rush, and Rush's superiority lies only in his great address which only requires a pocket radio to access. Great addresses are expensive, tho--and even your newsletter costs money. I vote for spending that spare change on advertising FreeRepublic.com to improve the value of its address.
Why Broadcast Journalism
is Unnecessary and Illegitimate
No problemo. My business experience tells me - when in doubt -punt!
You do what every on-the-edge-business does, you firewall your assets and set yourself up for quick restart under a different name. You put the whole business in the name of your insane penniless aunt in the asylum, so any lawsuit goes nowhere. All profits are sucked up by wages. Write under nom-de-plumes. You guys get the idea. Trust me, I've had to operate this way on many occasions for self preservation.
If you're serious, I can fix you up with some military safe-contents thermite incendiary packs as used to ensure the security of classified data.
Honk! Honk! Why it's Waffles, the goose!
-archy-/-
First off, let me be blunt: . ... .
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So, there you have it - a few ideas that will hopefully spark some discussion, ideas, activism, and information.
This is an ongoing work in progress, and is in no way complete.
First project for you, using the names of those who've responded to this post: Compile yourself four ping lists of FReepers who've expressed interest, with one for those interested in or contributing to the project in general [I added a *FR-RAG* tag in the keywords; that'll do until a tentative project name can be slugged onto it] and one each for the three legs of the journalistic endeavor tripod- circulation/distribution, editorial, and business/ advertising.
I've got around 35 years on and off working for various newspapers from the defunct Chicago Daily News and St Louis Sun to county weeklies and as a chain syndicated columnist. Of late I've been involved with a couple of magazines and online *new media* projects, and if I can help in any way with the startup of another one, I'd love to. It's a swell idea.
-archy-/-
Most images for newspapers look 100% better using a "real" camera rather than a less expensive digital camera. (the issue is resolution rates and image size for the computer systems.)
I've been a newspaper and magazine photog since 1970, my start in the newspaper racket was as a news photog. If we need fotos, we can get 'em, either utilizing the best of the new technology as it develops [word carefully chosen!] or the old tried-and-true way if necessary. We CAN make it happen, aside from the easy use of shots from wireservices, stringers, freelancers and stock shot houses.
No big deal. A lot more has to be worked out before worrying about pic content becomes a particularly major consideration.
-archy-/- -
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