Archive for July, 2007

New biography out on comic strip artist Milton Caniff

Thursday, July 26th, 2007

A month or so ago, I wrote in this blog about a Web site where you can find a day-to-day reposting of vintage Steve Canyon comic strips.

Now, this update: A new book was published last week, a biography of Steve Canyon writer/artist Milton Caniff:

Meanwhile…: A Biography of Milton Caniff, Creator of Terry and the Pirates and Steve Canyon

No, that’s not an excerpt. That’s just the title.

Caniff Biography

From the publisher-supplied description at Amazon:

While Milton Caniff provides a biography of Caniff and analyzes his storytelling techniques, it also serves as a history of the medium and reveals the inner workings of the syndicate business (at which Caniff was as expert as he was at cartooning).

Milton Caniff

…The book charts Caniff’s rise to fame and fortune through artistic excellence and patriotic fervor when the characters in his comic strip Terry and the Pirates entered World War II, then recounts the decline of his strip Steve Canyon’s popularity (whose protagonist served as an unofficial spokesman for the U.S. Air Force from the Korean War until the end of the strip in 1988) when the same brand of patriotism that had inspired admiration during World War II provoked protest during Vietnam, a bittersweet conclusion to a career spent producing a daily feature for 55 years, a record that would stand for a generation.

At 800 pages, Amazon’s price of $23.07 seems like a bargain. Find it here:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1560977825/ref=wl_it_dp/102-2214167-4492900?ie=UTF8&coliid=I3SGBEXLJ8HSG7&colid=HCA0D2V1OL90

Read my earlier post about the Steve Canyon online publishing effort here:
http://www.visualeditors.com/apple/2007/06/vintage-steve-canyon-comic-strips-online/

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A report on the size of newspaper home pages

Wednesday, July 25th, 2007

The Bivings Report posted an interesting piece today in which they examined the size of newspaper home pages:

In looking at newspaper websites, it becomes clear pretty quickly that their homepages are bloated. They try to stick as much data as possible on the homepage (including ads).

Given that, we decided to look at the file sizes of the homepages of the top 10 newspapers, and how much of that file size is devoted to advertising. Note that file size does not always equate to load times. Other factors such as the number of database calls and the quality of the hosting environment play big roles.

Bivings downloaded the pages with ads and, using Adblock, without ads.

A few results:

USA Today

USA Today
- With Ads: 735 KB
- No Ads: 570 KB

New York Times

New York Times
-With Ads: 655 KB
-No Ads: 434 KB

LA Times

LA Times
-With Ads: 897 KB
-No Ads: 772 KB

Chicago Tribune

Chicago Tribune
-With Ads: 687 KB
-No Ads: 592 KB

Washington Post

Washington Post
-With Ads: 569 KB
-No Ads: 475 KB

Compare those numbers with the sizes of these common sites:

Google: 15 KB
Yahoo: 155 KB
Amazon: 519 KB
MySpace: 162 KB

Bivings notes:

Based on the sizes of these pages, none of these papers is designing for dial up users, except the Houston Chronicle.

The Chronicle’s numbers:

Chronicle

Houston Chronicle
-With Ads: 205 KB
-No Ads: 136 KB

Interesting stuff. I’ll have to keep an eye on these guys. Check out the full report here:
http://www.bivingsreport.com/2007/newspaper-homepages-and-load-times/

Bivings recently published a study of the features available on newspaper Web sites. Read it here:
http://www.bivingsreport.com/2007/american-newspapers-and-the-internet-threat-or-opportunity/

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Of Monopoly, Operation and other visual cliches

Wednesday, July 25th, 2007

Alan Jacobson’s Sunday Best Front Page site cited the Frederick (Md.) News-Post for its centerpiece illustration of a Monopoly board. Alan wrote:

The newspaper with the best front design today is The Frederick News-Post for a deftly handled photo illustration.

The News-Post didn’t play games with its Monopoly metaphor. It was handled with aplomb, right down to the typographical details.

Frederick page

Find it in the archive at Alan’s BFD site:
http://www.bestfrontdesign.com/072207.html

Meanwhile, a couple of readers questioned that. Paul Wallen, design director of the Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel, commented:

I have to admit that I’m a bit puzzled…

I mean no offense to the good folks in Fredericksburg, as I’m sure this worked for them. At the same time, the Monopoly board has just been done so, so many times that I have to think it’s even a bit tiresome for readers at this point. The execution is fine and I really don’t mean to criticize the work so much as say I’m surprised it would be preferred over some really smart, impactful presentations you mention here.

And yeah: Paul has a point. The Monopoly thing has been done time and time again. It’s a visual cliché.

But does it work? Does it work for this particular story? Does it work for this particular set of readers?

If it does, then good for the folks in Frederick. If not, then perhaps they should have tried something else.

That’s what’s fascinating about Alan’s daily BFD exercise (and NewsPageDesigner and the Newseum and the gallery here at VizEds, too, for that matter): We get to see work from all over the country, from papers and communities big and small.

The downside, of course, is that we’re seeing the pages out of context.

The Monopoly cliché is a common one. I’ve done that one myself perhaps four or five times in my 20+ years in the business. My most recent attempt was in December 2005. I don’t have the entire page, unfortunately, but here is my photoillustration:

My Monopoly centerpiece

Unlike the News-Post’s more recent illustration, I didn’t try to reproduce the precise typography when I renamed the properties in my piece. Why? I wanted the names to pop more. Not at subtle as Frederick’s version. But I’m not a very subtle photoillustrator.

I also wanted to take out all the text that I thought would detract from the whole. Note I Photoshopped out the text in the “Go” space.

Here is Frederick’s centerpiece again:

Frederick centerpiece

I like the Frederick page. The art is clean. My only quibble: I dislike how that little box on the right overlaps onto the illustration. I wonder if it would have been possible to consolidate all those boxes into a table or something to run across the bottom of the package. Then, you could wrap the story into two legs between the illo and the table.

Just a thought.

In some of my presentations, I do a whole riff on clichés. My favorite example is another game board piece: The sports injuries graphic I built last year with Xinning Huang. She did most of the research and drew the little medical icons; I designed the page and redrew the main art after we discovered that a photo just wouldn’t work at that size:

My Operation page

Initially, Xinning and I had planned to construct an illustration or a photoillustration of a football player as lead art. Our DME, Deborah Withey, however, urged us to use the Operation game board guy.

By the way, did you know his official name is Cavity Sam? I didn’t, either. He’s such an icon that you can even buy rip-off Halloween costumes of him:

Halloween costume

Find it here:
http://www.costumesgalore.net/operation_game_guy.html

So anyway, we went in that direction. And we had our misgivings. Especially when one of our editors raised a yellow flag: He had no idea who the little fellow was. He had never heard of Operation. Luckily, he chose not to press the matter and the page ran the way we designed it.

And it received a pretty strong positive reaction. At our daily in-house “kudos” session the next morning, we heard from several staffers who said their kids picked up the page and absorbed the info. The familiarity of Cavity Sam made a page on common sports injuries a lot more accessible than we could have achieved with another illustration. And the fact that it ran on the back of sports – it’s rare we get an open page back there – meant that it caught the eye of folks who normally didn’t read sports.

The lesson for me was: Clichés can be a good thing. If they’re used properly.

This point was driven home even more strongly when I was serving as a judge for the graphics category at the Society for News Design judging last February in Syracuse, N.Y. One of the other judges picked up that very page from a table of entries and complained that it was a tired, old cliché.

At first, I thought the judge was putting me on, but he was completely serious. I asked him to check out the byline. He was awfully embarrassed to find me listed there. That’s why they ask judges not to discuss entries until the medal rounds, I suppose.

The page didn’t win a graphics award. But I got the last laugh a few weeks later when I was told the page had won an Award of Excellence for Page Design – my first-ever win in that category. Pretty good, considering I didn’t enter it in that category. Turned out, Lori Kelley, The Pilot’s most excellent deputy design director, had, on a lark, inserted a spare copy of that page into our entries in that category.

Thanks again, Lori!

But while that award looks awfully spiffy on my wall, my fellow judge has a good point — the same one Paul Wallen made. It is a cliché. Perhaps a time-worn one.

Here are a few other Operation game board pages from around the country. If you’ve seen any of my slide shows, then perhaps you’ve seen these examples before. Click on the thumbnail for a larger view. From left to right:

Jonathan Berlin RedEye Lindi Daywalt

1. This was by the Merc’s Jonathan Berlin, back when he was still with The Rocky Mountain News. Find Jonathan’s portfolio here:
http://www.newspagedesigner.com/portfolios/portfolio1.php?UserID=432

2. Here’s one from Chicago’s RedEye.

3. This was by my former intern Lindi Daywalt of the Ft. Myers, Fla., News-Press. Find Lindi’s portfolio here:
http://www.newspagedesigner.com/portfolios/portfolio1.php?UserID=6377

Bob Schneider RedEye woman Lauren Kuntz

4. Here’s one from Bob Schneider of The Reading (Pa.) Eagle.

5. Here’s another one from RedEye – this one ran in January. Note they’ve turned Cavity Sam into Cavity Samantha. Now that’s an Operation!

6. And then there’s this one, from Lauren Kuntz, a student at Ohio University. I spotted it in her classwork portfolio and asked her for a copy for my slideshow. Nicely done, Lauren! Find her portfolio here:
http://www.laurenkuntz.com/

And what do these hackeyed, old clichés have in common?

They work. They work for the stories they accompany and they work for their respective audiences.

One more point to make on this subject…

David Kordalski, AME of the Cleveland Plain Dealer, posed a fabulous question on that BFD page:

Question for discussion: Does using the Monopoly board (even with minor changes to localize) constitute copyright infringement? Can’t see how it would fall under fair use, as the story has nothing to do with the game, or coverage of Parker Bros. It is a gray area, though. Thoughts?

Nick Masuda, Managing Editor for Visuals of the Lewiston (Maine) Sun Journal, responded:

You know, the same thing crossed my mind yesterday. We did a similar thing on our Perspective cover about six months ago and had that conversation. We gave a credit to Parker Bros., although we pretty much changed everything.

I think, in cases of mimicking board games, they are fair game. It isn’t something you should do too often, but people identify do identify with the image. You must make it your own, however.

Is it a form of free advertising for Parker Bros.? Yes. Has anyone ever received a phone call on this, from Parker Bros.? I think it would be interesting to do a industry story in Design magazine on how companies feel about the use of their products or symbols (example: Wal-Mart’s happy face).

Section 107 of the U.S. copyright law – commonly called the “Fair Use Doctrine” – lays out four criteria for determining whether copyright has been violated:

  • 1. Did you use the material for journalistic or nonprofit educational purposes?
  • 2. What is the nature of the copyrighted material? Fictional material, for example, is generally awarded more protection than is nonfiction.
  • 3. How much of the material – compared the the whole of the copyrighted work – did you actually use?
  • 4. Did your use damage the potential market value of the original work?

Read more about the Fair Use Doctrine here:
http://www.copyright.gov/fls/fl102.html

And while you’re at it, bookmark this page from Stanford University’s Fair Use Center:
http://fairuse.stanford.edu/Copyright_and_Fair_Use_Overview/index.html

See my previous post on this topic:
http://www.visualeditors.com/apple/2007/05/todays-lesson-copyright-law-and-fair-use/

While newspapers aren’t exactly a non-profit venture — well, most of them aren’t; please insert your own financial doom-and-gloom joke here — this art is used as a visual metaphor in a newspaper, in order to make a journalistic point. On the back of sports, in the case of our Operation illo.

I didn’t use all the Operation game, just Cavity Sam. And no, I don’t think that anyone would rip the tearsheet out of that day’s Pilot and attempt to use it as a substitute for the actual Parker Brothers game.

Therefore I believe we were in the clear to use that illustration the way we did. If we attempted to make an electronic kid’s game with the art, or if we tried to sell t-shirts with the art—that would be an entirely different matter.

But then Tom Peyton, Visuals Director of The State in Columbia, S.C. and formerly of the Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel, wrote at BFD:

If they wanted to pursue, Parkers Bros, they would have a strong case. Using the game/board has nothing to do with the story on the front… Even giving credit is not good enough unless an agreement had been worked out in advance.

How do I know? Years ago I made a mistake. You can learn a lot about copyright infringement when you cost the company you work for money.

You’re rolling the dice when it comes to other people’s work.

Rolling the dice? Game board clichés? Nice pun, Tom.

But Tom’s advice is important to hear. Sounds like he earned that wisdom the hard way.

So: What do you think? Should we all think twice before we use a game board motif again?

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Free N.C. daily celebrates first month in print

Tuesday, July 24th, 2007

Jim McBee, managing editor of an interesting new startup newspaper in Fayetteville, N.C., called SmartNews, wrote last week:

Finally got SmartNews into the lineup for Newseum’s Today’s Front Page. You can look us up at newseum.org.

We publish Tuesday through Friday, so you won’t see anything Saturday through Monday. A Saturday edition will come one of these days.

My goal is to push this more in the direction of a magazine feel.

SmartNews has been publishing not quite a month-and-a-half, now. Jim’s boss, publisher Randy Foster, is the brain behind the operation. Randy spent six years an editor with The Fayetteville Observer. He quit to go into competition with his former paper.

Today’s SmartNews front

Randy told the Free-Daily blog last week:

I am 47 and have held every job at newspapers but one: publisher. I’ve also consulted for other papers to help them look better, read better and be more efficient. Almost every paper I have worked for or with became General Excellence papers. Papers where I was the senior editor have all grown in circulation. I thought it was time that I put what I know to work for myself.

Smart News circulates in Cumberland, Sampson and Hokie counties in southeast North Carolina. So far, it’s been a real do-it-yourselfer for Randy. He told Free-Daily:

On our first day, we had six people — friends, relatives and employees — and four of our five sons out trying to deliver 15,000 copies. Another six people we hired for distribution didn’t show up. Getting distributors to show up for the job has been surprisingly hard.

We scaled back on distribution to better reflect our resources, and 8,000 copies, four days a week, has become a comfortable zone. My goal is to get back to 15,000 a day and add a Saturday edition sometime in the next six months.

Randy is doing it all right now with:

  • two editors
  • two correspondents
  • one paid news intern
  • three news stringers
  • four ad salespeople
  • two full-time circulation employees
  • and 16 independent distributors

He’s gradually staffing up. Randy says:

“Quality not quantity” is reflected in how I staff the paper. I pay premium wages, and I mean premium. I’d rather have a few great people than a roomful of people who don’t know how to excel.

Randy says he’s been surprised at…

…how thirsty people are for an interesting newspaper.

I’ve been in the business a long time and have read about and written about the gloom and doom predictions for the newspaper industry. And working for dailies, I could see why people wouldn’t want to pay for them. As an editor, most of the stories I read I only did so because I was paid for it. They’re dull, irrelevant, arrogant, inaccessible — even among papers that say they are trying to change all that.

The mantra these days is “local, local, local”, but I think “interesting, interesting, interesting” is even better. We’re aiming for interesting and local. And it is working.

Sounds terrific. So I thought I’d pop off a few quick questions to Jim McBee — who, again, is the newly-hired managing editor of SmartNews.

Q: When did you start?

A: I started July 9.

Q: What’s it like to be back in Fayetteville?

A: Well, I’m not really back, yet. Naturally, my career move comes right after the bottom dropped out of the real estate market. So I’m working from home while I try to sell this place in Bluffton, S.C. At this early stage, that’s acceptable. As we grow and I need to hire and manage people, that will be more problematic. However, for now, I take my dog to work every day.

McBee Earth
The Earth moves for Jim McBee
at SND/Houston in 2005.

Q: What kind of hardware and software are you using?

A: I bought a MacBook Pro, a 23-inch cinema display and the basic InDesign CS3 design suite. I stay in touch by instant messenger and phone.

Q: What is the size of each day’s edition? Number of pages, I mean.

A: 16 full color pages.

Q: The web site is curiously empty. When does Randy hope to get that up and running?

A: We haven’t dealt with the Web, yet. But certainly it looms as sort of the next big thing in the back of my mind. We really need to channel reader input into the paper, and the Web is a major component of that.

Q: This is your second consecutive start-up paper. Any advice for folks who see the ads for free tab startups and wonder if they should gamble their careers on them?

A: Any job you take is a risk. At a conventional paid daily, you know the business model is failing — it’s just a matter of time. Can you get what you need from that job before you get a pink slip?

At a startup, the potential is much greater, but the possibility that the enterprise just suddenly goes belly up is greater, too.

All the growth in newspapers is in freebies, however. All the shrinkage is in paid circulation.

Q: How many hours are you working?

A: I haven’t really been tracking time. The plan is to add a Saturday edition when the advertising builds up to that, but spread that workload over four days. So I think we’re looking at four long days and then a nice breather.

Q: Are you happy?

A: I’m on the right track.

And now, for the samples. First, three front pages from last week and today’s front. As always, click on the thumbnail for a larger view:

July 17 front July 18 front July 20 front July 24 front

And here are a few inside pages:

July 17 inside page Another July 17 page July 18 page

Find the SmartNews web site here:
http://www.smartnewsnc.com/index.htm

Read the Q&A with Randy Foster in the Free-daily blog:
http://free-daily.blogspot.com/2007/07/editor-opens-free-daily-in-n-carolina.html

Find McBee’s online portfolio here:
http://www.newspagedesigner.com/portfolios/portfolio1.php?UserID=2398

Keep up the good work, Randy!

And Jimbo: Keep us posted, please.

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Happy birthday, Howard Finberg

Tuesday, July 24th, 2007

Here’s wishing the happiest of VizEds birthdays to famed news technology guru Howard Finberg.

Howard Finberg

Howard is Director of Interactive Learning at the Poynter Institute, where he runs NewsUniversity.

Richard Curtis, managing editor of USA Today visuals, writes:

Howard and I are always kidding each other about being the “greybeards” of SND. When we sit together at SND functions, we refer to the table as the greybeards table. He’s been prematurely grey-headed, like, forever.

He’s a great guy, good sense of humor, very astute journalist.

Howard began his career as an editor at the San Francisco Examiner. His career eventually took him to The San Francisco Chronicle, The San Jose Mercury News, The New York Times and the Chicago Tribune.

Howard established the Tribune’s graphics desk, one of the first in the country. He also founded the nation’s first syndicated newspaper graphics service. “By SNAIL MAIL!,” Richard points out.

He was the founding president of the Society for News Design Foundation. That was in 1982, I believe.

In 1987, Howard became AME for Sunday, Features, Visuals and Technology at The Arizona Republic. He revamped the paper’s technological infrastructure and directed the Republic’s first online efforts in 1995.

Since then, Howard created a consulting firm, wrote a weekly column for Editor & Publisher magazine and served as a senior fellow for the American Press Institute. He moved to Poynter in 2002 as a presidential scholar and joined full-time in 2003. He’s regarded as one of the world’s foremost experts on the impact of new technology on journalism.

Howard shares a birthday with actors Anna Paquin, Michael Richards and Lynda Carter, musician Jennifer Lopez and San Francisco Giant Barry Bonds.

He also shares a birthday with Poynter’s ethics guru, Bob Steele. Talk about a small world.

Best wishes, Howard! And thanks for all you’ve done for visual journalism.

Find NewsUniversity here:
http://www.newsu.org/

Find Howard’s Digital Futurist site here:
http://www.digitalfuturist.com/

Find Howard’s writings for Poynter here:
http://www.poynter.org/search/results_article.asp?cdl_userID=1354&btn_submit=true

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Doh! Waiting for The Simpsons Movie

Monday, July 23rd, 2007

If we’ve waited this long for The Simpsons Movie to finally come to the local megaplex, I guess another five days won’t kill us. Opening day is Friday.

While you’re waiting, you might want to log on to The Simpsons Movie web site and create a version of yourself as a Simpsons character. You can choose body type and coloring, hair, eyes, noses, degree of ridiculous Matt Groening-style overbite, and so on.

the-apple-family.jpg

From left: Me, my wife and my
daughter, done up in Simpsons style.

You’ll have to register. But, hey, it’s amusing and it kills a few minutes. And don’t kid me: I know you’ll do this at work.

Check it out here:
http://www.simpsonsmovie.com

UPDATE:
Turns out, our friends over at the News Artists Organization already have a a thread about these Simpons avatars. Several folks have posted their renderings of themselves. Check them out here:
http://www.newsartists.org/forums/showthread.php?p=29511#post29511

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