New York Times Ends Publication of ‘The Local’ in New Jersey and Directs its Readers to Baristanet

From the NY Times:

The decision has been made to use the knowledge we have gained from the New Jersey Local and take the experiment in a new and exciting direction. And so today this part of The New York Times hyperlocal experiment has come to an end.

The Times is passing the baton to another site, Baristanet.com. Baristanet is one of the most successful hyperlocal Web sites in the country, and its owners, Debbie Galant and Liz George, both experienced writers and editors, are leaders in the field.

The new and exciting direction of which NYT speaks of is to cease publication… it seems lots of companies these days are trying this new approach to er…business.  Publicly traded NYT shut their experiment down because they couldn’t figure out how to make money with it, plain and simple.  Just looking at the The Local I could say, “where the hell is all the local advertising”?

Thankfully, Galant and George don’t seem to have any problem making money with their local news style.  Their sites content AND advertisements are plentiful and on topic.   A statement from their site follows below. Good luck to them and Happy Newsing.

Press Release from Baristanet

Starting tomorrow, July 1, the place we all call Baristaville gets bigger.

We will begin covering Maplewood, Millburn and South Orange with sites for each town as The New York Times today ends publication of The Local in New Jersey and directs its readers in those three towns to Baristanet.

We’ve served MontclairGlen Ridge and Bloomfield — towns encompassing about 90,000 people — since 2004. Expanding to MaplewoodSouth Orange and Millburn will bring Baristanet’s coverage area to 150,000.

“Hyperlocal journalism is constantly evolving, and as The Times continues to investigate this arena, we’ll watch with great interest how our friends at Baristanet advance the cause in Maplewood, South Orange and Millburn,” said Jim Schachter, associate managing editor.

We’re thrilled that the Times has passed their hyperlocal baton to us and we will run with it. First and foremost, we are your local homegrown online community. And to that end, we are bringing these new towns into an expanded “Baristaville” by staying local. Journalist and Maplewood resident Jolie Solomon joins the Baristanet team along with community contributors from Maplewood, South Orange and Millburn.

What does this mean for you dear readers? More to love, we hope, and some new voices as we welcome these towns and new readers into the online community you helped create. Thanks for everything you do to make this site an online news and entertainment destination and a true community. And feel free to say hi and interact with your new neighbors in Baristaville.

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Visit Baristanet.com for more.

Building a Community News Blog Day 1

Follow along as metaprinter.com founder and senior writer Robert Ivan builds a community news blog for Aberdeen Township New Jersey at NJcircles.com/AberdeenTownship.

I figure this could be a huge help for many of my readers who are either interested in starting their own community site (some call this BeatBlogging).  To my main stream media readers  who come here to stay on top of news media trends, this entire exercise could be a real lesson in the new realities of online publishing.

The site is called NJcircles (because I already had the domain from a previous project) and is located at NJcircles.com/AberdeenTownship and built using Movable Type.  I selected MT because the metaprinter site is built on WordPress and I’ve got those skills down pretty good, so I want to learn Movable Type CMS and share that experience as well.   It doesn’t hurt that MT is used by power bloggers like Jason Kottke, media companies like National Geographic, and community news sites like Baristanet.

Here are the first steps.  I’m going to assume you know how to do certain things so please let me know if you need help and we’ll work through this together. Continue reading

Q&A with Baristanet Co-Owner Liz George

Baristanet.com is a leading independent news site in NJ. Many news media experts consider Baristanet to be a whopping success in a sea of general interist news site and blog failures (traditional and nontraditional). Business is good at Baristanet and they are enjoying a growing community presence. At O’RIELLY Tools of Change 2009 Future of News panel discussion, Jeff Jarvis went so far as to suggest that New Jersey’s largest newspaper, The Star-Ledger, enter into some kind of partnership with Baristanet to share resources.

Following the TOC 2009 event I wanted to learn more about this hyperlocal hero.  What follows is an email Q&A between metaprinter.com founder Robert Ivan and Baristanet.com Co-Owner Liz George. Enjoy!

RI- Introduce yourself and tell us what you do on a daily basis at Baristanet.

LG- I’m Liz George and I’m the co-owner and editor of Baristanet. My partner and the site’s founder Deb Galant started Baristanet in May 2004. Her initial partnership did not work out; we started working together in August 2004 and soon after became partners.

On any given day, I’m either writing for Baristanet, editing the stories from other writers and contributors, assigning stories, updating the site with breaking news, answering requests from readers, community organizations, businesses, etc., and working on developing new aspects and features of the site, new projects and alliances. Some days, Deb and I will meet, but typically we do most of our work virtually and fill in with phone calls and emails. Deb handles more of the ad sales end of things. Continue reading