If You Can’t Make Journalism Profitable, Make It Not-for-Profit

A few of Hamilton’s top-ranking police officers and their communications director gather in the Mulberry Street Coffeehouse, as rain gently falls outside on an August morning. They are still in uniform, hats off, looking relaxed as they joke with each other and ease into their chairs in a secluded corner. As investigative journalist and Canadian… Continue reading If You Can’t Make Journalism Profitable, Make It Not-for-Profit

Online paper’s one-man newsroom beats established paper by exposing a gutted fire department

Gagandeep Ghuman’s office in downtown Squamish, British Columbia, regularly consists of a seat in a coffee shop, a cell phone and his laptop. Ghuman is the reporter and editor for his online newspaper, The Squamish Reporter. “It’s a one-man newsroom,” he says. In September of 2010, he wrote and published “Playing with Fire,” a story… Continue reading Online paper’s one-man newsroom beats established paper by exposing a gutted fire department

Is Canada Neglecting Its Journalistic Past?

Bob Huggins thought he had come up with a nearly surefire plan to make some money and secure a legacy for himself. He would make Canada’s historical newspaper records available to anyone with access to a computer and a public library card. It would be North America’s first large-scale newspaper digitization program, and when he… Continue reading Is Canada Neglecting Its Journalistic Past?

Canada lags behind as online platforms help long-form journalism thrive in the United States

Paul Lima says he nearly doubled the profits from nine of his non-fiction books by publishing them as e-books on Amazon’s Kindle website. His feature writing how-to guides sell for two-thirds the price of their hard copy counterparts, but more people buy them. “I’m making money that I wouldn’t have otherwise with the Kindle,” he… Continue reading Canada lags behind as online platforms help long-form journalism thrive in the United States

Toronto Life’s Christine Dewairy faces design challenger

At Maclean’s, art director Christine Dewairy was responsible for redesigning a tired magazine for the “grandparents,” as she puts it, that was lagging on the newsstand. But when she became responsible for an additional three magazines (MoneySense, Canadian Business and Profit), she found herself doing more overseeing and less designing. So when Toronto Life  editor… Continue reading Toronto Life’s Christine Dewairy faces design challenger

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