Here's our first post, and some news about the future of YES!Weekly.
Tap tap. Is this thing on? Can you hear me in the back?
Okay.
This is our first foray into the series of tubes, porn and spyware that is the internets. All right, maybe it's our second try, but cut us a break. We were young, and we needed the money.
Plus, when we had good stuff to write, we saved it for the paper.
Well, not no more!
This space will serve as a repository for all the crap not quite fit for print — behind-the-scenes takes on our feature stories; inside looks into newsgathering techniques and editorial decision making (hooray for transparency!); notes on artwork, photography, headline writing... all the mind-numbing minutiae of our jobs! And maybe a few tales of our office antics. Hilarious!
Let's lay down the ground rules:
Right now we're in free-for-all mode, and we'd like to keep it that way. But this is our turf, and we'll delete inappropriate comments and throw your ass out as we see fit.
That being said, the bar for tolerance is set pretty high — we're kind of a raw bunch, and we can't promise you that our content here will always be "family friendly."
We will allow anonymous commenters, with the caveat that, as reporters, we think anonymous comments are of dubious veracity. Also, it's kinda pussy.
You can get tough if you like — we're into rigorous debate. But be prepared to defend your positions, and don't get all pissy if someone disagrees. Don't be concerned with "winning" or "losing" a virtual argument so much as... refining the rhetoric.
Yeah, that's it.
Oh, and no SPAM.
Moving on...
We have big news.
As of Nov. 1 our Winston-Salem bureau will be up and running.
Crazy, right?
We're not leaving Greensboro — our Adams Farm offices will still be buzzing with activity — but we're dispatching a couple reporters to a space on Trade Street to gather news, sniff out feature stories and generally check out the scene. We'll be bringing the YES! Weekly brand of investigative journalism, spot-on news coverage, hard-hitting opinion and savvy cultural writing to the foothills, and it will debut in our Nov. 7 issue.
We're upping our distribution in Forsyth County as well. Publisher Charles Womack, the hardest working man in the newspaper business, and Marketing Executive Brad McCauley have been installing new distribution points all week.
Its exciting and, after nearly three years on the scene, long overdue. There are some incredible people and happenings in the Camel City. We want to give them the weekly they deserve.
That's all I got for now. I'll keep everyone posted as things develop.
2 comments:
I've enjoyed your covers since you joined Yes Weekly.
Thanks for the insight into your creative process.
Thanks, Jeffrey! I'm assuming you meant to comment on my post, and not this one by Brian Clary. Although the covers have been pretty good since he joined, too.
Post a Comment