

“Unfortunately the distribution system for NOISE as a print product wasn’t always as strong as I thought it could have been. In 2008, Fisher said Gannett made a 10 percent employee cut “across the entire organization.” Between August and December 2008, the LSJ cut 40 positions - including the full-time NOISE staff - and another 26 in 2009 (though some blogs that cover Gannett said it was 28).īetween 20, Fisher said NOISE went from being a “separate thing” from the LSJ to “definitely contributing more to the LSJ as an entity.” Fisher said the news about going online-only “didn’t surprise me.” Hirten said now the staff is a mix of “freelance, internal staff and staff-assigned.”įisher was laid off from Gannett in 2008 after working there since 1997. Our great watchdog journalism doesn’t pay for itself but it’s a commitment we have.”īrian Fisher, editor of NOISE from November 2004 to December 2008, was there when the paper had two full-time reporters, a full-time photographer, a creative manager, a copy editor and one part-time staffer. We do things that don’t have direct revenue tied to them. If it turns out NOISE is not viable online, either, Marymont said “we’ll have to weigh the importance of serving those audiences in those ways. “That was all discussed at the local level,” she said. Marymont could not comment on whether NOISE was hemorrhaging money. Other products include and specialized publications like and. Gannett owns 82 daily newspapers in the U.S., including USA Today, and 23 television stations. “We can reach some better with a digital platform than print for something like NOISE.” “In this case, our young audience has gone very digital,” Marymont, who has been at Gannett for three years, said. Kate Marymont, vice president of news at Gannett, could not confirm if any more of Gannett’s weeklies were moving online. Identical news about Gannett’s Indianapolis-based weekly Metromix also surfaced last week. They don’t want to wait until Thursday when they can have it on Friday. “I’m not discussing our finances any more than how are you guys doing?" (City Pulse has been profitable for about six years, Schwartz said.) "It was a viable publication, certainly,” he said. Hirten said in an interview that the move is strictly market-driven and denied Noise was losing money. “An enhanced Web site, set for a June 22 launch, will be immediate, personal and portable, featuring the region’s most comprehensive local entertainment calendar, profiles of musical acts headed to local stages, food reviews, LCC video and other favorites.” Mickey Hirten, executive editor of the Gannett-owned Lansing State Journal, announced the news on the LSJ’s website last week: “The move reflects the news and information preferences of NOISE’s young audience,” he wrote. (City Pulse printed 19,995 copies this week, of which 5 to 10 percent will be left over, publisher Berl Schwartz said.)
LANSING STATE JOURNAL CLASSIFIEDS GARAGE SALES DRIVER
One NOISE driver told City Pulse even if 80 out of 100 papers were left at a stop, numbers never got cut. No matter: Stacks of old NOISE copies were returned a week later.

Its distribution fell to 17,000 about two years ago NOISE tried to generate more pick-up by deploying a wave of red boxes around town. Several years ago, the full-time staff disappeared and its page count dropped to 16 or 20. NOISE started as a robust 48-page product with a full-time staff of nine and a distribution of 20,000 copies. In 2002, Lansing and Boise, Idaho, were guinea pig markets for media giant Gannett’s plans to launch weekly tabloids - which the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies dubbed “faux alt-weekly” publications - that targeted a young and hip news consumer.Īfter this week’s issue, NOISE becomes an online-only publication.
