Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Md Troopers Assoc #20 & Westminster Md Fire Dept Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Showing posts with label Journalists Sears-Bryan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Journalists Sears-Bryan. Show all posts

Friday, October 29, 2010

Recent articles by Bryan P Sears on Patch


Lutherville-Timonium Patch




Recent articles by Bryan P Sears on Patch


ELECTIONS
Oct 20, 2010
. Sutley, a 42-year-old attorney, was arrested twice for driving under the influence when he was 19 and 22. The two are competing in the District 3 race to replace Councilman BryanMcIntire, a Republican who served four terms. In September, McIntire lost the GOP…

ELECTIONS
Oct 28, 2010
County Executive Jim Smith is urging voters in next week's election to defeat a ballot initiative that would allow unions representing general county employees to use binding arbitration for salary and other disputes. In a press release Thursday, Smith said the initiative, called Question A, would "diminish the authority of the county executive to submit a fiscally responsible budget by authorizing a third party arbitrator to determine employee salary increases and other employment issues." If …Comment (1)

GOVERNMENT
Oct 28, 2010
'Timing, luck and opportunity are everything in life,' says Bob Barrett, an important advisor to two county executives.

20101029 sdosm Recent articles by Bryan P Sears on Patch

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Monday, October 25, 2010

Bryan Sears has left the virtual building for a Patch of greener pastures





Bryan Sears has left the virtual building for a Patch of greener pastures

Monday, 25 October 2010

By Kevin Dayhoff

Today, Oct. 25 is Bryan Sear’s first day as Patch.com’s assistant regional editor for Maryland region one and the politics and government reporter in Baltimore County.

Join me in wishing him the best on his new adventure in journalism.

It was on Friday, October 15 that Sears, the award-winning political writer succinctly announced on Facebook “Today was my last day at the Towson Times.”

It was an uncharacteristic short missive for Sears, the well-known and well-read prolific peripatetic political editor for Patuxent Publishing Co.'s eight Baltimore County community newspapers.

(For more on Sears, see: “COUNTY COUP — Patch puts Patuxent Publishing's political pundit on payroll,” written by Alan Z. Forman and of which, I contributed.)

For the last nine years, Sears have covered “government and politics in Baltimore County and state government and politics as it relates to Baltimore County,” according to a brief bio on his newspaper blog, “Strange Bedfellows.”
His blog, on the Explore Baltimore County website, is considered by many political junkies to be must reading for anyone who wants to know anything about Baltimore County – and Maryland politics.

Sears, who is also the president of the local Maryland Pro Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, is also known in the close-knit Maryland area family of journalists as a student of the ever-changing 24/7 world of newspapers in the age of the Internet, Twitter, Facebook and blogs.
He frequently posts newspaper and media news and analysis on his Facebook page, always has time on the phone for inquiries from various other writers, and has constantly pushed the envelope of encouraging the Internet presence of newspapers both vertically and laterally.

According to his personal writer’s blog, “Baltimore County Politics,” he is “also a political contributor on the Maryland Morning News program on Thursdays on WBAL 1090 AM…

“[A]s well as a frequent guest on many of the station’s shows, a co-host on Jay Liner’s ‘All Politics is Local’ show on WCBM 680 AM, and [has] appeared on State Circle on Maryland Public Television.”

As readers quickly filled his Facebook page with best wishes and surprise, folks slowly coaxed more information out of Sears about the abrupt change of venue.

“I'm sure I’ll probably repeat this a few times but for you early birds...  I'm going to Patch.com here in Baltimore County where I will continue to cover county government and politics,” wrote Sears.

Later, Sears revealed even more insight into his new job, “I'm the assistant regional editor for Maryland Region 1 (mostly Baltimore County) and I'll be covering Baltimore County government for the Patch.com sites in Baltimore County…”

“There's a lot more to say about this and I'm sure it will all be said but it's important to start with noting that I spent about 1/4 of my life (about 9 years) here at Patuxent and loved the work.  I love my home county and what I covered and was honored to work with the reporters and staff that came and went during my time.

“The work I did at The Towson Times was the best of my career (so far -- stay tuned) and it is in no small part due to the people around me who helped me become a better reporter every day.”

Saturday, on his personal writer’s blog, Sears elaborated more, “It’s been a whirlwind week here at the home office in Towson,” said Sears in “Leave?  I live here.”

“In case you haven’t heard, I left the Towson Times and Patuxent Publishing Co. Friday.  (Well, technically Thursday but what’s a few hours among friends?)”

Sears went on to explain that his tenure with Patuxent “ended Thursday when I gave notice of my intention to leave and go to Patch.com and was subsequently let go a day later.  It’s an odd feeling to be let go from a job where you work from home.

“I’d be escorted out of any other office under the same circumstances.  This time, everything was done by phone and e-mail and when it was over I simply hung up the phone and let my dog in…

“I start the new gig on Oct. 25 where I’ll be Patch.com’s assistant regional editor for Maryland region one and the politics and government reporter in Baltimore County.

Lutherville-Timonium PatchPatch.com is a hyper-local news source that has sites around the country
 including 27 in Maryland. Four of those are in Baltimore county — Catonsville, Lutherville-Timonium, Perry Hall and Towson.

Since the beginnings of newspapers in Germany in 1615, newspapers have always been changing, adapting – and controversial.

Many historians accept that 1960 was the first year more Americans got more of their news by watching TV than reading the newspaper.  Recent historians believe that the year 2000 was the first year that more Americans get their news from the Internet than from the television. 

Enter into the fray, Patch.  Jay Yarow wrote in Business Insider on May 2, 2010, “AOL plans to spend $50 million to build hundreds of Patch sites… this year according to its 10-K.”

For those who have been around the block several times, in the last decade, in which the newspaper industry has labored under a bad case of the flu, there have been plenty of newspapers that have come and gone.

Who can forget the short life of the print edition of the Baltimore Examiner that lasted from April 4, 2006 until February 15, 2009?  Today, the Baltimore Examiner continues an online presence; of which many with 20/20 hindsight suggest is where it ought to have concentrated its energies from the beginning.

However, Patch is going to be only an Internet newspaper and not have to deal with the expense and aggravation of printing presses and newspaper delivery.

The data migration from newsprint to website media has been ugly.  So much so, that several years ago, a younger colleague who was an early adopter of advocating for a strong Internet presence for newspapers, once said, in a moment of total frustration, that if he had his way, no-one over the age of 45 should be allowed to be newspaper management.

Sears is 42 years-old.

Photo of Bryan Sears Courtesy of Baltimore County Politics

20101024 sdosmKED Sears has left building


Sunday, October 17, 2010

AOL’s Patch, a national chain of news websites, comes to the Baltimore ‘burbs

AOL’s Patch, a national chain of news websites, comes to the Baltimore ‘burbs

Will mass-producing community journalism like Big Macs slay it or save it? (A two-part Baltimore Brew special report.)


patch map and logo
AOL is sinking nearly $50 million into Patch, a network of local news websites, including some in Baltimore suburbs.



Baltimore is used to having out-of-town companies gobble up its home-grown news operations. The ranks of the  once- independent-and family-owned that are now media properties include The Baltimore Sun(Chicago-based Tribune Co.) and WJZ-TV (one of 28 stations owned by CBS Corp.)
But the latest deep-pocketed corporate ‘playa to muscle into the Baltimore media market, AOL, is taking a different approach. Rather than acquiring an existing entity, they’re quietly building online news operations from the ground up, in Towson and in two dozen other suburban Maryland communities. What they’re creating they callPatch.com, a national network of “hyperlocal” news sites aiming to fill the prodigious news holes created by shrinking traditional media.
In addition to TowsonPatch, there’s a Lutherville/TimoniumPatch andEllicottCityPatch, among the Maryland sites either scheduled or already publishing. Patches have also sprouted in affluent communities in New York, Massachusetts, Connecticut and New Jersey and a growing list of other states...
[...]
Utopia? Dystopia?
Bryan Sears is the immediate past president of the Maryland Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, and a well-known local political reporter in the Greater Baltimore area.
At points in a discussion about Patch, Sears seemed excited by the idea that a ripple effect from the chain’s rapid expansion could actually benefit journalists in search of jobs.
“There are media companies taking this very seriously. What happens if they [Patch] ramp up and put a lot of reporters in the area, and The [Baltimore] Sun or [Washington] Post decides it needs to respond in kind?” Sears said.  “All of a sudden you’ve got yourself a 21st century newspaper war.”
At other moments, he has a reporter’s skepticism that Patch, or any company, has figured out a cure for what’s afflicting America’s Fourth Estate.
“There are two questions as I see it.  One, it’s AOL, the same company that had Bebo, the social networking site that no one ever heard of.  Have they learned from that?” Sears said.  “Two, do they have some magic ju-ju that makes these Patch sites work that the others didn’t?”
In the end, Sears said, he welcomes the arrival of the Patch sites, even though they technically compete for readers with his paper.
“I’m excited about journalists getting good jobs and enjoying the work they’re doing,” he said, “and I refuse to believe that having more reporters on the beat is anything but good for the public.”
And, he added, “I plan on beating them as often as I can.”
[...]


Media Baltimore Brew, Journalists Sears-Bryan, Media Baltimore, Media, 
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Bryan Sears at Baltimore County Politics

Until Bryan Sears takes up shop in his new digs with Patch, follow him here on his website: Baltimore County PoliticsAll Baltimore County politics all the time, or at least for the next several days…  http://baltimorecountypolitics.wordpress.com/


About Me


Bryan P. Sears
Sears

I’m a life-long resident of Baltimore County and have a passion for covering local politics and government. I grew up in Middle River and Perry Hall and now live in Towson.
For the last nine years I covered the Old Courthouse for the Towson Times. Starting on Oct. 25 I’ll do so for Patch.com.
Over the years I’ve won regional and national awards for breaking news coverage, local and state government reporting and investigative reporting.
I’m also a political contributor on the Maryland Morning News program on Thursdays on WBAL 1090 AM as well as a frequent guest on many of the  station’s shows, a co-host on Jay Liner’s “All Politics is Local” show on WCBM 680 AM, and have appeared on State Circle on Maryland Public Television.
When I’m not doing any of that I like to hike with my golden retriever and play video games with my son.
Occasionally,  I sleep.


Bryan Sears at Baltimore County Politics
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Wednesday, September 08, 2010

Nine months ago, Bryan P. Sears of the Towson Times broke an eyebrow-raising story


SEPTEMBER 7, 2010

County council races: Follow the money

Nine months ago, Bryan P. Sears of the Towson Times broke an eyebrow-raising story: Two Baltimore County development attorneys — one the son of term-limited County Executive James T. Smith Jr. and the other one of Mr. Smith’s former law clerks — had selected candidates to back in three separate County Council races and had held high-dollar fundraisers for them. Now, with the Democratic primary a week away, it’s worth revisiting that report to see exactly how much impact the efforts of Michael Paul Smith and David Gildea have had on what is shaping up to be the council’s biggest makeover in nearly two decades.
The three candidates the attorneys backed are Tom Quirk, who is running in the 1st District, centered around Catonsville; Gordon Harden, running in the 5th District, which stretches from Towson to Perry Hall; and Cathy Bevins, running in the 6th District, which includes Essex and Middle River. All three are Democrats, and all three have raised enough money to run well financed campaigns. Among the 38 people running for council this year, Mr. Quirk has raised the fourth most money ($73,674), and Ms. Bevins and Mr. Harden came in 10th ($58,670) and 11th ($57,859).
It’s difficult to say with certainty how much of that fundraising success can be attributed to the efforts of Messrs. Gildea and Smith, but state campaign finance reports suggest that all three owe at least 40 percent of their take to the two attorneys...  http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/2010/09/county_council_races_follow_th.html

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Thursday, August 19, 2010

AOL Aims High With Hyperlocal Journalism Project

AOL Aims High With Hyperlocal Journalism Project



Lauren Evans
EnlargeTamara Keith/NPR
Lauren Evans, a Patch editor, works on her laptop at a Starbucks in College Park, Md. She says she works "pretty much anywhere" -- from bagel shops to the curb outside of a fire station.
t
August 17, 2010
AOL is best known as an Internet service provider, the one that sent out all those promotional CDs back in the '90s. Now, the company is working to reinvent itself, and as part of that, it is making a big push into hyperlocal journalism with a project called Patch.
On Tuesday, it launched its 100th local news site. Patch says it will expand to 500 small communities by the end of this year, but it faces big competition and an uncertain future.
Lauren Evans holds a BlackBerry up to her ear as she quizzes a College Park, Md., police sergeant about a recent wave of robberies. She is surrounded not by the buzz of a traditional newsroom but by other customers in Starbucks.
Evans says she works "pretty much anywhere" — from bagel shops to the curb outside a fire station.
She was headed there to ask some questions about a new firetruck but ended up getting a call on another story. Evans describes herself as a one-woman news-producing machine... http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=129238091

(Monday, October 18, 2010 UPDATE: Wouldn't it be great if B. P. Sears looked this good
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