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By Michael van Baker Views (986) | Comments (4) | ( +2 votes)

Every time I read a story like TIME's "Are Hyperlocals Replacing Traditional Newspapers?", my first reaction is generally a little thrill of recognition at seeing Tracy Record's name.

Seattle's hyperlocal scene (and social media mavenry for that matter) is the envy of the nation, and West Seattle Blog, as a more-than-full-time, news-breaking enterprise is the stuff of future HBR case studies. A six-figure revenue stream in the placeblog space? 750,000 page views per month?

But on the other hand--as Record would be the first to tell you--this is a dog bites man story. Listen to TIME characterize hyperlocal content: "Hyperlocal sites also frequently publish upbeat accounts of parades and high school sports, as well as information on which local vendors sell the best produce. Recent headlines on Record's site noted a 'mega-low' tide and an upcoming garden tour."

What does that sound like? TIME sums it up for you: "Record sits in her living room reinventing the role of an old-school newspaper editor." Reinventing may be stretching it: Record is swimming with the online current, rather than against it, but she's a journalist-editor in the mold of many newshounds who came before her.

West Seattle Blog is a local newspaper that's not printed on newspaper, but otherwise, what's different is a question of degree, rather than kind. It's supported by local advertisers: insurance and real estate agents, yoga and massage practitioners, car repair shops and dog-walkers (thanks to "Sales Guy," co-publisher, and husband, Patrick Sand). Its online presence makes community-driven (and -supplied) stories that much easier, but news tips are not new. The WSB forum fills in for classifieds, and augments reader contributions.

Record is fond of reminding people that a blog is just a delivery system. It would be a huge mistake to focus solely on the platform, and overlook the veteran, up-all-night journalist who knocks out stories on the hour. Coming from broadcast journalism, Record seems to have had zero fetishistic attachment to ink-smudged sheets; if there's media (video, audio, social) she hasn't leveraged in her quest to connect readers with WSB, please drop her a line, she'd love to hear about it....

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By Michael van Baker Views (466) | Comments (3) | ( 0 votes)

Full disclosure: We're on the radio!

Tuesdays at 9:15 a.m., The SunBreak has a cameo on the "Nine2Noon" show on KOMO Newsradio (97.7 FM, 1000 AM), with Brian Calvert and Nancy Barrick. It's their new 3-minute segment, "The Nine2Noon Blogosphere."

This morning they talked with Portland's social media/start-up blog Silicon Florist, to find out how the Twitter hashtag #pdxboom helped police solve a mysterious explosion (a pipe bomb went off). Thanks to Twitter, a Google map, and instructions on how to describe how close the explosion sounded, police were able to triangulate on the general location.

"While we still present the top stories of the day," says Calvert, "the feel is more of a 'news magazine' as we have more of a conversation about the day’s news. Our show’s slogan is 'We keep your morning moving,' evidenced by our bouncing from topic to topic with fewer commercials."

Calvert and Barrick have five blogs lined up so far, and are working on adding another five.

The full Monday-Friday 9:15 a.m. lineup is after the jump:

Monday: Seattle Crime

Tuesday: The SunBreak

Wednesday: The Silicon Florist

Thursday: Seattle Transportation Watch

Friday: Seattlepi.com's nightlife blog After Dark

By Audrey Hendrickson Views (116) | Comments (1) | ( 0 votes)

On this, the deadest workweek of the year, you owe it to yourself to check out one of the best things about 2009, The Awl, for their collective, still-ongoing take on the decade that was with The End of the 00s series.  Seriously, just use the tag to read every single piece, which run the gamut from the painfully personal (the decade as told through alcohol/drug-related blackouts, lost jobs, and/or Netflix) to the overarching themes (the rise of reality tv, the fall of the US economy, the mainstream media's unyielding march to increasing suckitude) to those single defining moments of the decade (9/11, natch, but also the infamous Britney-and-Justin dance-off).  So take the afternoon to read 'em all, because what the hell else are you doing in the office today?...

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