Vol 1. No. 25.Baltimore, MD  Fri July 30th 2010GIVING YOU THE NEWS THE MSM IGNORES 
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O's big day ends with an extra-inning win
O's big day ends with an extra-inning win

Orioles hire Showalter to be next manager
Orioles hire Showalter to be next manager

Return of Bell major reason for Tejada trade
Return of Bell major reason for Tejada trade

Samuel pondering future after Showalter hire
Samuel pondering future after Showalter hire

Guthrie's start spoiled by no-show offense
Guthrie's start spoiled by no-show offense

Gonzalez shows improvement since return
Gonzalez shows improvement since return

O's rotation gets another go-around
O's rotation gets another go-around

Struggling Pie gets mental break
Struggling Pie gets mental break

Orioles still can't find way past Blue Jays
Orioles still can't find way past Blue Jays

CRIME SCENES Police apologize to injured boy
Alvin Williams' summer is pretty much over. The 5-year-old can't run around with his friends. Instead, he sits in a folding chair on the front porch of his grandfather's house off York Road in North Baltimore, his broken right leg wrapped in a cast and propped up on another chair. His leg was broken when a Baltimore police cruiser ran over it last week. This week, a top department officer paid Alvin a visit. Lt. Col. Michael J. Andrew brought chocolate cake, Adam Jones and Matt Wieters bobbleheads, a patch that made the child an honorary police officer and the promise of tickets to an Orioles game.




A close brush with violence
Stabbing of her brother 8 years ago colors mayor's view of issue

Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake rarely speaks of the day eight years ago when the city's dangers literally fell through her front door. But her brother's stabbing shaped the way she views violent crime and has deepened her empathy for victims and their families.




In Westminster, businesses welcome Ravens, their fans
In challenging economy, annual training session offers 'more than a little bit' of help

Amid challenging economy, annual training session offers 'more than a little bit' of help




HEALTHKEY University of Maryland discovery may open door to 'smart pill'
Scientists make link between brain acid and cognition

Scientists link brain compound to cognition, potentially opening door to development of drug that could aid learning in healthy people, those with disorders such as Alzheimer's




In apparent reversal, O'Malley praises prosecutor Jessamy
Sparring had dominated relations; now governor may need help

She won the appointment to Baltimore state's attorney that he wanted in 1995. Later, as mayor, he famously called for her to "get off her ass" and prosecute a case. She said he was "hoodwinking" the public into thinking his crime-fighting strategies were effective.



Comments about Baltimore Reporter:

Perhaps the best part of blogging or the internet in general is the occasional discovery of something unexpected.Over on Baltimore Reporter and Conservative Thoughts is a great and thought provoking article by Robert Farrow.I hope you will follow this link and read this great post.

from conservativecontracts.com


I love your blog

Once again - as happens so often - I have been positioned here on the living room couch, immersed in your blog. You are better than Fox News.

Kevin Dayhoff



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10/27/2009

The MSM gets what it Deserves
Filed under: — Robert Farrow @ 10:39 pm

It could not happen to a nicer bunch of people.

CNN’s Ratings Falling Faster than Obama’s

from Powerline

CNN, which pioneered cable news, now rates dead last among cable news networks. Prime time ratings are down 68 percent since last year. Of course, much of that is due to 2008 being an election year, but CNN’s fall relative to the other news networks can’t be blamed on the election cycle.

Can some of CNN’s decline, at least, be attributed to the network’s liberalism in general and its attacks on and sniggering denigrations of, normal Americans? It’s hard to tell. But sniggerer-in-chief Anderson Cooper’s ratings are sliding into the toilet. (The midsummer blip was Michael Jackson’s death.):

CNN apparently has tried to market its on-air personalities by having them participate in the television show Jeopardy, thereby showing off their superior intelligence. That hasn’t worked out too well either. If the network really gets desperate, it could consider covering the news straight. But that isn’t likely: look how many newspapers have preferred to go bankrupt rather than abandon their liberal bias.

And the fun is not limited to the Communist News Network.

US newspaper circulation down 10.6 percent as rate of decline accelerates amid rising prices

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Circulation at newspapers shrank at an accelerated pace in the past six months, driven in part by stiff price increases imposed by publishers scrambling to offset rapidly eroding advertising sales.

Average daily circulation at 379 U.S. newspapers plunged 10.6 percent in the April-September period from the same six-month stretch last year, according to figures released Monday by the Audit Bureau of Circulations.

It’s the largest drop recorded so far during the past decade’s steady decline in paid readership — a span that has coincided with an explosion of online news sources that don’t charge readers for access. Many newspapers also have been reducing delivery to far-flung locales and increasing prices to get more money out of their remaining sales.

The latest decline outstripped a 7.1 percent decrease in the October 2008-March 2009 period and a 4.6 percent decline in last year’s April-September window.

As both publications indicated earlier in the month, The Wall Street Journal surpassed USA Today as the top-selling newspaper in the United States. The Journal’s average Monday-Friday circulation edged up 0.6 percent to 2.02 million — making it the only daily newspaper in the top 25 to see an increase.

USA Today suffered the worst erosion in its 27-year history, dropping more than 17 percent to 1.90 million. The newspaper, owned by Gannett Co., has blamed reductions in travel for much of the circulation shortfall, because many of its single-copy sales come in airports and hotels.

The New York Times stayed in third place at 927,851, down 7.3 percent from the same period of 2008. Its Sunday edition remained the top weekend seller at 1.4 million, a decrease of 2.6 percent.

Sunday circulation at all the newspapers covered in the ABC survey fell 7.5 percent in the latest six-month span.

The circulation numbers are just the latest sign of distress in the shrinking newspaper industry.

Newspapers are trying to recover from a steep drop in advertising revenue — traditionally their main source of money. The worst U.S. recession since World War II and the lure of the Internet have combined to make the industry’s annual ad revenue $20 billion less than it was three years ago.

To compensate, many of the nation’s largest publishers are raising the subscription rates and newsstand prices for their print editions.

Some newspapers also are planning to charge for access to at least some sections of their Web sites. Besides bringing in more revenue, the online fees could cause more people to keep subscribing to the print editions if fewer stories are available for free on the Web. But it would also threaten to shrink their online audiences, making it more difficult to sell the Internet ads that are gradually replacing some forms of marketing in print.

Although higher prices for print editions alienate some readers, enough of them are footing the bill to funnel more money to newspapers.

For instance, circulation revenue at The New York Times Co. and another major newspaper publisher, McClatchy Co., climbed by 7 percent during the summer, even though they both lost subscribers.

Bringing in more money from readers is now more important than trying to preserve circulation, according to Mark Adkins, president of the San Francisco Chronicle. His newspaper suffered a nearly 26 percent drop in circulation in the April-September period to 251,782. But the remaining subscribers collectively pay the Chronicle more than its much larger audience did in the previous year, Adkins said.

The Chronicle now charges $7.75 per week for home delivery, up from $4.75 in the previous year. Weekday copies sell for $1 on the newsstand, up from 75 cents.

“The new circulation revenue has become an important part of our business model,” Adkins said. “We are pretty pleased.”

The Dallas Morning News attributes about half of the 22 percent decline in its weekday circulation to higher prices. The newspaper, owned by A.H. Belo Corp., averaged circulation of 263,810 during the period. Despite the erosion, the Morning News now gets about 40 percent of revenue from circulation, up from the industry’s traditional average of 20 percent.

“While we knew our reported circulation would be down, the key was that we were growing circulation revenue significantly,” said Morning News Publisher Jim Moroney.

Both the San Francisco Chronicle and The Dallas Morning News say they are investing their additional circulation revenue in improvements aimed at retaining their remaining audiences — with the hope the advertisers will want to connect with a more engaged and loyal group of readers. There’s a potential downside, too: If newspaper circulation keeps tumbling, advertisers may demand rate cuts and could even shift more of their marketing budgets to media that reach more people.

Other newspapers such as the Detroit Free Press and The Detroit News have curtailed their home delivery schedules to save money. Since March 30, Detroit’s two biggest dailies have limited home delivery to Thursdays, Fridays and Sundays — the editions that sell the most advertising. Readers can get electronic versions of the newspapers on the other days or buy a print copy on newsstands.

The Free Press, the bigger of the two newspapers, ended the latest reporting period with average weekday circulation of 269,729, down 9.6 percent from last year.

A few newspapers, mostly smaller ones, added subscribers during the reporting period. Of all the newspapers with a paid circulation of more than 50,000, the York Daily Record in Pennsylvania saw the biggest increase — rising 16.5 percent to 55,370. The newspaper’s publisher and managing editor didn’t return messages Monday.

AP Business Writer Barbara Ortutay in New York contributed to this story.
The link is here.

No one is more deserving of a career change then the lying media, save perhaps the Dems….

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Foxworth out for year with knee injury (The Canadian Press)
WESTMINSTER, Md. - Baltimore Ravens cornerback Domonique Foxworth will miss the upcoming NFL season with a knee injury.

Ravens CB Foxworth out for year with knee injury (AP)
Baltimore Ravens cornerback Domonique Foxworth will miss the season with a knee injury. The veteran was hurt Thursday during an informal practice period. Coach John Harbaugh said Friday that Foxworth tore his ACL without being touched. The Ravens already had two cornerbacks, Lardarius Webb and Fabian Washington, coming back from knee injuries.

Ravens Team Report (Yahoo! Sports)

Nose tackle Terrence Cody, a second-round pick, passed his conditioning test Wednesday and was cleared to practice with the team.

Cody said he weighs 350 pounds.

"I'll have to admit that I was surprised this morning when he passed the conditioning test," said coach John Harbaugh, who declined to say if the Ravens put a number on what they want Cody to weigh. "But we have it on tape that will verify the results of the test. Obviously, it shows you that he was in shape. He's a little heavy right now. He's got to lose little weight, but that will happen in training camp. But the fact that he's in shape is important. That shows you that he's done the work."

The hot topic surrounding Cody since the Ravens selected him has been his eating habits.

NFL Team Reports: AFC North (SportingNews.com)
Several times a week, The Trenches will present team reports from Sporting News' 32 NFL correspondents.

Belichick wants Patriots to focus on present (The Canadian Press)
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. - Ty Warren was stunned when he saw the bare spots where pictures of former Patriots stars once hung. He and his teammates wondered what was going on.

College coach says Kindle fell down stairs because of narcolepsy (Yahoo! Sports)
Baltimore Ravens rookie linebacker Sergio Kindle was hospitalized last Thursday after falling down two flights...

Ravens rookie LB Kindle narcoleptic (Yahoo! Sports)
Baltimore Ravens rookie linebacker Sergio Kindle recently fell down two flights of stairs late one night in...

Poster latest show of NFL concussion reality (The Canadian Press)
The HBO cameras are rolling in New York, where this season's "Hard Knocks" could make a star out of Jets coach Rex Ryan — and send parents across the country scurrying for the mute button on the remote control.

Younger Patriots hope to find leader as camp opens (The Canadian Press)
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. - The New England Patriots faltered badly late last season without four veteran leaders who were gone before the opener.

Ravens DT Cody finally launches NFL career (The Canadian Press)
WESTMINSTER, Md. - A day late and quite short of breath, rookie defensive tackle Terrence Cody passed his conditioning test Wednesday and formally launched his NFL career with the Baltimore Ravens.

One day later, Ravens DT Cody launches NFL career (AP)
A day late and quite short of breath, rookie defensive tackle Terrence Cody passed his conditioning test Wednesday and formally launched his NFL career with the Baltimore Ravens. Cody, a 350-pounder out of Alabama, twice failed the test Tuesday. The drill consists of running 25 yards, doubling back, resting for 70 seconds and repeating it twice.

Younger QBs ready to carry torch (Yahoo! Sports)
Philip Rivers and Aaron Rodgers have helped erase a fear that there would be an eventual dropoff in QB play.

Patriots put Welker on unable to perform list (The Canadian Press)
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. - Star receiver Wes Welker was placed on the New England Patriots' active physically unable to perform list on Tuesday as he continued his strong recovery from knee surgery.

Cameron content to run potent Ravens offense (AP)
Cam Cameron might consider taking another crack at being an NFL head coach, if the right opportunity comes along. For now, however, he's content being Baltimore's offensive coordinator -- a job that became even more attractive after the Ravens' signed standout wide receivers Anquan Boldin and Donte' Stallworth.

Terrence Cody deemed too tubby for Ravens training camp (Yahoo! Sports)
Despite having first-round talent, but falling to the second round of the draft because of concerns about weight...

Ravens' rookie Cody flunks conditioning test (The Canadian Press)
WESTMINSTER, Md. - Baltimore Ravens second-round draft pick Terrence Cody failed his conditioning test Tuesday and was not permitted to participate in the team's first training camp practice.

Eager Ravens open camp built for Super Bowl run (The Canadian Press)
WESTMINSTER, Md. - The Baltimore Ravens are built to make a run at the Super Bowl — if the key components remain in working order.

Former O-lineman breaks news of Bengals' interest in T.O. (Yahoo! Sports)
Offensive tackle Willie Anderson played 12 years with the Cincinnati Bengals from 1996 through 2007, made four...

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