Thursday, February 05, 2009

Tribune Press Release


Tribune Forms Online Entertainment News Bureau

Los Angeles Times and Zap2it to Supply Original, Multimedia Content Across Company’s Newspaper and Television Station Websites

Will Offer Exclusive, Behind-the-Scenes Look at TV’s “American Idol”



CHICAGO, February 5, 2009 -- Tribune Company today announced the creation of an online entertainment news bureau that will provide original, multimedia content to the company’s newspaper and television websites. The bureau will be powered by the combined resources of the Los Angeles Times (http://latimes.com), long the country’s premier outlet for entertainment industry news, and Zap2it (http://zap2it.com), the leading online source of movie and television listings.

The bureau will deliver expanded coverage of movies and television, and will leverage writers and reporters from across Tribune to bring readers constantly updated blogs and other multimedia news on more than 60 top TV shows. One of the team’s first editorial projects will be a behind-the-scenes look at the unstoppable phenomenon of "American Idol." While located at The Times, the bureau’s editorial content will be aggregated on the Zap2it portal, which will be enhanced and re-launched early this year.

"The Los Angeles Times covers entertainment like no one else, and it's a natural fit to locate Tribune’s online bureau here," said Russ Stanton, Los Angeles Times editor. "This allows us to combine the best of Tribune’s entertainment content with Zap2it’s industry-leading movie and TV listings to reach an even greater audience."

The new bureau will serve a combined online audience of about 9 million unique visitors viewing 65 million pages a month across all Tribune online entertainment offerings.

"This bureau will work with reporting and producing teams at all our newspapers and TV stations to bring our audiences the most complete, behind-the-scenes entertainment report on the Web," said Marc Chase, president of Tribune Interactive. "Zap2it is now also well positioned to become a national one-stop for the best TV, movie and celebrity news and buzz."

Times editors and veteran entertainment journalists Richard Rushfield and Joseph Kapsch will lead the operation, working closely with colleagues at The Times, Tribune Interactive, Zap2it and across all Tribune newspapers.

Rushfield has been named director/national entertainment programming for "The Syndicate," Tribune Interactive’s new online marketplace. He will be responsible for coordinating coverage among Tribune sites and will continue to serve as entertainment editor for latimes.com.

Kapsch has been named editorial director for Zap2it.com, and will oversee the expansion of Zap2it into a national entertainment portal, aggregating information from Tribune sources as well as a network of entertainment bloggers. He will oversee a redesign of Zap2it, launching in the first half of the year. Kapsch will also retain his current responsibilities as executive producer/entertainment, latimes.com.

Delivering exclusive, behind-the-scenes coverage of Fox's talent show juggernaut "American Idol" will be one of the bureau’s first projects.

"The more than 4 million fans who visit Zap2it each month will not only find a richer, more informative site, but one that still has the detailed TV and movie listings and showtimes they depend on," said Rebecca Baldwin, general manager of Zap2it.

3 comments:

Jeff Prescott said...

Wow!--Team Coverage of American Idol and dumping the California section.
These guys at the Times are visionaries.......

Kanani said...

I think the online efforts have been lame. Let's take the blogs, or the comments sections they've been putting up following articles.

It could be 24 hours IF your comment even gets put up on the board. By that time news has moved on. I think if they want to run in the pack with bloggers, they've got to do look and act more like a blog than like a school marm.

Edward Padgett said...

Rather easy to see that the Tribune Company does not appreciate readers of their newspapers in the hard copy, as they set their aim at online readers. Like it or not, this is the trend we are being made to follow.