Renewing the Voice


Wednesday, March 3, 2010

New community blogs launch

Montgomery Media, parent company of the Souderton Independent has launched two new local blogs this week.

The first, the Tents for Haiti Project blog, documents the 30-year relationship between volunteer groups in the Souderton area and the village of Côtes-de-Fer in Haiti along with ongoing efforts to provide relief and support to that village.

The second blog, Second String Thoughts, is for sports fanatics in the local area and features writings from Kevin McGuire, a Souderton resident who will blog on local sports issues in the Souderton and Pennridge area, as well as hot topics for Philadelphia’s major sports teams and Penn State sports.

The Souderton Independent and Montgomery Media are aiming to expand local opinion coverage on the web through its blog center. If you have a blog idea you’d like us to consider, e-mail Souderton Independent editor Emily Morris at emorris@montgomerynews.com or our Video and Web editor Andy Stettler at astettler@montgomerynews.com.

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Monday, February 15, 2010

"The Fort" on FourSquare





Just some quick news to our readers whom follow our social networks; you can now check-in to “The Fort” on
FourSquare.

Okay, so maybe it isn’t the most revolutionary news but for now on, if you happen to stop by our Fort Washington offices, be sure to check in. We love to know who is in the office or who has stopped by.

Montgomery Media Social Networks:

Twitter- @MontgomeryMedia

Facebook- Montgomery Media

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Saturday, December 19, 2009

Winter Weather Live Cam

I'm using UStream on my iPhone to stream the snow storm from my house. If you are streaming from your home email me at AStettler@Montgomerynews.com and I'll add your video here. Live TV : Ustream

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Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Tweeting for you

This morning, we launched our new Twitter format which caters more directly to our readers.

Each morning @MontgomeryMedia will ask "what would you like to read today?" Follwers can then respond with something like "@MontgomeryMedia, I would like to read today's local news and sports." Another might respond "@MontgomeryMedia, I'd like to read an opinion piece about health care."

Within minutes we will reply with a story or two which suits you. In addition, we pay attention to who we follow. We read your blog posts and have come to enjoy your work. If we see a story which, based on your tweets, we think you might find interesting, we will tweet that story to you.

This is part of our mission to enrich our readers lives with knowledge. So keep following and we'll keep tweeting.

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Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Fungus Infects Montgomery County

The fungus that has infected tomato crops across the Northeast has now hit Montgomery County.. This infectious fungus is the same one that caused the Potato Famine in the 19th Century and although there is no forecast that the fungus, named Late Blight, will have the same lasting effects here in Montgomery County that was seen in the 19th Century, this is still something to be taken seriously.

One NPR specialist noted, "this fungus is spreading like nothing I've ever seen before."

Home gardeners and commercial growers alike are seeing the fungus strangle tomato crops and some potatoes are also dying off due to the Late Blight fungus. Below is some information on how to "Fight the Blight" and stop the fungus which forever changed Irish demographics.

PENNSYLVANIA VEGETABLE DISEASE UPDATE JULY 10, 2009 BETH K. GUGINO PENN STATE VEGETABLE PATHOLOGIST

If you are using a conventional spray program then start including late blight specific fungicides with translaminar activity. Make it a practice to alternate between fungicides with different FRAC codes for resistance management and tank mix with a protectant when needed (some products like Gavel already include a protectant). When conditions are cool and wet (conducive for late blight) use a shorter 5 to 7 day spray interval. The spray interval can be extended to 10 days under more hot dry conditions. Always check with Commercial Vegetable Production Recommends for specific rates and tank mixing recommendations and always check the label for chemical use restrictions before applying a fungicide.

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Saturday, July 18, 2009

The Calm After the Storm









Last night, I was having dinner with my family when someone shouted "Look outside!" I looked out the sliding door window of my kitchen to see a tar colored sky swallowing the landscape. This was at 8 p.m. but by the looks of the sky, no one could tell if it was 8 p.m. or midnight.

By about 8:10 p.m. the dark sky had somewhat subsided slowly fading to a brighter white. This was not the end however, as I kept my eyes on the horizon while I finished my meal, I suddenly saw a white mist forming in the distance.

The Pa. Turnpike is in my backyard, about 50 yards from my kitchen window. Its brown walls vanished as the mist moved closer to our home. I felt like I was in that Stephen King book/movie "The Mist."

The mist kept moving toward us until it swallowed us and the backyard became nearly impossible to see. BOOM! That was the sound of the thunder as rain fell like fireworks on our roof. By this time winds were picking up and the trees in my backyard were arching at a 90 degree angle.

My mother and I walked to the front door, opened it and saw the disaster area that had become my neighborhood: A six foot tree limb had fallen literally centimeters from my car. Up the street, I guessed because I couldn't see for sure, four or five trees had fallen on my neighbors property.

I stepped out onto my front porch and noticed my neighbors roof. The rain was bouncing about a foot-high off the roof showing a visible aura forming around the house. Then, the rain stopped.

It truely felt like some kind of hurricane had come through the neighborhood. My neighbors were walking down the sidewalks looking at the aftermath. One neighbor said that on Jolly Road a tree had fallen on a house, this was the home which I had guessed maybe four or five trees had falllen.

I grabbed my camera and hopped in my car, drove up the street and found my neighbors house which was off of Jolly Road in Plymouth Meeting. The entire family was standing outside, arms folded, heads down looking at the damage.

Incredibly, no tree had hit the house. However, a 10 foot tree had fallen on an antique tractor in the backyard. This is a family who once farmed the land that is now my enitre block, until they sold the land to Plymouth Township. That tractor had most likely been used by someones father or grandfather. The next house down, which was owned by this families mother, may have been worse. More than half of the drive way was completely covered with fallen tree limbs. The wind had piled the limbs about as high as my ribs. "Incredible," I thought. The storm had lasted no more than 20 minutes and it looked like it had been raining all day.

After snapping a few pictures, which proved to be a tough job due to the amount of light in the sky, I drove back home and typed up a few sentences which went up on our main page as breaking news. Just another night at a weekly paper right?

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Thursday, July 16, 2009

How Twitter and Facebook are revolutionizing Montgomery County local news


My college journalism professor, Dr. Jerry Zurek, sent me an email this morning asking about social media. The email went out to a majority of the top journalism students in my class and the class below asking questions, I believe, in the hopes that his current students could be let in on the not-so-secret reasons as to why Twitter and Facebook are so important in the journalism world. This is my response.

Montgomery News has a unique chance as a weekly, local paper to capture the attention of our large community. While national papers like the New York Times and the Washington Post must compete with the best on a national scale, Monty has very few competitors when it comes to the weekly spectrum.

Our path to success is obvious. We need to find more readers. How can we do that? Well, we can't just sit around and wait for them to find us anymore. Instead, we need to find them.

Over the past two months, we have taken giant steps toward our goal to find our readers and I believe that much of this has to do with our new Twitter (@MontgomeryMedia) and Facebook (Montgomery Newspapers) pages. It is so easy to go to search.Twitter.com use the "nearby:" feature and find Twitter users in our area. In fact, each night I sit at my computer trying to come up with at least 15 twitter users in our area that we are not following or who are not following us.

We began using Twitter in late May of '09 after I convinced our publisher that this was a free way to advertise our publications. Readership from May to June jumped by 10,000 page views and about 4,000 readers. We are projecting another jump by the end of July and through hyper-texting (linking stories in our text), which we just started this month, I am projecting that we will go beyond that extra 10,000 page views.

So what do we Tweet? It's all about relevance. If a person is killed in an auto accident, we Tweet the location into the headline. If a college is raising tuition we tweet the name of the college and make sure it gets to our college crowd on Facebook. This also means that if we can find a select group of people on Facebook who go to the college, we personally post the article onto their Facebook wall. Show me a national paper that will take the time to do that.

The July 4th weekend was a perfect example of how effective we have become in terms of promotional social networking. Our web hits usually peak on Wednesdays and Thursday when our print publication is delivered to the public. Over the weekends, our hits would normally fall by the hundreds.

However, July 4th weekend changed all of that. We posted videos, photos, and even articles teasing the next week's print publication, to our website. All the while, we were on Twitter and Facebook posting the updated articles, announcing changes to celebration schedules and even announcing where we would be reporting on that day or the next hoping that readership would increase. It did.

We nearly doubled our readership that weekend and I believe it was because readers were told, through Twitter and Facebook, that our site, which up until that point had been mainly changed on a weekly basis, was being updated and people could miss something if they did not check our page.

Today, our weekend readership is reflecting upon our July 4th weekend performance. Readers are checking the website to see if we have reported on events like summer community concerts and local news. They are getting what they want and I strongly believe that this change could not have happened without our new use of social media and the loyalty of our new readers.

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