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I am a staff writer with CTV.ca News. That operation is part of CTV News, which is of course nestled into CTV Inc. and CTVglobemedia.

I don't speak for my employer on this blog. I don't comment about the internal affairs of my employer.

Any views expressed here are my own.
Main Page  »  Media
View Article  Clancy named Toronto Sun editor

From globeandmail.com:

Sun Media has turned to a veteran of the Toronto newspaper wars to run the newsroom of its flagship paper, The Toronto Sun.

Lou Clancy, a former Sun editor who has also served in senior roles at the Toronto Star, has been named editor-in-chief of the tabloid daily.

Here's what Clancy had to say in the Toronto Sun story:

"Content is our No. 1 job," he said. "The Toronto Sun will be the first place for people to go to for local news, whether it is in the paper or the Internet."

Oddly enough, the Star didn't report on this momentous event. :)

View Article  Globeandmail.com gets incrementally more Web-2.0-y

Globeandmail.com -- which made a great leap forward in 2006 when it allowed people to comment directly on individual stories -- has added a 'most recommended' feature, allowing people to vote on whether they would recommend a given article to others.

The site's most popular page already had lists of most read and e-mailed. There is also a list of most-commented-upon stories that shows up on the home page.

Right now, however, the most-recommended results don't show up on the home page (yet?). Nor is there a prominent way to vote on recommending a story (see USA Today for a comparison; here's my reaction to its Web 2.0-ification). At globeandmail.com, you have to read the individual story all the way to the bottom (and who does that?) to see the link.

TheStar.com has most read, e-mailed and searched.

CBCNews.ca has most popular, e-mailed and blogged. CBC.ca and TheStar.com both display that information more prominently than globeandmail.com does.

CTV.ca has a short list on its home page of the site's five most popular news stories.

Canada.com appears to be bereft of such Web 2.0 bells and whistles.

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