There’s gonna be a new face at The Huntsville Times and it’s got a scruffy goatee. Welcome to Huntsville, Kevin Wendt.

My hope is that he’ll turn the paper around and get rid of the leftie bias and incurious reporting.  Huntsville needs a good newspaper, and deserves a better one than what we’ve got.  I know that many people have just stopped getting the paper, because of the stench of liberalism that permeates the Times.  In my own love-to-read family, we went from four full subscriptions to one weekend-only subscription, and think often of cancelling that.

Here’s the story of how Wendt became a journalist (must read):

Call it destiny or dumb luck, but the fact Kevin became a journalist at all can be traced to a chance meeting at Subway on freshman move-in day. He ran into Star sports editors Jason Schaumburg and Ryan Byrne. He and Jason had grown up together in Elgin. Even though Kevin was a chemistry major, Jason asked if he’d be interested in covering women’s soccer.

“Of course, I thought, ‘Hmmm. Women … soccer.’ So I started doing it. It was a good way to make some money. I didn’t have any when I went to college.”

Mercury News memo:

Kevin will be among the youngest newspaper editors in the country, and it’s no surprise to any of us. Since his arrival at the Mercury News in 2000 — wearing a degree from Northern Illinois University and a black eye delivered by some thugs he exposed in the campus newspaper — Kevin has shown an incredible aptitude for this business.

The Huntsville Times memo:

He has experience helping develop the newspaper’s convergence efforts between its newspaper and online operations. Among other stops in his career at the Mercury News has been executive news editor, assistant business editor covering internet/technology companies as well as the sale of the former parent company, Knight Ridder, and news design director, responsible for the overall visual report for news, local, business and sports sections.

The Society for News Design published an Interview with Kevin Wendt:

I was just really impressed by the Huntsville area, and I was really enthused by some of the things I saw the paper doing and imagining the potential to grow in print and online…  my age (30) allows me to not accept “Well, that’s how we’ve always done it” as an answer to any question…

Visually, you just look at the sophistication of design and packaging these days (insert Apple reference here), and producing a product that feels authoritative — both in print and online! — is so important. And that’s not just design. Our stories must be clear and concise, and written with an authoritative voice. We must package our news in the most user-friendly way possible…

Journalism and newspapers are too important, and there are too many talented people still affiliated with both, for us not to create a sustainable business model that supports what we do.

 

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