Nottingham Local Blogs: Council LOLs, Radnor’s Nottingham, Nottingham Daily Photo, Nottingham is Crap
I’ve added four Local Blogs from the East Midlands to the Nutshell directory.
Nottingham City Council LOLs , Nottingham
Want to know what your favourite local council (and some of its friends) gets up to? We trawl through all the boring minutes, press releases and Freedom of Information requests so you don’t have to.
Just in case anybody was wondering, this site is not in any way connected to Nottingham City Council, gets no money from them (well, apart from Council Tax benefit) and if we ever did have anything to do with them would probably have been sacked by now. They probably don’t even like us. But then you knew all that didn’t you.
Radnor’s Nottingham, Nottingham
A guide to things to do and see in Nottingham, with a sprinkling of historical fact and contemporary comment.
Nottingham Daily Photo, Nottingham
A photographic daily dose of my thoughts and what I see during the day around Nottingham, Beeston and sometimes further afield . The good, the bad and the amusing.
Comments regarding the pictures are very, very welcome. You’ve looked at them, so why not say something about them! All my photographs are copyright, so please ask before poaching them and saying that they are yours.
Nottingham is Crap, Nottingham
Well I don’t really think Nottingham is totally crap. Like a lot of places it has its good and bad. But this blog is a place to rant about the things that really annoy you about Nottingham.
If you want to rant about something about Nottingham then please post it in the comments box.
It will not be the last. With a few exceptions (see article) local newspapers are declining quickly. Trinity Mirror, which owned the Echo, shut 27 local newspapers last year and has already closed 22 this year. The main reason more local papers have not collapsed, says Paul Zwillenberg of OC&C, a consultancy, is that they were cushioned by large operating margins. Many have gone from annual profits of up to 30% to negligible earnings. As they tip into loss, the trickle of closures is likely to become a torrent. Enders Analysis, a media consultancy, reckons a third to a half may go in the next five years.