Nottingham Local Blogs: Council LOLs, Radnor’s Nottingham, Nottingham Daily Photo, Nottingham is Crap

September 7, 2009

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.

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    New: Brownhills Bob, St Albans blog

    September 6, 2009

    I’ve added two more Local Blogs to the directory.

    St Albans Blog, St Albans, Hertfordshire

    St. Albans blog contains information and independent reviews about living, shopping, eating and drinking in St. Albans. It’s authored primarily by a man in his 30’s who moved to St. Albans in around 2003.

    Brownhills Bob’s Brownhills Blog, Walsall.

    Life in the northern wastes of Walsall

    I’m a middle-aged tech geek with a love of cycling and the outdoors; I care passionately about people, the environment we all share and the social stuff that glues us together. I do a job that makes me think about how things work, and have an inquisitive, argumentative nature. I know what it’s like to be a carer, and what it’s like to struggle and only just survive.

    I love Brownhills, it’s my home. I despair of what is happening to it. I’m concerned about the motivations of those who make descisions on our behalf, about their judgement and lack of foresight. I fear for the future of local democracy.

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    New: Creative Wolverhampton, Birmingham It’s Not Shit, Created in Birmingham

    September 4, 2009

    Birmingham It’s Not Shit, Birmingham – (establised 2002)

    Birmingham: It’s Not Shit loves Birmingham, its people, arts, animals, buildings, parks, grass verges, factories and bus stops.

    We’ve even got a soft spot for the Black Country. B:iNS runs The Brummie of the Year Award, Talk Like a Brummie Day and organises odd stuff like spending eleven hours on the eleven bus on the eleventh of November. Bournville Village, Birmingham The latest news, pics and chat from the Cadbury community.

    Created in Birmingham, Birmingham

    Linking up Birmingham’s Artistic and Creative Communities.

    Created in Birmingham is a weblog that has been written on an almost daily basis since January 2008, promoting, discussing and being part of Birmingham’s vibrant creative community. An online home for the Birmingham arts scene.

    Creative Wolverhampton, Wolverhampton – (running on and off since 2006)

    The aim of Creative Wolverhampton is to promote professionals and individuals practicing and studying in the city, and to provide a showcase for the creative and cultural industries.

    On this blog you will find news, articles, events and updates about the creative and cultural industries in the Wolverhampton area. CW was devised by Debut in 2006.

    The site is maintained and updated by Debut, with a small group of regular contributors who share the desire to raise Wolverhampton’s profile as a creative city.

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    Bedworth: the Town without News (from the Economist)

    September 4, 2009

    A superb piece in the Economist from July, about the impact of loss of local newspapers and the possibilities – which have not yet reached fruition for “ultralocal” (jargon, yech!) websites to fill the gap.

    WHAT happens when a place loses its newspaper? Most of the 80 or so local papers that have closed in Britain since the beginning of last year were the second- or third-strongest publications in their markets. But the weekly Bedworth Echo, which published its last issue on July 10th, was the only paper dedicated to the town’s news. A small former mining settlement in the Midlands, Bedworth also lacks a radio station. Although it will still be covered by newspapers focused on its bigger neighbours, it is now a town without news.

    20090904-advertising-spending-CBR797It 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.

    At the moment hyper-local sites tend to be filled with discussions of town fetes and the next music night at the village pub. It may be, says Roland Bryan of Associated, that this is the equivalent of small talk at a cocktail party, and that people will eventually get down to local politics. Or they may not. As local newspapers fail, we may learn that their real value was less as a check on politicians than simply as a forum for casual conversation—a place where a town can talk to itself.

    Read it all. (There’s a lot more).

    Hat tip: Jon Slattery

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    Ultralocal blogs update and a new local directory: nutshell.org.uk

    August 18, 2009

    Last week Paul Bradshaw and I launched an exercise (background) to identify and map as many “ultralocal” blogs and websites as possible.

    We have had almost 140 blogs and websites added, albeit with a certain amount of “creative marketing” in the mix, which will reduce the total – depending on the criteria used by each person using the data.

    There are so many blogs which can be called “local”, with a wide range of purposes, that I think we are likely to end up with a series of directories rather than a single monolithic website. Otherwise the directory might become so large as to be unmaintainable.

    I have an interest in independent commentary and a movement to rebuild politics from the grassroots upwards. I think a key to this is to react to the recent political scandals by seeking a broader, more rounded view of politics, rather than either rejecting or ignoring political life.

    So I’m kicking off with a directory – called Nutshell.