Nice sparkly new look for top tech webzine Engadget.
It’s not often you can say you were part of history but I feel that way about Bermuda 1609-2009: 400 Years – 400 Portraits, which was finally published today. I was one of the contributing editors for the book, edited by Meredtih Ebbin, which was one of the many projects carried out this year by the Bermuda 2009 Committee to mark 400 years of Bermuda’s settlement.
We started work on this book more than a year ago and I eventually ended up contributing about 60 of the potted biographies as well as longer pieces on some of Bermuda’s prominent families – Butterfield, Gosling, Gibbons (not related!), Gilbert and Williams. It was a lot of work and painstaking research but fascinating to do and I certainly learned a lot about Bermudian history along the way. My congratulations to Meredith who did an absolutely heroic job pulling it all together and a special thanks to Ellen Hollis at the Bermuda Library who was incredibly patient and helpful with all my many requests for information.
If you’re interested in Bermuda, her people and its history, I hope you pick up a copy and find it as interesting to read as we did to work on it. The book is available islandwide, priced $60 (hardback) and $20 (soft cover).
Bermuda’s most prominent people honoured in book (Bermuda Sun)
Further reading: Bermuda Biographies
I heard the news today, oh boy – it’s farewell to the Mid-Ocean News on Friday. The weekly paper will cease publication after 98 years and with it goes a bit of my personal history, having been the paper’s sports editor from 1984 to 1992. By the time I joined, the Mid-O (or the Wahoo News as we dubbed it then) had been a weekly paper since 1968 but it had previously been a daily paper and continued to be so after the Bermuda Press, owners of The Royal Gazette bought it in 1962.
I have great memories of working on the paper and the many long Thursday nights carousing in the Lobster Pot and The Club after putting another edition to bed. My colleagues during that time were some of the best newspaper people I ever worked with and remain friends to this day. Amanda Outerbridge was a fine, fair and conscientious editor; Ivan Clifford, the long-suffering deputy editor, was an old-school stickler for good copy and a punning headline-writer par excellence. The fine staff who came and went on to better things included Brits Howard Rose, Duncan Hopwood, Mark Graham and Keith Blackmore (now deputy editor of The Times in London), Canadian Stu Nicol (who went on to produce shows at TSN, ESPN and is now Vice President Broadcasting & Programming at the PGA Tour) and Canadian-US author, journo and blogger Danielle Crittenden. Kiernan Bell, now president of the Bermuda Bar Association, is another former reporter … and there were many others I know I’ve forgotten.
At the time of writing I don’t know the full reasons for the closure but given that the paper rarely made money, it was only a matter of time before the Gazette would decide it could no longer afford to subsidise it. The current economic climate and the increase in online competition only hastened a demise that a bold redesign by my good friend Dana Cooper could not avert.
Even so, the demise seems to have been sudden – staff were apparently only told this afternoon (Tuesday). I hope they are being absorbed by the Gazette and that editor Tim Hodgson’s thundering editorials find a new home in print. With this current Government we can ill afford to lose another voice of opposition and objective reporting.
It is indeed a sad day when Bermuda now has just two newspapers (no, the Workers’ Voice does not count) and fewer newspapers than it has had in more than 200 years. It is, unfortunately, a sign of the times. As I wrote recently, the news business is changing forever and the pace and scope of that change may not be wholly desirable but it is, I fear, unstoppable.