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Articles on Cool Stuff

E-Letters: Lean Plate Club

By Jan Schaffer
October 25, 2004

The Washington Post's Lean Plate Club has become a meaty case study in how e-mail newsletters are opening up rich new ways for news organizations to interact with readers.

You Decide: But Let's Play Devil's Advocate

By Jan Schaffer
April 15, 2004

KQED's "You Decide" interactive game lets visitors express their opinion on tough social issues and then repeatedly tests their stance with opposing arguments.

Planning Your Park: A Game of Choices

By Jan Schaffer
April 15, 2004

GothamGazette.com's "Plan Your Future Park" is an exercise in choices and more choices. The game invites users to solve real obstacles in building a park--and tells how fellow citizens did it.

Reporters Help Produce Multimedia Obits
By Jan Schaffer
April 15, 2004

Spokesman-Review's reporters produce interactive obituaries complete with photographs and narration by a family member.

A New Recipe: Tax Game Measures Tax Bills
By Jane Sutter
February 3, 2004

Democrat and Chronicle readers in Rochester, NY, can use an interactive tax calculator to see how their taxes compare to tax rates in other states, one of many interactive features of "Fighting for Rochester's Future."

Wish Lists and Price Tags: The Cost of Fixing Transit Woes
By Mark Briggs
February 3, 2004

In Phase II of the interactive project "Fix Your Commute," more than 1,100 people submitted plans to solve the area's top 20 traffic hot spots. But people cannot submit a plan for improvements unless they find new revenue to cover the costs.

Forging America: Building an Interactive History of Bethlehem Steel

By Chris Krewson
February 3, 2004

Bethlehem Steel built the Golden Gate Bridge and much of New York City's skyline. When it dissolved at year's end, The Morning Call went interactive to capture the end of an American era.

Snipers to Microsoft:Beat Bloggers cover their turf
By Ryan Pitts
October 24, 2003

Whether reporting the D.C. sniper trial or a Pacific Northwest religion beat, blogs are opening up beat reporting to a new possibilities for giving and getting information.

Future News is Foreshadowed at Batten Awards
By Kyle M. Orland
September 26, 2003

Read what Dan Gillmor, Mike Skoler, Ashley Wells and others had to say at the 2003 Batten Awards for Innovation in Journalism.

City News Site Goes Interactive
By Kyle M. Orland
August 28, 2003

The GothamGazette.org seeks to nab New York City readers in new ways.

Rochester: Five-Part series, Five Interactives
By Kyle M. Orland
July 3, 2003

The Rochester Democrat and Chronicle will conclude it's groundbreaking five-part series, which features five interactive exercises, next month.

Next Time: Three Things to Do Differently
By Jon Greenberg
July 3, 2003

New Hampshire Public Radio's "Budget Balancer" attracted 1,800 visitors. But new media veteran Jon Greenberg says next time he'd do at least three things differently.

Northwest WA: Advanced Simulation Launches this Fall
By Kyle M. Orland
July 3, 2003

The Everett Herald and its partners are preparing to launch phase two of their "Fix Your commute" project later this year.

MSNBC: Complex Story Shells Deliver Flexible Interactions
By Kyle M. Orland
June 4, 2003

For the past seven years, MSNBC has been a leader in providing innovative interactive content for the web.

Over 600 use Seattle Times' "Ax and Tax" to Solve Washington's Budget Woes
By Kyle M. Orland
May 16, 2003

In just over one week, 604 people try to fix the state's $2.65 billion deficit.

Two Government Tax Calculators Help Pennsylvanians See the Bottom Line
By Kyle M. Orland
May 13, 2003

The Pennsylvania Governor's Office andSenate Republicans are both using the internet to help constituents make sense of a complex tax plan.

State Budget Calculators Help People Learn about Tough Choices
By Kyle M. Orland
April 15, 2003

News organizations around the country have created budget games to report on looming state deficits.
Update: May 6, 2003 - Over 1,800 people visit NHPR Budget Builder

Residents Take Back the Streets in Seattle
By Vicki L. Duckett
April 15, 2003

In "You Build It," The Seattle Times invites people to help solve the region's transportation woes. Choose what transportation project you'd like to build - and how you'd pay for it.
Update: May 13, 2003 - Transit Board rethinks tax hike in response to Seattle's "You Build It"

Fighting for Rochester's Future
By Vicki L. Duckett
April 15, 2003

In "Fighting for Rochester's Future," the Democrat and Chronicle plans an interactive exercise for each topic in a five-part series. Play an urban planner and spend $150 million in the first installment.


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