If you're going to New York City next week for the BookExpo America convention, don't miss Steve Harrison's media panel on Saturday. I'll be there. I attended this last year when it was part of the convention, and it was one of the highlights of my trip. A panel of top-tier print and broadcast journalists offered their best tips on how … [Read more...]
Search Results for: Radio
How to convince a magazine to write about maternity boutique
This week, 10 Publicity Hounds have tips Andrew Ingram of Toronto, Canada. He and his wife own a high-end maternity boutique. A local magazine that has a Best of Toronto section and a fashion guide continues to ignore them. Andrew wants clever publicity ideas that will get the boutique into the magazine and elsewhere. From Christina Sorbella of … [Read more...]
Clear pronunciation needed for a stint on NPR
Among the most loyal listeners of National Public Radio--ready for this?--are taxi cab drivers in Washington, D.C. and probably those elsewhere through the United States. Many listeners who are non-English speaking immigrants say that NPR and public radio in general give them the best information and the clearest diction on American radio. They … [Read more...]
Pitch stories to Religion News Service
When I attended my niece's high school football game in Ohio last fall, I couldn't help but notice that some of the cheerleaders looked like (starts with the letters SL and rhymes with mutts). Apparently, it's not just me feeling old again. A story in my local paper yesterday discussed the spirited debate over what's appropriate at high school … [Read more...]
Why food bribes work with broadcast media
The Milwaukee Brewers are off to a good start this year--yet another reminder of how using food to entice reproters to cover your story works. While Harley-Davidson was welcoming several hundred thousand bikers at its giant 100th anniversary reunion in Milwaukee several years ago, popular afternoon drive-time talk show host Mark Belling opened … [Read more...]
How an author/therapist piggybacked onto runaway bride
As I was writing last week's tip about how to piggyback off the runaway bride story, my friend Barbara Bartlein was doing just that. Barbara, a professional speaker and author of the book "Why Did I Marry You Anyway? --12.5 Strategies for a Happy Marriage," saw all the attention the Runaway Bride was getting and fired off [Read more...]
Build relationships with reporters
Get to know reporters who you want to cover you, and start building relationships. But how do you start building relationships with someone you don't know, particularly a reporter who is pitched dozens of times a day? Take a tip from Jeffrey O'Brien, senior editor at Wired magazine. "We love to talk about our work," he said. "On a very rare … [Read more...]
Runaway bride story begs for comment
People have been buzzing for a week about Jennifer Wilbanks, the 32-year-old runaway bride-to-be, who bolted from Atlanta four days before her wedding and set off a massive search by police and the FBI. This story screams for letters to the editor, opinion columns and expert opinion on radio and TV talk shows from authors, speakers, mental health … [Read more...]
Follow the clues
When you listen to your favorite radio talk show, do you listen with only one ear, oblivious to all the little clues the hosts or the drive-time deejays are dropping about their likes and dislikes, hobbies, friends and family members, and other topics that will catch their attention in your pitch letters and phone calls? Publicity Hound Carol … [Read more...]
12 worst mistakes PR people make
It was difficult to pare them down to a dozen, but we did. Of all the mistakes PR people make when working with the media, Jon Greer of Bulldog Reporter's PR University and Liz Miklya of Weber Shandwick joined me in whittling down the list to 12. We presented them the Media Relations 2005 conference earlier this month in San Francisco. Here's our … [Read more...]