Most Popular
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Thousand Dollar Baby: By day Jamie O'Hare studies for a master's in social work. Her night job is anything but.
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Hot Contender: If looks count, Sarah Steelman may be your next governor
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John Ray used to own a tavern in Benton Park. Now he lives in Quincy and dabbles in conspiracy theory.
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Grand Old Patty: Ian goes on a beefy binge at Burger Bar and Sub Zero New American Burger Restaurant
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Dora Magrath was blessed with a beautiful voice. She's gone, but you can still hear it.
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Unreal puts "Jorts & Mandals Day" initiative on the back burner, weighs in on Saint Louis Fashion Week (13)
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Seeing Red: Partners battle over a Wash. Ave. eatery's ownership (17)
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Red Alert: Everything they really don't want you to know about those pesky traffic-light cameras (13)
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Hot Contender: If looks count, Sarah Steelman may be your next governor (3)
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Fist City: Rockwell Knuckles aims to punch through St. Louis hip-hop's glass ceiling (3)
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Thousand Dollar Baby: By day Jamie O'Hare studies for a master's in social work. Her night job is anything but.
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Hot Contender: If looks count, Sarah Steelman may be your next governor
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John Ray used to own a tavern in Benton Park. Now he lives in Quincy and dabbles in conspiracy theory.
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E-Mix: André Anjos and the Remix Artist Collective leverage initiative, ingenuity and the Internet into an online music force
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The Cards aren't likely to challenge for the pennant this year. In a way, that'll make them all the more interesting to watch.
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Anti-Smelter Slate Wins in Crystal City
03:55PM 04/09/08 -
The Cosby Show Cast Today: Bill's Got a Rap Album in the Works
01:59PM 04/09/08 -
Bon Iver, "The Wolves (Act I & II)" Live from the Billiken Club, April 8, 2008
05:37PM 04/09/08 -
Local News Tidbits: Tight Pants Syndrome, The Feed, Raglani, Stella Mora, Heroes of the Kingdom, Fundamental Elements
02:50PM 04/09/08 -
In This Week's Issue: Everest Café & Bar, Burger King Snacks
02:29PM 04/09/08 -
The Morning Brew: Wednesday, 4.9
09:13AM 04/09/08
What we are writing about
- 7-Up
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- Craft Alliance
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- Mosaic
- musicals
- Othello
- Playstation
- RFT DJ Spin-off
- sexual harassment
- St. Louis theater
- The Black Rep
- The Ghost of the Forest
- Three Monkeys
- Tuesdays with Morrie
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Recent Articles By Chad Garrison
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Same Ol' Song: Club owners owe royalties for music played on their premises
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Red Alert: Everything they really don't want you to know about those pesky traffic-light cameras
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Phantom Punch
Milton "Skip" Ohlsen had big plans for mixed martial arts in St. Louis. Now it seems hes down for the count.
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Smelterville
Crystal City forges one hell of a deal.
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Helter-Smelter
Lawsuits fly as Crystal City residents try to stop construction of a pig iron production plant.
National Features
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Miami New Times
The Murder of Master Do
In a city plagued by killings, the most perplexing death is that of a killer.
ByTamara Lush -
SF Weekly
Pitching "Woo-Woo"
He'll find you a parking space and even watch your car--if the meter maids let him.
By Ashley Harrell -
Nashville Scene
Spank the Honkey
The victim of a racial slur exacts a special kind of retribution.
By P.J. Tobia -
Broward-Palm Beach New Times
Spring Break is Still Awesome
Try as it might, Ft. Lauderdale still can't shake America's die-hard partiers.
By Michael J. Mooney
All In A Name
Did the Post-Dispatch deliberately give its new blog the same title as the competition?
By Chad Garrison
Published: April 9, 2008
After a year spent preparing and fundraising, a group of retired St. Louis Post-Dispatch editors were preparing to officially launch their online news site St. Louis Platform this spring. Then came the March 30 announcement that their former employer also had plans for a new online feature with a name curiously close to theirs. It's title? The Platform.
"The timing certainly seems odd," comments Margaret Freivogel, editor of the St. Louis Platform, who notes that the Post-Dispatch accompanied its announcement in the editorial pages of its paper with a trademark symbol. "We are flattered that they like our name," says Freivogel. "But I think we're going to move on with another title for our publication. We don't want there to be any confusion as to which is which."
Gilbert Bailon, editorial page editor for the Post-Dispatch, describes The Platform as a blog that "will provide readers a chance to respond to the paper's editorials as well as engage in conversation with writers and editors." The blog, says Bailon, takes its name from Joseph Pulitzer's "platform" that appears each day in the paper and states — among other mantras — that the morning daily will "never tolerate injustice or corruption."
The editorial page editor dismisses any suggestions that his staff named its new blog in an attempt to undermine the Web site founded by the paper's former staffers. "There are people here who certainly know the people who are launching the other site," says Bailon. "But that outfit is going to do what they do, and we're going to do what we do. I don't see a big significance."
Freivogel acknowledges that her group never thought of seeking a trademark for its name. Like the Post-Dispatch blog, Freivogel says the St. Louis Platform also took its name — in part — from Pulitzer's platform. "That was one of the meanings," she explains. "But it was also a play on words as both a technology platform and a platform in which people can express themselves."
Freivogel and many of the Web site's other founders — Dick Weil, Robert Duffy, Dick Weiss and Freivogel's husband, Bill Freivogel — took a buyout shortly after Lee Enterprises purchased the Post-Dispatch in 2005. (For more about The Platform's inception, see Chad Garrison's story, "Virtually New[s]", published in the May 9, 2007 edition of RFT and available online at riverfronttimes.com.)
The ex-Post staffers plan to operate their Web site as a nonprofit akin to public radio and recently received a conditional grant of $500,000 from none other than Emily Pulitzer, whose family sold the Post-Dispatch to Lee Enterprises. In recent weeks Freivogel and her staff of nearly a dozen full- and part-time employees have found office space with KETC-TV (Channel 9) and launched a beta version of the Web site at www.stlplatform.org.
Now all they need is a name. Unfortunately, calling their upstart Web site the "Post-Dispatch" is probably out of the question. "That's an idea," says Freivogel. "But I imagine they probably have a trademark on that one, too."







