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Detroit
host
Assoc.
of
Alternative
News
Media
convention
By
Abenaah
Ezra/Tell
Us
Detroit
DETROIT
(Tell Us
Det) -
Hundreds
of
participants
in
alternative
news
media
gathered
at the
Westin
Book
Cadillac
Hotel,
for the
35th
Annual
Association
of
Alternative
News
Media
convention.
As its
first
year in
Detroit,
news
Professionals
were
taken
back by
the
city's
profound
jewels
and
commended
organizers'
on its
first
day
success.
Larry
Alexander,
president
and CEO
of the
Detroit
Metro
Convention
&
Visitors
Bureau,
struck a
similar
note:
“Downtown
is
undergoing
a
complete
transformation,
becoming
an
incubator
for new
businesses
that are
bringing
thousands
of new
employees
and
amenities.
We’re
proud to
have the
opportunity
to
showcase
this to
such an
influential
and
large
group of
media.”
And AAN
Executive
Director
Tiffany
Shackelford
underscored
the
synergy
between
the
association
and the
city:
“Much
like
alternative
weeklies,
the city
strives
for
change
and
rebounds
with new
ideas
and the
motivation
to
fulfill
them.
This
makes it
the
perfect
host
city for
AAN’s
35th
Annual
Convention.”
The
Association
of
Alternative
Newsmedia
is made
up of
130
alternative
news
organizations
covering
every
major
metropolitan
area and
a number
of
smaller
markets
across
the
United
States
and
Canada,
with
combined
weekly
circulation
of more
than 6.5
million,
and a
print
readership
of
nearly
17
million
active,
educated
and
influential
adults.
Additional
millions
view AAN-member
content
via the
web and
mobile
devices.
Conventioneers
will
hear
from
major
voices
in the
industry
on
topics
from
investigative
reporting
to the
science
of
measuring
online
audiences.
And
they’ll
hear
from a
range of
Detroit-rooted
speakers
including
legendary
MC5
guitarist
Wayne
Kramer,
Detroit
activist
Grace
Lee
Boggs
and
University
of
Pennsylvania
historian
Thomas
J.
Sugrue,
a
Detroit
native
well
known
for his
Detroit-centered
work.
Metro
Times,
founded
in 1980,
is among
the
oldest
members
of what
began as
the
Association
of
Alternative
Newsweeklies
(until
its name
changed
last
year).
To meet
the
association’s
rigorous
membership
standards,
weekly
newspapers
must
demonstrate
that
they
produce
high-quality
journalism
that
offers a
valuable
alternative
to the
mainstream
media in
their
area.
Metro
Times
remains
the only
AAN
paper in
metropolitan
Detroit
and one
of two
in the
state of
Michigan.
For more
information
about
the
convention,
see
aan.org.
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