1. What exactly happened in the NPR interview of Pew President Rebecca Rimel, when NPR reported that Pew would make a run at acquiring the Philadelphia Inquirer, only to correct its story a day later?
2. Still, will Rimel's
comments -- "We have to put wise heads together to think about how the civic
purpose and the democratic purpose of newspapers is served, first and
foremost." -- help ignite a wider conversation?
3. What, then is the Inquirer worth, and what might a local model of ownership/management look like?
4. If you put together fledgling sites like PhillyFuture.org with traditional newspaper sites, what might you get?
5) What if you added City Guide-like functionality like Yahoo's beta to the mix, what would you get then?
6) Is the Newspaper Guild's foray into buying newspapers a passing notion, or a growing part of the civic conversation Rebecca Rimel wants to get going?
7) Can the KR* alumni editors group seeking a pro-journalism resolution to the sale join forces -- in conversation at least -- with the Guild and Rimel, to get things moving?
8) What other kinds of community groups, in other KR cities, may be moved to similar, civic action?
9) When current news publishers look at the St. Petersburg (this piece by Nelson Poynter in 2000), what are they thinking?
10) Your question here. (Happy New Year.)
*Disclosure: Ken Doctor is a retired Knight Ridder journalist and retains financial holdings in the company.

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