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Al's Morning Meeting

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Al Tompkins
Story ideas that you can localize and enterprise. Posted by 7:30 a.m. Mon-Fri.
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A dozen sites
I'm diggin'


*1. "Wired" explains how to figure out who is behind a Twitter page.

2. Check out FarmVille, Facebook's fastest growing application.

3. Before any health care reform vote, watch Steve Kroft's "60 Minutes Story" on the $60 billion in Medicare fraud that poisons the system each year.

4. Slate reported that some companies under criminal investigation still received stimulus money.

*5. USA Today reporters Brad Heath and Blake Morrison, WNYC's Radio Rookies and others won Casey Medals for their coverage of children. Watch this video of Heath and Morrison talking about their 8-month investigation of toxic air outside America's schools.

6. The Washington Post reveals how Washington, D.C., which has the nation's highest rate of AIDS cases, wasted millions of dollars on AIDS care.

7. The Association of Independents in Radio has provided a one-stop shopping page for people trying to sell freelance radio stories.

8. Sidewalks are in such bad shape in some cash-strapped towns that people who use wheelchairs are having to ride along the street instead.

*9. There's a new wearable HD camera for sports and action video that costs less than $350. Watch this sample video.

*10. The Tennessean's "Life on Hold" project looks at the lives of 20-year-olds trying to "figure it all out." The project features some really nice multimedia.

11. What words do you use that your readers don't understand? The New York Times tracks the words that its readers look up.

12. Read Beth Macy's first-person account about her Roanoke Times' project, "Age of Uncertainty." The series is about her community's aging senior citizens and the people who care for them.

All of my Diggin' sites are saved on Poynter's del.icio.us page.

EDITOR'S NOTE: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas, edited story excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites, as well as original concepts and analysis. When the information comes directly from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be provided whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but relies on the accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. We will correct errors and inaccuracies when we become aware of them.


Golf Recession: The Number of People Playing Golf Is Flat/Declining
Here is a story that may have implications for businesses where you live. It may even have implications for cities and states that run golf courses.

Golf Business Magazine, a trade journal for golf course owners, says the real estate bust has huge implications for course owners. Many high-end developments have golf as their central attraction. When home sales and building slows in those developments, the course, which planned to rake in big initiation fees and annual dues, bring in zilch.

Golf Business Magazine reports:

For an industry so inextricably linked to real estate, the timing of this "market correction" certainly couldn't be any worse for golf, given the game's own growth issues. Despite the confluence of this perfect economic storm -- the devastating real estate slowdown, flat golf participation and stagnant rounds played growth over the last five years -- golf's outlook isn't gloomy these days. At least that's the opinion of numerous golf operators and real estate developers, many of whom remain bullish on golf's future, especially as it relates to the lifestyle matrix of certain markets.

To be sure, some golf course owners and developers have felt the fallout from the nation's sluggish real estate market. Joey Garon, vice president of operations for Bonita Springs, Florida-based real estate developer Bonita Bay Group, says the real estate malaise is significantly affecting cash flow at clubs, particularly from an initiation deposit standpoint.

More people are quitting golf than are picking it up. Even hardcore golfers are playing less. And it is not just golf, it is a trend that washes over many outdoor activities.

The New York Times
reports
:

Over the past decade, the leisure activity most closely associated with corporate success in America has been in a kind of recession.

The total number of people who play has declined or remained flat each year since 2000, dropping to about 26 million from 30 million, according to the National Golf Foundation and the Sporting Goods Manufacturers Association.

More troubling to golf boosters, the number of people who play 25 times a year or more fell to 4.6 million in 2005 from 6.9 million in 2000, a loss of about a third.

The industry now counts its core players as those who golf eight or more times a year. That number, too, has fallen, but more slowly: to 15 million in 2006 from 17.7 million in 2000, according to the National Golf Foundation.

Maybe there is a bigger story:

The disappearance of golfers over the past several years is part of a broader decline in outdoor activities -- including tennis, swimming, hiking, biking and downhill skiing -- according to a number of academic and recreation industry studies.

A 2006 study by the United States Tennis Association, which has battled the trend somewhat successfully with a forceful campaign to recruit young players, found that punishing hurricane seasons factored into the decline of play in the South, while the soaring popularity of electronic games and newer sports like skateboarding was diminishing the number of new tennis players everywhere.

Additional resource:
National Golf Course Owners Association


Posted by Al Tompkins at 3:40 PM on Feb. 26, 2008
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Intriguing, but incomplete thesis This is a really a topic for a Freakenomics style... More.
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