
Just kidding.
Wouldn’t it be fun to create a physical magazine like CollideMagazine and become one of their competitors?
Perhaps we should do that here at ChurchCrunch, especially since we’re bleeding into traditional print media!
Yeah. Right.
Magazines are going the way of the dinosaur, or John Donne perhaps (Not Collide though…!).
But the point of this extremely useless blog post on a late friday afternoon is to make mention that a Dallas / Forth Worth newspaper quoted us in an article that was released today about GodTube and their transformation into Tangle.com.
You could read the entire thing (and it’s a decent article) or just get your kicks with the other stuff:
Going in a more secular direction, while insisting on “safe” content, makes sense, according to some observers. “There might be some wisdom in creating partnerships with secular businesses, which have more money” than the ministries and church-related businesses that advertised with GodTube, said John Saddington, editor of ChurchCrunch, a blog that covers Christianity and technology.
So, what does this mean exactly? It means that ChurchCrunch was mentioned in a local paper.
The end. Have a great weekend.

Well maybe not paper print, but what about PDF?
oh. hmm.
Good deal. Pithy commentary. Next time hold out for managing editor credit.
puaha. “pithy”… that's a funny word.
i'm a sucker for a good magazine, i read Field and Stream because they have a knack for satire. Nice work on the Dallas Morning News…you're in the bigs now, kid.
puaha. they ganked some stuff from the blog. bleh.
stinkin gankers argh!
puaha.
love the new media stuff, but i'm going to be one sad man when print media gets (totally) swallowed by it. i'm a sucker for the tactile sensation (if you can call it that…) of paper.
very nice stuff you've got here on your site, by the way.
useful whether you're in ministry – which i am – or you're not.
Wow. I can't help but be impressed with GodTube right now. And I never thought I would say that. Ever.
peace|dewde
yes.
We've done it the other way around. Prevail Magazine started out in print and is now online: http://www.prevailmagazine.org . Our readership is small, but not because of demand. We just can't afford to print enough copies