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        <title>What knits together the fabric of a community? - Your Advocate: an editor&#039;s blog - ChrisCobler&apos;s Blog - Victoria Advocate</title>
        <link>http://community.victoriaadvocate.com/home/Blog/ChrisCobler/7775</link>
        <description>A newspaper contains much more than news stories or photographs. Perhaps just as important is the central role it plays in bringing together its community.

I thought about this today because of a letter to the editor criticizing the Advocate for not covering a car show last weekend. Even though we can always do better with our coverage, I was pleased we had publicized the show in advance. Readers regularly tells us they want to be informed about what they can go and do.

A key way we support these community events is through our&amp;nbsp; newspaper sponsorships. It seems as if the Advocate is a sponsor of every event I attend. The Advocate&#039;s family owners are more involved in and committed to the community than any newspaper I&#039;ve ever seen. 

I don&#039;t think longtime residents here realize this isn&#039;t the case at many newspapers. Across the country, many papers are owned by publicly traded corporations that don&#039;t care about the local Bach Festival or the zoo or the drill team&#039;s fund-raisers. They care only about the bottom line.

Sure, the Advocate is a business, too, but I can assure you the McHaney and Roberts families go above and beyond to make this the best possible place to live that they can.

I asked Emily Weissmiller, our community services manager, for a list of the community events the newspaper sponsored this year. If you&#039;re organizing an event, she&#039;s the person to talk with about a sponsorship. As a sponsor, the newspaper spends many thousands of dollars every year advertising these events.

We have to work within a budget and can&#039;t sponsor everything (even though it seems that way to me). Here&#039;s the list Emily provided:

---------

&amp;nbsp;
- Presenting sponsor of  such events&amp;nbsp;and organizations as the  Victoria Bach Festival, Keep Victoria Beautiful, Hospice of South Texas Living  in the Light Run, The Victoria Builder&amp;rsquo;s Association Parade of Homes and Home  Products Show, The Victoria Ballet Theatre, The Victoria Fine Arts Committee  Jazz Festival and the Victoria Regional Museum Association (Polo at McFaddin  event).
&amp;nbsp;
- Lead, gold or grand sponsors for Theatre  Victoria, The Children&amp;rsquo;s Discovery Museum, The Texas Zoo, Adult Literacy  Council,&amp;nbsp;and Museum of the Coastal Bend.
&amp;nbsp;
- Major event sponsor, aiding events  like Warrior&amp;rsquo;s Weekend, the Victoria Symphony&amp;rsquo;s Downtown Rhythms, Victoria  Chamber of Commerce events, Texas Kicking Bull, Red Cross Bash event, Habitat for Humanity House Party, African  American Chamber Gala, Family Outdoor Expo,&amp;nbsp;Rotary Clay Shoot, Charity Concert Series, YMCA Corporate Cup,  Knowledge Bowl, Perpetual Help Home  Celebrity Waiter event, and Hispanic Heritage&amp;nbsp;Month celebration events&amp;nbsp;(part of the UHV Spanish Speaking  Initiative.)
&amp;nbsp;
We also sponsor many non-profit organizations to help their message reach  the general public. We have supported&amp;nbsp;non-profits  including, but not limited to, the Victoria County United Way, Bluebonnet  Youth Ranch, Golden Crescent CASA, Hope of  South Texas and Sure B.E.T. (Business and Education Together). 
&amp;nbsp;
In February, the  Advocate&amp;nbsp;partnered with Victoria College to bring Stellar Brass Air Force  Academy Band to Victoria and&amp;nbsp;also&amp;nbsp;sponsored  the&amp;nbsp;Break of Reality concert.&amp;nbsp; We  are also set to&amp;nbsp;sponsor&amp;nbsp;the&amp;nbsp;Victoria 4th of July Blastoff City  Fireworks Show and Concert.
&amp;nbsp;
Emily sums it up this way: &amp;quot;Our heart is truly in our community.&amp;quot;
</description>
        <itunes:summary>A newspaper contains much more than news stories or photographs. Perhaps just as important is the central role it plays in bringing together its community.

I thought about this today because of a letter to the editor criticizing the Advocate for not covering a car show last weekend. Even though we can always do better with our coverage, I was pleased we had publicized the show in advance. Readers regularly tells us they want to be informed about what they can go and do.

A key way we support these community events is through our&amp;nbsp; newspaper sponsorships. It seems as if the Advocate is a sponsor of every event I attend. The Advocate&#039;s family owners are more involved in and committed to the community than any newspaper I&#039;ve ever seen. 

I don&#039;t think longtime residents here realize this isn&#039;t the case at many newspapers. Across the country, many papers are owned by publicly traded corporations that don&#039;t care about the local Bach Festival or the zoo or the drill team&#039;s fund-raisers. They care only about the bottom line.

Sure, the Advocate is a business, too, but I can assure you the McHaney and Roberts families go above and beyond to make this the best possible place to live that they can.

I asked Emily Weissmiller, our community services manager, for a list of the community events the newspaper sponsored this year. If you&#039;re organizing an event, she&#039;s the person to talk with about a sponsorship. As a sponsor, the newspaper spends many thousands of dollars every year advertising these events.

We have to work within a budget and can&#039;t sponsor everything (even though it seems that way to me). Here&#039;s the list Emily provided:

---------

&amp;nbsp;
- Presenting sponsor of  such events&amp;nbsp;and organizations as the  Victoria Bach Festival, Keep Victoria Beautiful, Hospice of South Texas Living  in the Light Run, The Victoria Builder&amp;rsquo;s Association Parade of Homes and Home  Products Show, The Victoria Ballet Theatre, The Victoria Fine Arts Committee  Jazz Festival and the Victoria Regional Museum Association (Polo at McFaddin  event).
&amp;nbsp;
- Lead, gold or grand sponsors for Theatre  Victoria, The Children&amp;rsquo;s Discovery Museum, The Texas Zoo, Adult Literacy  Council,&amp;nbsp;and Museum of the Coastal Bend.
&amp;nbsp;
- Major event sponsor, aiding events  like Warrior&amp;rsquo;s Weekend, the Victoria Symphony&amp;rsquo;s Downtown Rhythms, Victoria  Chamber of Commerce events, Texas Kicking Bull, Red Cross Bash event, Habitat for Humanity House Party, African  American Chamber Gala, Family Outdoor Expo,&amp;nbsp;Rotary Clay Shoot, Charity Concert Series, YMCA Corporate Cup,  Knowledge Bowl, Perpetual Help Home  Celebrity Waiter event, and Hispanic Heritage&amp;nbsp;Month celebration events&amp;nbsp;(part of the UHV Spanish Speaking  Initiative.)
&amp;nbsp;
We also sponsor many non-profit organizations to help their message reach  the general public. We have supported&amp;nbsp;non-profits  including, but not limited to, the Victoria County United Way, Bluebonnet  Youth Ranch, Golden Crescent CASA, Hope of  South Texas and Sure B.E.T. (Business and Education Together). 
&amp;nbsp;
In February, the  Advocate&amp;nbsp;partnered with Victoria College to bring Stellar Brass Air Force  Academy Band to Victoria and&amp;nbsp;also&amp;nbsp;sponsored  the&amp;nbsp;Break of Reality concert.&amp;nbsp; We  are also set to&amp;nbsp;sponsor&amp;nbsp;the&amp;nbsp;Victoria 4th of July Blastoff City  Fireworks Show and Concert.
&amp;nbsp;
Emily sums it up this way: &amp;quot;Our heart is truly in our community.&amp;quot;
</itunes:summary>
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                    <item>
                <title>Jun 18,  2008 at 11:06 PM : These ingrates should...</title>
                <description>These ingrates should thank their lucky stars they even have a newspaper in Victoria.&amp;nbsp; You guys do a great job. Most of these whiners don&#039;t know anymore about journalism, than they do about fornication. Sorry, I love to paraphrase that line from &amp;quot;Patton.&amp;quot;</description>
                <link>http://community.victoriaadvocate.com/home/Blog/ChrisCobler/7775/#c_54240</link>
                <guid>http://community.victoriaadvocate.com/home/Blog/ChrisCobler/7775/#c_54240</guid>
                <itunes:summary>These ingrates should thank their lucky stars they even have a newspaper in Victoria.&amp;nbsp; You guys do a great job. Most of these whiners don&#039;t know anymore about journalism, than they do about fornication. Sorry, I love to paraphrase that line from &amp;quot;Patton.&amp;quot;</itunes:summary>     
            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>Jun 19,  2008 at 08:06 AM : Thanks, Ragman. We...</title>
                <description>Thanks, Ragman. We know we&#039;re far from perfect, but I do try to get across the point to people that a community would be a far worse place without a local newspaper. If you don&#039;t support the newspaper because it failed to cover one item of importance to you, imagine what would happen if that publication ceased to exist. Who would publicize any event?

I&#039;m biased on the topic, obviously, but I think a good newspaper is the heart of its community. I understand people wanting to improve their newspaper. I don&#039;t understand people wishing it ill. The two families who own the Advocate wish only the best for the communities they serve. I consider myself lucky to work for such an organization. We&#039;re stewards of a public trust, even though we&#039;re also a private business. We certainly are fair game for criticism in how we exercise that stewardship.</description>
                <link>http://community.victoriaadvocate.com/home/Blog/ChrisCobler/7775/#c_54279</link>
                <guid>http://community.victoriaadvocate.com/home/Blog/ChrisCobler/7775/#c_54279</guid>
                <itunes:summary>Thanks, Ragman. We know we&#039;re far from perfect, but I do try to get across the point to people that a community would be a far worse place without a local newspaper. If you don&#039;t support the newspaper because it failed to cover one item of importance to you, imagine what would happen if that publication ceased to exist. Who would publicize any event?

I&#039;m biased on the topic, obviously, but I think a good newspaper is the heart of its community. I understand people wanting to improve their newspaper. I don&#039;t understand people wishing it ill. The two families who own the Advocate wish only the best for the communities they serve. I consider myself lucky to work for such an organization. We&#039;re stewards of a public trust, even though we&#039;re also a private business. We certainly are fair game for criticism in how we exercise that stewardship.</itunes:summary>     
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