Ask a newsagent in Moncton, N.B., about that new local newspaperâZoomNB, a free monthly dedicated to reporting good news onlyâand you may hear a funny story: someone dropped a stack of the papers off, then someone entirely different came and picked them all up, and no oneâs seen it since. Daniel Mlodecki, ZoomNBâs publisher, agrees heâs heard tell of itâthat someoneâs conducting some sort of black-plumbing operation against himâbut dismisses the yarn as âa little rumour.â
Whatever the case, running a newspaper in New Brunswick is hard work: Brunswick News, owned by the provinceâs Irving family, holds all its English dailies and most of the weeklies, a situation that prompted a Senate inquiry into media concentration there. Two years ago, the publisher of the Carleton Free Press, a Woodstock, N.B., indie, filed a Competition Bureau complaint accusing Brunswick News of selling ads at predatory prices; the bureau didnât pursue it and the Free Press closed months later.
Both Mlodecki, 32, and his father Victor once worked for Brunswick News. When Mlodecki fils lost his jobâhe says his wrongful dismissal suit should go to trial soonâhe bought a Moncton pub. âA barâs fun,â he adds, âbut it doesnât really fill the days.â So he launched ZoomNB, a photo-heavy, copy-light tabloid geared toward good news (âCanada Day is a blast in Moncton, Dieppe, and Riverview,â is one recent headline).
Is it any sort of threat to the Irvings? Not really. âItâs not a newspaper,â says Kim Kierans, a journalism prof at the University of Kingâs College in Halifax. âTheyâre relying on advertisers, and the enticement is seeing pictures of your friends, your neighbours, your kids, your aunties.â Still, Mlodecki says it was never about that, anyway: âItâs not like a revenge thing.â












What a great idea! Certainly better than what you normally see for free papers in the coffee shop.
Nobody robbed a liquor store on the lower part of town…
Nobody OD'd, nobody burnt a single building down…
[S]omeone dropped a stack of the papers off, then someone entirely different came and picked them all up, and no one’s seen it since. Daniel Mlodecki, ZoomNB’s publisher, agrees he’s heard tell of it—that someone’s conducting some sort of black-plumbing operation against him—but dismisses the yarn as “a little rumour.”
Too bad they can't print anything about that in their own paper.