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NEWS | FEATURES | COMMUNITY | SPECIALTY PUBLICATIONS | EVENTS THE BULLETIN Advertising MEDIA KIT 2020 We’re Central Oregon’s local, daily news source. INFORMING, ENGAGING, INSPIRING, AND EMPOWERING. REACHING OVER 35,000 LOCAL READERS EVERY DAY and connecting more local businesses with Central Oregon than any other local print and online media source.

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Page 1: Te ulletin Advertising edia it Advertising THE BULLETIN MEDIA …€¦ · BEND Christmas Valley Fo Ro Silver ak resce Gilc ris LaPINE SUNRIVER Camp Sherman REDRMEDONMDOND well Butte

The Bulletin Advertising Media Kit 2020

NEWS | FEATURES | COMMUNITY | SPECIALTY PUBLICATIONS | EVENTS

THE BULLETIN Advertising MEDIA KIT 2020

We’re Central Oregon’s local, daily news source. INFORMING, ENGAGING, INSPIRING, AND EMPOWERING.

REACHING OVER 35,000 LOCAL READERS EVERY DAY and connecting more local businesses with Central Oregon

than any other local print and online media source.

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The Bulletin Advertising Media Kit 2020

p

IN PRINT & [email protected]

541-382-18111777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702

242126

126

58

31

22

97

9726

26

20

20

20

26

LAKE

NATIONALFOREST

BLMLAND

CROOK

JEFFERSON

WASCOKL

AMATH

To Mitchell

To The DallesTo Portland

To Salem

To Eugene

To Eugene

To Eugene

To Klamath FallsTo Lakeview

CFort Rock

Silver Lake

CrescentGilchrist

LaPINE

Ca man

Powell Butte

PRINEVILLE

Tumalo

Butte Terrebonne

Culveretolius

ings

BEND

Christmas ValleyFort Rock

Silver Lake

CrescentGilchrist

LaPINE

SUNRIVER

Camp Sherman

REDMONDREDMOND

Powell Butte

PRINEVILLE

MADRASMADRAS

SISTERSSISTERS

AlfalfaTumalo

Black Butte Terrebonne

CulverMetolius

Warm Springs

Millican

BEND

DESCHUTES

SW

NWNE

SE

Colorado Ave. Bear Creek Rd.

Tumalo

Alfalfa

BEND

97

97

20

20

COVERING THE CENTRAL OREGON MARKET

IN PRINT AND ONLINEThe typical reader of The Bulletin in print and online tends to be a HOMEOWNER, BETTER EDUCATED, AND EARNING A HIGHER INCOME when compared to the general adult population.

The Bulletin is delivered throughout Central Oregon to over 15,000 households and is sold in over 300 locations around the area. The city of Bend is our highest concentration of readership.

THE BULLETIN IS READ BY OVER 35,000 PEOPLE A DAY.

WHO VISITS www.bendbulletin.com:Bendbulletin.com is the #1 local news site in Central Oregon, recording over 1.2 million pageviews from 420,000 unique monthly visitors. Over 60% of our traffic comes from mobile.Source: March 2018 ComScore & March 2019 Google Analytics

WHO WE ARE: The Bulletin is part of Central Oregon Media Group. Publishing seven days a week, The Bulletin is the primary newspaper for Central Oregonians, providing in-depth news reporting, community listings and events, and local business advertising. The portfolio includes a daily edition both in print and online, special news products and numerous lifestyle and community focused publications.

2

Circulation OUR PRINT AND ONLINE BY THE NUMBERS

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The Bulletin Advertising Media Kit 2020

p

IN PRINT & [email protected]

541-382-18111777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702

IN PRINTPublished seven days a week and read by over 35,000 Central Oregonians, The Bulletin is a trusted source of news and information for the region. The Bulletin is written and divided in various sections that pair reader interest and give coordinated advertising opportunities to our advertisers.

DAILY FEATURESSmart Start, Local, State & National News, Business, Editorial, Weather, Comics and Puzzles

WEEKLY FEATURESMONDAY: Health, Golf, Kid ScoopTHURSDAY: GO! Magazine (+TV), OutdoorsFRIDAY: High Desert Pulse (3rd Friday, quarterly)SATURDAY: Area 97 (bi-monthly), Real EstateSUNDAY: Milestones, Event Calendar, Color comics, Parade, Features, Gardening, Beer, Restaurant Inspections, Travel, History (2nd Sunday)

Our specialty publications include Central Oregon Golf Preview covering that very popular local sport and High Desert Pulse covering our medical community. Area 97 is a high quality glossy magazine focused on Central Oregon lifestyle that publishes bi-montly. History buffs will enjoy our reproductions of 100-year-old issues of The Bulletin once a month on the second Sunday. And there’s more! See pg.4

ONLINEThe Bulletin’s daily news coverage is available at www.bendbulletin.com. An online subscription includes full access to all The Bulletin’s news stories, featured publications, virtual newspaper, archives, videos, online events calendar and more. Non-subscribers can still enjoy many online publications and features for free, as well as have ten free news articles every thirty days.

The Bulletin offers a daily email newsletter as well as www.bendbulletin.com & www.bendhomes.com

3

Products OUR PRINT AND ONLINE NEWS PUBLICATIONS

OVER 1.2 MILLION PAGE VIEWS A MONTH

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The Bulletin Advertising Media Kit 2020

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IN PRINT & [email protected]

541-382-18111777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702

OUR 2020 PUBLICATIONSJANUARY Area 97 COBA Directory

FEBRUARY High Desert Pulse

MARCH Sportsmen’s Show™ Guide Summer Youth Activity Guide Area 97 Redmond Profiles

APRIL Home & Garden Show™ Guide Sisters Magazine

MAY Area 97 High Desert Pulse Sisters Magazine (Rodeo Guide) Old Mill Guide Central Oregon Golf Preview Deschutes County Fair Premium Book Under The Sun

JUNE Where to GO! in Central Oregon Sisters Magazine (Quilt Show)

JULY Area 97 Tour of Homes™ Guide Deschutes County Fair Guide Old Mill Guide

AUGUST High Desert Pulse School Directory Sisters Magazine (Folk Festival)

SEPTEMBER Area 97 Redmond Community Guide

NOVEMBER Area 97 High Desert Pulse Sisters Magazine (Holiday Issue) Old Mill Guide

NICHE PUBLICATIONSAll publications are locally written and designed with a focus on life in Central Oregon. Several Special Projects publications have won multiple awards for design, content and photography including: Best section Cover, Best in Oregon, Best in the Northwest and Best National awards.

FEATURED PUBLICATIONS INCLUDE:Area 97: Central Oregon community & lifestyle at its best. A full color, glossy perfect bound magazine showcasing the highlights of the regionHigh Desert Pulse: is a quarterly glossy magazine created to help promote, encourage and maintain an active and healthful lifestyleOUR COMMUNITY/TOWN PUBLICATIONS INCLUDE:Sisters Magazine, and Under The Sun (Sunriver).All specialty publication advertising spaces are full color. Sizes, rates, publication dates and deadlines are available upon request.

4

Special Projects OUR NICHE PUBLICATIONS AND COMMUNITY GUIDES

Feb. 9, 2019magazine

DININGENTERTAINMENT

RECREATION& MORE!

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The Bulletin Advertising Media Kit 2020

p

IN PRINT & [email protected]

541-382-18111777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702

DOLLAR VOLUME RATES* Volume based on annual spend

Level Volume Level

Bulletin Display

Spokesman Display

BulletinClassified Display

BulletinClassifiedLine Ads

Nickel Marketplace

Display

Nickel Marketplace

Line Ads

SpokesmanClassified Display

SpokesmanClassifiedLine Ads

OPEN OPEN $65.00 $19.95 $43.16 $4.80 $4.00 $0.44 $19.50 $2.171 $800 $18.20 $5.59 $12.08 $1.34 $4.00 $0.44 $5.46 $0.612 $2,500 $17.88 $5.49 $11.87 $1.32 $4.00 $0.44 $5.36 $0.603 $5,000 $17.55 $5.39 $11.65 $1.29 $4.00 $0.44 $5.27 $0.594 $7,000 $16.25 $4.99 $10.79 $1.20 $4.00 $0.44 $4.88 $0.545 $10,000 $15.60 $4.79 $10.36 $1.15 $4.00 $0.44 $4.68 $0.526 $15,000 $14.30 $4.39 $9.50 $1.06 $4.00 $0.44 $4.29 $0.487 $20,000 $13.65 $4.19 $9.06 $1.01 $4.00 $0.44 $4.10 $0.468 $25,000 $13.00 $3.99 $8.63 $0.96 $4.00 $0.44 $3.90 $0.439 $40,000 $12.35 $3.79 $8.20 $0.91 $4.00 $0.44 $3.71 $0.4110 $65,000 $11.70 $3.59 $7.77 $0.86 $4.00 $0.44 $3.51 $0.39

Space rates are cost per column inch. To calculate column inches, multiply the number of columns by the height in inches.Example: A 2 col. x 2 inch ad = 4 column inches. At level 1 price, Bulletin Display is $18.20 per column inch. 4 column inches x $18.20 = $72.80

5

Print Rates OUR PRINT PRICING AND DISCOUNTS

Premium Charge Applies to Color Charge

Section Fronts 20% Space Standard

History Pages 15% Space Standard

Position Guarantee 15% Space Standard

PREMIUMS

*All spend in any product or service counts toward annual volume level

Price by column inchUnder 10”$5010” to 61” $150Over 61”$250

FULL COLORRate Bulletin

DisplayBulletin

Classified Display

Bulletin Classified Line Ads

Nickel Marketplace

Display

Nickel Marketplace

Line AdsSpokesman

DisplaySpokesman

Line Ads

Obituaries $26.00 $4.00 $11.90Charitable Civic Rate

$18.20 $12.08 $1.34 $4.00 $0.44 $5.59 $0.61

Celebration $26.00 $17.33 $1.93 $4.00 $0.44 $11.90 $1.32Sponsorship $26.00 $17.33 $1.93 $4.00 $0.44 $11.90 $1.32Legal $62.00 $44.00 $4.89 $19.50 $2.17Open Public Body Legal

$30.75 $21.32 $2.37 $19.50 $2.17

NON CONTRACT RATES

PICKUP DISCOUNTReceive a 30% discount after the first run of your ad. Applies to ads that run within 7 days of the original with no design changes. Discount does not apply to color charges.

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The Bulletin Advertising Media Kit 2020

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IN PRINT & [email protected]

541-382-18111777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702

TERMS & CONDITIONS1. Preprinted supplements can be inserted into The Bulletin, Redmond

Spokesman and Central Oregon Marketplace (TMC) at the rates listed below. These rates apply to preprints ordered by single advertisers. The Bulletin does not accept any pre-printed, multi-advertiser inserts.

2. Published preprint rates apply to machine-inserted preprints 5.75” x 4.25” minimum to 10.5” from the fold up 11.5” maximum size. Single sheets must be printed on minimum 60 lb. stock; other handling charges may apply.

3. Four page tabloid sections should be quarter-folded to reduce preprint spoilage.

4. Zoned preprint distribution is available in both The Bulletin and Central Oregon Marketplace (TMC). Check with your sales representative for availability. A 10% premium will be added for all zoned preprints.

5. Circulation figures by zone are updated quarterly and are available from your advertising representative. Preprints will be billed for quantity inserted.

7. Minimum insert charge is $400.00.8. No zoning available on Sundays

THE BULLETIN AND CENTRAL OREGON

MARKETPLACE ...COVERING CENTRAL OREGON WITH

NON-DUPLICATED COVERAGE.The Bulletin, along with The Central

Oregon Marketplace (TMC), delivers your advertising message to the households in the Central Oregon area. Central Oregon Marketplace is delivered to The Bulletin’s

non-subscribers by carrier and third-class mail.

The Bulletin/ Spokesman Marketplace The Bulletin/

Spokesman Marketplace The Bulletin/ Spokesman Marketplace The Bulletin/

Spokesman Marketplace The Bulletin/ Spokesman Marketplace

Size OPEN 12-23 dates annually 24-35 Dates annually 36- 51 dates annually 52+ dates annuallySingle Sheet $50 $45 $39 $35 $34 $30 $29 $26 $25 $234-12 Tab; 2-6 Standard $61 $55 $47 $42 $41 $37 $36 $32 $31 $2816-14 Tab; 8-12 Standard $66 $59 $50 $45 $44 $39 $38 $34 $33 $3028-36Tab; 14-18 Standard $70 $63 $54 $49 $47 $42 $41 $37 $35 $3240-48 Tab; 20-24 Standard $75 $68 $58 $52 $50 $45 $44 $39 $38 $3452-60Tab; 26-30 Standard $80 $72 $62 $56 $54 $48 $47 $42 $41 $37

A B C D EPREPRINT INSERT RATES

6

Insert Rates OUR PREPRINTED INSERT PRICING

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The Bulletin Advertising Media Kit 2020

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IN PRINT & [email protected]

541-382-18111777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702

6-COLUMN STANDARD ROP MEASUREMENTSFull page size ....................................................10.7” x 20.25”Width of column ......................................................... 1.6458” Depth of column .......................................................... 20.25”Inches per page ............................................................ 121.5”Gutter measure, between pages ................................. .7916”

FIVE-COLUMN TABLOID ROP PAGETabloid pages are made up and billed at standard column widths. A full tabloid page size is 5 standard columns wide plus the rail. A full page is billed at 10.5 inches deep.Full page size ......................................................9.83” x 10.5”Width of column ..................................1.6458” - 9p10.5 picasDepth of column ............................................................ 10.5”Inches per page ............................................................ 53.15”Gutter measure, between pages ..................................... 92”Go! Magazine Rail ad size .............................................. 10.5”Double Truck ...................................................20.58” x 10.5”

5-COLUMN TABLOID MODULAR PAGETabloid pages are made up and billed at standard column widths. A full tabloid page size is 5 standard columns wide. A full page is billed at 10.5 inches deep.1/8 page ................................ (Horizontal) 4.8315” x 2.5325”1/8 page .......................................(Vertical) 2.332” x 5.2317”1/4 page ..................................(Horizontal) 4.8315 x 5.2317”1/2 page .........................................(Vertical) 4.8315” x 10.5”1/2 page .................................... (Horizontal) 9.83” x 5.2317”Full page .............................................................9.83” x 10.5”Double Truck (11 column) ................................20.58” x 10.5”

ROP STANDARD COLUMN MEASUREColumns Inch Width1 Column .................................................................... 1.6458”2 Columns ................................................................. 3.4583”3 Columns ................................................................. 5.2708”4 Columns ................................................................. 7.0833”5 Columns ................................................................. 8.8958”6 Columns ............................................................... 10.7083”Double Truck (13 Columns) ...................................... 22.2082”

9-COLUMN CLASSIFIED/MARKETPLACE PAGE MEASUREMENTSFull page size ..............................................10.7125” x 20.25”Width of column ............................................................. 1.12”Depth of column .......................................................... 20.25”Inches per page .......................................................... 182.25”

CLASSIFIED/MARKETPLACE STANDARD COLUMN MEASURESColumns Inch Width Pica Width1 Column ..................................................................... 1.120”2 Columns .................................................................. 2.319”3 Columns ................................................................... 3.518”4 Columns ................................................................... 4.717”5 Columns ................................................................... 5.916”6 Columns ................................................................... 7.115”7 Columns ................................................................... 8.314”8 Columns ................................................................... 9.513”9 Columns ............................................................... 10.7125”

OTHER MECHANICAL INFORMATION1. The Bulletin is printed offset.2. Standard page advertisements exceeding 19 inches in depth

will be charged at full column depth of 20-1/2 inches. Tabloid size advertisements exceeding 10 inches in depth will be billed at full tabloid depth of 10.5 inches. The minimum size ROP display advertisement is one column by one inch. Strip ads may be any column width by minimum 3 inches deep, maximum 6 columns wide. Wider strip ads are allowed as space is available and subject to 25% premium.

3. Unique premium ad spaces are available. Contact your sales representative

6 col. X 10”Half PageHorizontal

3 col. X 20.25”Half PageVertical

3 col. X 10”Quarter page

Vertical

COMMON ROP SIZES

7

Print Ad Specs OUR PRINT AD SIZES COLUMN WIDTHS

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The Bulletin Advertising Media Kit 2020

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IN PRINT & [email protected]

541-382-18111777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702

ELECTRONIC SUBMISSIONCentral Oregon Media Group gladly accepts electronic submission of press ready advertising and commercial print files. Files should be uploaded to our FTP site at: ads.bendbulletin.com Complete instructions are available online at that website.Alternatively, print advertising files under 25MB can be emailed to: [email protected] for all ad and publication sizes are gladly provided upon request. Please call your Bulletin sales representative to obtain a template.

REQUIREMENTS FOR PRESS-READY FILESThe Bulletin accepts press quality PDF files that meet the following specifications: • Contain high resolution (250 - 300 dpi) CMYK or grayscale photos• CMYK or grayscale graphics (no Pantone, or RGB elements)• No Rich Black (100% Black, not CMYK mix)• All fonts embedded (or turned to outlines)Image Preparation All photos should be sized as near as possible to the final print size. Photos that are enlarged or reduced by more than 25% in the page layout application will lose sharpness and image quality. Any shadow in excess of 90% can be expected to print solid black. Plan for a dot gain of 25% and a total ink limit of 240%.Image and Quality Issues A common issue that hinders quality reproduction is the use of “Rich Black.” When an area of solid black ink coverage in text or a graphic also contains Cyan, Magenta and Yellow, print reproduction, sharpness and clarity may suffer. This commonly occurs inadvertently when text is copied from other desktop publishing applications, when ‘registration black’ is chosen as a text color, or when fields of RGB black are converted to CMYK. Typography and Rules Type set smaller than 6 point should be avoided.Use 10 point type minimum to reverse out of a single color background. Use 12 point type minimum to reverse out of a four color screened background. Do not reverse serif type smaller than 12 points.Do not reverse serif type within screened areas containing less than a 70% screen of 2,3,or 4 colors. Do not reverse serif type in yellow or other light colored background. Do not reverse small type over colored images. Reverse copy should be set in bold-face type for best reproduction.Screened Text Please avoid screening serif type with fine or medium weight fonts. Type screened at 90% or more will reproduce as solid.

PREPARING FILES FOR UPLOADFiles will not upload if not properly named. Please ensure your PDF file is named using a .pdf suffix. Ads will not upload if this file name suffix is not included. For example a correct name would be: ‘MySundayAd.pdf’. Multiple Page-Ready PDF files with the appropriate suffix may be uploaded. In addition, you may choose to ‘stuff’ multiple ads into a single archive for uploading using a compression utility such as Stuffit or Winzip . Stuffed archives will upload only if the appropriate file name suffix is used (.zip, .sit, .sea, .hqx, .bin). For example ‘MySundayAds.hqx’.DEADLINE NOTIFICATION This process does not guarantee space in The Bulletin. In order to guarantee space you must call your advertising sales representative and reserve before 4 p.m. 4 days prior to regular Monday through Sunday publication.

RESPONSIBILITYYOURSYou have already initiated an ad insertion order with a representative at The Bulletin.Before you submit your electronic ad, please check all graphic elements and fonts and complete a successful output to your postscript laser printer.Online submission of the Electronic Ad Delivery Form and associated files.

OURSThe Bulletin will take every precaution to insure care is taken with advertiser files. We will make every effort to process your ad as intended. However, The Bulletin is not responsible for unusable material, delays or missed schedules due to file errors, errors in advertisement, software bugs, improperly prepared files, incompatible (non-Macintosh) PC files, corrupted or unusable fonts or unclear instructions.COPYRIGHT DISCLAIMER: The advertiser is solely responsible for the content of the ad and for obtaining permission to use photographs, fonts, or any copyrighted material.

ONLINE SUBMISSION OF THE ELECTRONIC AD DELIVERY FORM

IS REQUIRED FOR ADS.BENDBULLETIN.COM

8

Press Ready Sp ecs OUR FILE SPECIFICATIONS FOR PRINTING

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The Bulletin Advertising Media Kit 2020

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IN PRINT & [email protected]

541-382-18111777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702

9

Services OUR PRINT AND ONLINE MARKETING SERVICES

DESIGN AND PRODUCTION SERVICES AVAILABLEE-TEARSHEETS Electronic Tearsheets are provided free of charge. Physical tearsheets provided at $5 each. Upon request, a tearsheet of any ad four inches or larger is provided on the day of publication. Co-op billing and other tearsheets are available by mail once per month. All tearsheets must be ordered in advance of publication, to ensure timely delivery. The Bulletin cannot guarantee tearsheets for late orders.

PROOFING SERVICES The Bulletin provides free proofs of ads composed by The Bulletin when materials are received by the deadlines published in this rate card. All other ads will be proofed by The Bulletin based on original materials submitted. Proofs are available to check accuracy of text and copy, as well as images, based on the original layout submitted. Excessive changes after deadlines are subject to Bulletin approval based on time available before publication. The Bulletin is not responsible for errors submitted with original materials by the customer.

SPECULATIVE ADVERTISING DESIGN Digital (non-finished) ad concepts and design ideas are available, free of charge, with no obligation for publication in The Bulletin.

AD PRODUCTION There is no charge for new ads designed by The Bulletin for use in Central Oregon Media Group publications. The Bulletin-created ads may be purchased for use in other publications at $75 per hour for handling.

PRESS READY AD SUBMISSION The Bulletin will accept press ready electronic ads at the specifications outlined on ads.bendbulletin.com. The Bulletin is not responsible for file errors. The Bulletin will not be responsible for unusable material, delays or missed schedules due to file errors or improperly prepared files. The Bulletin has the right to publish an ad “as is” if necessary to meet deadlines. The Bulletin reserves the right to eliminate agency commissions when file assistance is required.

GRAPHICS LIBRARY Our graphics library is rich with images and readily available to Bulletin customers. Selected images are available for use outside The Bulletin for a fee. See your Sales Representative for additional information.

LOGO DESIGN Logo design is available and multi-media ready for only $200.00 per hour. The logo is provided with full rights of usage to the advertising customer.

ELECTRONIC AD COPIES A PDF copy of a completed ad that has been published in The Bulletin is available as a courtesy, for publication in another medium whose specifications match The Bulletin’s. Requests for PDF copies require 3 days advance notice.

DESIGN AND PRODUCTION FEES

PROOFS AND CHANGES TO AD COPY: Advertisers receive free of charge, up to two sets of changes, or three proofs with any ad created by Central Oregon Media Group graphic designers. Advertisers who require more than two sets of changes, or more than three proofs will be subject to $50 per occurrence.

LATE SUBMISSION OF AD MATERIALS: Advertisers who submit late ad materials to our design team, or upload print ready ads to ads.bendbulletin.com past deadline will be subject to a $50 late fee per occurrence.

LATE CANCELATION: Advertisers who reserve ad space and then cancel their scheduled advertisement after the advertising deadline will be subject to a fee of 50% of the original advertising cost.

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The Bulletin Advertising Media Kit 2020

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IN PRINT & [email protected]

541-382-18111777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702

ADVERTISINGMEDIA KIT 2018

Updated 6/6/18

BENDBULLETIN.COM AND AUDIENCE EXTENSION

S92083 non dti

BASE RATESBendbulletin.com. ROS 300x250; 300x600; 728x90; 320x50 (Mobile Leaderboard)

CPM

25,000-249,999 Impressions......................................... $10

250,000-499,999 Impressions .........................................$9

500,000-1 Million Impressions........................................$8

Mobile App ......................................................................... $12

Audience Extension CPM

25,000-249,999 Impressions............................................$8

250,000-499,999 Impressions .........................................$7

500,000-1 Million Impressions........................................$6

Add Ons CPM

Remarketing..........................................................................$5

Mobile Sticky.........................................................................$2

Premium Positions Flat Rate

Home Page Takeover/1 Day........................................$250

Home Page Takeover/3 Days in 1 Week .................$500

Section Front Takeover/1 Day....................................$100

Section Front Takeover/3 Days in 1 Week..............$300

Native Advertising .........................................................$400

Native Content Creation ................................................ $75

To advertise contact yourBulletin Sales Representative at

541-383-0394 INSIDE

Blazers — Portland

gets a taste

of its own

medicine as Washing-

ton gets hot from long

range. Roundup, C3

Ducks — As No. 11 Oregonmoves to

a more regular league

schedule, it still sees

the need to improve.

Roundup, C4

NHL — Penguins end

Washington’s winning

streak at nine in a 15-

goal overtime thriller.

Roundup, C3

NFL

SANTA CLARA, Calif.

— The search for San

Francisco’s new coach

narrowed Monday with

New England offensive

coordinator Josh Mc-

Daniels pulling out of

the running for the job,

while the 49ers added

more candidates for

their general manager

vacancy.Shortly after Mc-

Daniels said he was no

longer a candidate to re-

place the fired Chip Kelly

in San Francisco, team

CEO Jed York inter-

viewed Seattle co-direc-

tors of player personnel

Trent Kirchner and Scott

Fitterer later Monday for

the GM job previously

held by Trent Baalke.

McDaniels, who

was the head coach in

Denver from 2009-10,

was considered one of

the favorites to land the

coaching job because

of his success running

New England’s offense

before deciding to stay

with the Patriots for at

least another year.

That leaves only two

coaching candidates

remaining unless San

Francisco decides to

open up the search

before making a final

decision: Atlanta offen-

sive coordinator Kyle

Shanahan and Seattle

offensive line coach

Tom Cable. Shanahan

cannot be hired until the

Falcons’ season is over

The 49ers have the

only coach opening left

in the NFL after the oth-

er five vacancies have all

been filled.Kirchner has 17 years

of experience in the

NFL since starting as a

scouting intern in Seat-

tle in 2000. Fitterer has

19 years of NFL person-

nel experience and has

been with the Seahawks

since 2001. York has already

interviewed seven other

candidates for general

manager: Arizona vice

president of player

personnel Terry Mc-

Donough, ESPN analyst

Louis Riddick, Carolina

assistant GM Brandon

Beane on Monday, Indi-

anapolis vice president

of football operations

Jimmy Raye III, Min-

nesota assistant GM

George Paton, Green

Bay director of football

operations Eliot Wolf

and Packers director of

player personnel Brian

Gutekunst.— From wire reports

49ers coaching

search narrows

www.bendbulletin.com/sports

SPORTSTHE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2017

CINSIDE: CLASSIFIEDS

Scoreboard, C2

Sports in brief, C2

Preps, C4

This is supposed to be the time of year when Dave

Hood can exhale, when he can breathe a sigh of

relief as Mountain View’s nonleague schedules

conclude and they get into league competition.

PREP SPORTS THIS WEEK

GRANTLUCAS

That is how it is SUPPOSED to be.

“I’ve been around here 50 years,”

says Hood, the longtime athletic

director at Mountain View High

School in Bend. “I grew up here.

And I’ve never seen anything like

this.”Hood then laughs and adds: “I

have a massive headache right now.

It’s crazy.”With record-level snow blan-

keting the High Desert, which has

endured more than 57 inches of

snowfall in recent weeks, squeezing

in games and even practices has

been a challenge for prep teams

across Central Oregon. Just since

the turn of the calendar year, Bend-

La Pine Schools has canceled six

school days due to either snowfall

or the uncertain safety of its school

structures after the gym roof

collapsed at Highland Magnet at

Bend’s Kenwood School last week.

Certainly the safety of students and

school staff is paramount, but those

closures have prevented high school

teams from practicing and compet-

ing. Hence, Hood’s headache.

“You just get stressed,” Hood

says. “You want to do the best

things for the teams that haven’t

practiced. Our wrestling coach

(Les Combs) is going, ‘We haven’t

practiced, and when we do have

a match, our kids are getting hurt

because we haven’t practiced.’ You

want to do right by (the athletes),

and you want to do right by the

coaches who want a competitive

schedule. And right now, you’re just

going, ‘I’ll take any game.’ … It’s an

ongoing headache. But that’s the

nature of this business, and you just

roll with it.”“I’m not going to lie to you,” Scott

Baker chuckles, “I hate the snow

right now.”

•With Central Oregon schools closed for most of 2017, coaches worry that

athletes are falling behind — and risking injury — with lack of competition

“I’m not going to lie to you:

I hate the snow right now.”

— Bend High boys

basketball coach Scott Baker

See Schedules / C4

(Peter Pietrangelo/Bulletin illustration from Thinkstock photos)

SEATTLE — They were once a brash

collection of misfits. They are now a

dismissive group of egomaniacs.

They were once known for the resolve

they showed in victory. They are now known

for the grace they lack in defeat.

The Seattle Seahawks have been every-

thing from dominant, to mesmerizing, to

maddening to heartbreaking — all points

on an emotional gamut that

has compelled fans for years.

But one thing they are not is

likable.Not anymore, at least.

About 20 minutes after Se-

attle’s 36-20 loss to Atlanta on Saturday, Q13-

TV reporter Bill Wixey asked defensive end

Michael Bennett why the pass rush struggled

to pressure Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan.

Bennett responded with a profanity-laced

tirade centered on belittling Wixey for never

having strapped it up in the NFL.

“You nonplaying (expletive). What did

you do with your life?” Bennett screamed.

“What did you do with your lifetime?”

The season

in which the

Seahawks turned heel

NFL

MATTCALKINS

• Players show lack of grace,

perspective after playoff loss

KANSAS CITY, Mo. —

Ashley Wagner remembers

being glued to her TV during

the 1998 Winter Olympics,

when a sprightly young figure

skater named Tara Lipinski

was dazzling the judges on

her way to gold at the Nagano

Games.

Wagner was 7 years old at

the time. Lipinski was just 15.

Nearly two decades later,

Wagner is still trying to follow

Lipinski’s footsteps, albeit in

much different fashion. That

dainty skater who captured

Wagner’s imagination all

those years ago became the

youngest Olympic champion

in history, while Wagner will

head to Kansas City for the

U.S. figure skating champi-

onships this week aiming to

become one of the oldest to

win Olympic gold next year in

South Korea.

She is at the forefront of

what might best be described

as the antithesis of a youth

movement.

At 26, representing the old guard

By Dave Skretta

The Associated Press

FIGURE SKATING

Ashley

Wagner, 26,

will head to

Kansas City

for the United

State figure

skating cham-

pionships

this week

aiming to

become one

of the oldest

competitors

at the 2018

Olympics.

(AP file photo)

See Skating / C4

MELBOURNE, Australia — “So Ivan, are

you calling Andy ‘Sir’?”

Ivan Lendl paused and then laughed, which

would surely seem strange to those who know

him only as Andy Murray’s stone-faced coach

in the front row of the players’ box.

“Definitely not,” Lendl said, chuckling

some more before heading off down the

crowded main hallway inside Rod Laver

Arena at the Australian Open.

Clearly, not much has changed in the Mur-

ray camp since his remarkable stretch run to

the No. 1 ranking and a knighthood in 2016.

Murray (don’t call

him Sir Andy) still

after more gloryBy Christopher Clarey

New York Times News Service

Andy Murray hits a forehand during his first-

round Australian Open win Monday against

Illya Marchenko.

(AP photo/Aaron Favila)

TENNIS

See Murray / C3

Inside• Seahawks

hid Sherman

injury, C3

See Seahawks / C4

• bendbulletin.com miminum impressions 25k/month*May be lower as long as total impressions equal 25k+

• Impression tiers are for total flight

600 - 750 word story that will be hosted in the Home Page Top Stories of bendbulletin.com for 3 days and for an additional 10 days in the From Our Advertisers Section. All ad placements on the article page will be sponsored by advertiser.

ADVERTISINGMEDIA KIT 2018

Updated 6/6/18

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To advertise contact yourBulletin Sales Representative at

541-383-0394 INSIDE

Blazers — Portland

gets a taste

of its own

medicine as Washing-

ton gets hot from long

range. Roundup, C3

Ducks — As No. 11 Oregon

moves to

a more regular league

schedule, it still sees

the need to improve.

Roundup, C4

NHL — Penguins end

Washington’s winning

streak at nine in a 15-

goal overtime thriller.

Roundup, C3

NFL

SANTA CLARA, Calif.

— The search for San

Francisco’s new coach

narrowed Monday with

New England offensive

coordinator Josh Mc-

Daniels pulling out of

the running for the job,

while the 49ers added

more candidates for

their general manager

vacancy.Shortly after Mc-

Daniels said he was no

longer a candidate to re-

place the fired Chip Kelly

in San Francisco, team

CEO Jed York inter-

viewed Seattle co-direc-

tors of player personnel

Trent Kirchner and Scott

Fitterer later Monday for

the GM job previously

held by Trent Baalke.

McDaniels, who

was the head coach in

Denver from 2009-10,

was considered one of

the favorites to land the

coaching job because

of his success running

New England’s offense

before deciding to stay

with the Patriots for at

least another year.

That leaves only two

coaching candidates

remaining unless San

Francisco decides to

open up the search

before making a final

decision: Atlanta offen-

sive coordinator Kyle

Shanahan and Seattle

offensive line coach

Tom Cable. Shanahan

cannot be hired until the

Falcons’ season is over

The 49ers have the

only coach opening left

in the NFL after the oth-

er five vacancies have all

been filled.Kirchner has 17 years

of experience in the

NFL since starting as a

scouting intern in Seat-

tle in 2000. Fitterer has

19 years of NFL person-

nel experience and has

been with the Seahawks

since 2001. York has already

interviewed seven other

candidates for general

manager: Arizona vice

president of player

personnel Terry Mc-

Donough, ESPN analyst

Louis Riddick, Carolina

assistant GM Brandon

Beane on Monday, Indi-

anapolis vice president

of football operations

Jimmy Raye III, Min-

nesota assistant GM

George Paton, Green

Bay director of football

operations Eliot Wolf

and Packers director of

player personnel Brian

Gutekunst.— From wire reports

49ers coaching

search narrows

www.bendbulletin.com/sports

SPORTSTHE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2017

CINSIDE: CLASSIFIEDS

Scoreboard, C2

Sports in brief, C2

Preps, C4

This is supposed to be the time of year when Dave

Hood can exhale, when he can breathe a sigh of

relief as Mountain View’s nonleague schedules

conclude and they get into league competition.

PREP SPORTS THIS WEEK

GRANTLUCAS

That is how it is SUPPOSED to be.

“I’ve been around here 50 years,”

says Hood, the longtime athletic

director at Mountain View High

School in Bend. “I grew up here.

And I’ve never seen anything like

this.”Hood then laughs and adds: “I

have a massive headache right now.

It’s crazy.”With record-level snow blan-

keting the High Desert, which has

endured more than 57 inches of

snowfall in recent weeks, squeezing

in games and even practices has

been a challenge for prep teams

across Central Oregon. Just since

the turn of the calendar year, Bend-

La Pine Schools has canceled six

school days due to either snowfall

or the uncertain safety of its school

structures after the gym roof

collapsed at Highland Magnet at

Bend’s Kenwood School last week.

Certainly the safety of students and

school staff is paramount, but those

closures have prevented high school

teams from practicing and compet-

ing. Hence, Hood’s headache.

“You just get stressed,” Hood

says. “You want to do the best

things for the teams that haven’t

practiced. Our wrestling coach

(Les Combs) is going, ‘We haven’t

practiced, and when we do have

a match, our kids are getting hurt

because we haven’t practiced.’ You

want to do right by (the athletes),

and you want to do right by the

coaches who want a competitive

schedule. And right now, you’re just

going, ‘I’ll take any game.’ … It’s an

ongoing headache. But that’s the

nature of this business, and you just

roll with it.”“I’m not going to lie to you,” Scott

Baker chuckles, “I hate the snow

right now.”

•With Central Oregon schools closed for most of 2017, coaches worry that

athletes are falling behind — and risking injury — with lack of competition

“I’m not going to lie to you:

I hate the snow right now.”

— Bend High boys

basketball coach Scott Baker

See Schedules / C4

(Peter Pietrangelo/Bulletin illustration from Thinkstock photos)

SEATTLE — They were once a brash

collection of misfits. They are now a

dismissive group of egomaniacs.

They were once known for the resolve

they showed in victory. They are now known

for the grace they lack in defeat.

The Seattle Seahawks have been every-

thing from dominant, to mesmerizing, to

maddening to heartbreaking — all points

on an emotional gamut that

has compelled fans for years.

But one thing they are not is

likable.Not anymore, at least.

About 20 minutes after Se-

attle’s 36-20 loss to Atlanta on Saturday, Q13-

TV reporter Bill Wixey asked defensive end

Michael Bennett why the pass rush struggled

to pressure Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan.

Bennett responded with a profanity-laced

tirade centered on belittling Wixey for never

having strapped it up in the NFL.

“You nonplaying (expletive). What did

you do with your life?” Bennett screamed.

“What did you do with your lifetime?”

The season

in which the

Seahawks turned heel

NFL

MATTCALKINS

• Players show lack of grace,

perspective after playoff loss

KANSAS CITY, Mo. —

Ashley Wagner remembers

being glued to her TV during

the 1998 Winter Olympics,

when a sprightly young figure

skater named Tara Lipinski

was dazzling the judges on

her way to gold at the Nagano

Games.

Wagner was 7 years old at

the time. Lipinski was just 15.

Nearly two decades later,

Wagner is still trying to follow

Lipinski’s footsteps, albeit in

much different fashion. That

dainty skater who captured

Wagner’s imagination all

those years ago became the

youngest Olympic champion

in history, while Wagner will

head to Kansas City for the

U.S. figure skating champi-

onships this week aiming to

become one of the oldest to

win Olympic gold next year in

South Korea.

She is at the forefront of

what might best be described

as the antithesis of a youth

movement.

At 26, representing the old guard

By Dave Skretta

The Associated Press

FIGURE SKATING

Ashley

Wagner, 26,

will head to

Kansas City

for the United

State figure

skating cham-

pionships

this week

aiming to

become one

of the oldest

competitors

at the 2018

Olympics.

(AP file photo)

See Skating / C4

MELBOURNE, Australia — “So Ivan, are

you calling Andy ‘Sir’?”

Ivan Lendl paused and then laughed, which

would surely seem strange to those who know

him only as Andy Murray’s stone-faced coach

in the front row of the players’ box.

“Definitely not,” Lendl said, chuckling

some more before heading off down the

crowded main hallway inside Rod Laver

Arena at the Australian Open.

Clearly, not much has changed in the Mur-

ray camp since his remarkable stretch run to

the No. 1 ranking and a knighthood in 2016.

Murray (don’t call

him Sir Andy) still

after more gloryBy Christopher Clarey

New York Times News Service

Andy Murray hits a forehand during his first-

round Australian Open win Monday against

Illya Marchenko.

(AP photo/Aaron Favila)

TENNIS

See Murray / C3

Inside• Seahawks

hid Sherman

injury, C3

See Seahawks / C4

• bendbulletin.com miminum impressions 25k/month*May be lower as long as total impressions equal 25k+

• Impression tiers are for total flight

600 - 750 word story that will be hosted in the Home Page Top Stories of bendbulletin.com for 3 days and for an additional 10 days in the From Our Advertisers Section. All ad placements on the article page will be sponsored by advertiser.

CPM25,000-249,999 Impressions ....................................$10250,000-499,999 Impressions ...................................$9500,000-1 Million Impressions ..................................$8Mobile App ..............................................................$12

GOOGLE DISPLAY CPM...................................................................................$8

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600 - 750 word story that will be hosted in the Home Page Top Stories of bendbulletin.com for 3 days and for an additional 10 days in the From Our Advertisers Section. All ad placements on the article page will be sponsored by advertiser.

• bendbulletin.com miminum impressions 25k/month*May be lower as long as total impressions equal 25k+

• Impression tiers are for total flight

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