While the pre-launch dismissal this week of longtime colleague and early ModState editorial signee Jeremy Bennett was a development unforeseen by the surrounding members, any possible concern(s) over the credibility of the upstart publication evaporated almost immediately after. Within the same workweek as Bennett’s departure, Jonathan D. DeViney (ModState‘s EiC) revealed the renewal of a long-standing partnership with a friend of nearly a decade, Maryland attorney, radio host and political author James Braswell. The latter’s five-year-old online firm, Free State Radio, has entered into a broad network alliance and content affiliation with the former’s upstart e-zine.
With ModState due over the course of the weekend to enter into its’ second public beta-testing phase, further details are slated to emerge promptly as Braswell and DeViney continue to explore the extent to which the content of FSR will appear on MS as well as how many (if not all) of Braswell’s staffers will be joining DeViney’s crew in at least minor roles of contribution. Already established are many of the tenets set to operate the business mechanics of the arrangement, as well as the guarantee that Braswell and DeViney will be heavily entrenched in unique content creation (original video content, in particular) throughout the next seventy-two hours.
“While it may only stay up for a couple of days, when ModState becomes available for limited viewing this weekend during the second of three planned beta test periods,” DeViney said, “there will be far greater movement in terms of actual content available this go ’round. For those who observed the first beta test, saying it was very limited would be a big understatement. One whole post, the one concerning the pending difficulties of Paul Ryan’s job, was all that was apparent. The reason for that was because things still weren’t settled as far as the graphical layout, the aesthetics, were concerned. It wasn’t about whetting the editorial appetite of potential return visitors. For one thing, virtually no one outside of the organization even knew we were doing a beta test. This time, we’ve made available a few details about both the timeframe and what to expect in terms of original content during this period. The only real similarity will be the duration of the beta test; it is highly unlikely to last for much longer than forty-eight hours. We’ll probably go live tomorrow [Saturday] night and bring it back down by Tuesday morning.”
Regarding the timing of the aforementioned third (and likely final) beta test slated to happen later this month or the first week of April, neither Braswell nor DeViney ventured any information. As pertains to the current activities and future plans of Jeremy Bennett, only the assertion that the editorial and recording aspirations of the former contributing editor were incompatible with the direction of ModState and thus the continued working relationship was deemed obsolete. Bennett previously worked under DeViney as a staff writer and columnist for the now-defunct game journalism e-zine GamePartisan from 2007 until it ceased operations on the seventh anniversary of its launch, 02 February 2009. He was primarily known for his eclectic column, “The Gaymer”, and as a content strategist who helped DeViney refine much of what would become GamePartisan editorial policy regarding an eventual video arm/YouTube channel of the site. The latter facet of the network never officially launched and, in terms of public access, never saw the light of day.