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The New Yorker: Out of Print THE POST OF THE DAY!!!

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Omaha Steve Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-31-08 06:05 PM
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The New Yorker: Out of Print THE POST OF THE DAY!!!

http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2008/03/31/080331fa_fact_alterman

The death and life of the American newspaper.
by Eric Alterman March 31, 2008

The American newspaper has been around for approximately three hundred years. Benjamin Harris’s spirited Publick Occurrences, Both Forreign and Domestick managed just one issue, in 1690, before the Massachusetts authorities closed it down. Harris had suggested a politically incorrect hard line on Indian removal and shocked local sensibilities by reporting that the King of France had been taking liberties with the Prince’s wife.


Arianna Huffington questions newspapers’“veneer of unassailable trustworthiness.


It really was not until 1721, when the printer James Franklin launched the New England Courant, that any of Britain’s North American colonies saw what we might recognize today as a real newspaper. Franklin, Benjamin’s older brother, refused to adhere to customary licensing arrangements and constantly attacked the ruling powers of New England, thereby achieving both editorial independence and commercial success. He filled his paper with crusades (on everything from pirates to the power of Cotton and Increase Mather), literary essays by Addison and Steele, character sketches, and assorted philosophical ruminations.

Three centuries after the appearance of Franklin’s Courant, it no longer requires a dystopic imagination to wonder who will have the dubious distinction of publishing America’s last genuine newspaper. Few believe that newspapers in their current printed form will survive. Newspaper companies are losing advertisers, readers, market value, and, in some cases, their sense of mission at a pace that would have been barely imaginable just four years ago. Bill Keller, the executive editor of the Times, said recently in a speech in London, “At places where editors and publishers gather, the mood these days is funereal. Editors ask one another, ‘How are you?,’ in that sober tone one employs with friends who have just emerged from rehab or a messy divorce.” Keller’s speech appeared on the Web site of its sponsor, the Guardian, under the headline “NOT DEAD YET.”

Perhaps not, but trends in circulation and advertising––the rise of the Internet, which has made the daily newspaper look slow and unresponsive; the advent of Craigslist, which is wiping out classified advertising––have created a palpable sense of doom. Independent, publicly traded American newspapers have lost forty-two per cent of their market value in the past three years, according to the media entrepreneur Alan Mutter. Few corporations have been punished on Wall Street the way those who dare to invest in the newspaper business have. The McClatchy Company, which was the only company to bid on the Knight Ridder chain when, in 2005, it was put on the auction block, has surrendered more than eighty per cent of its stock value since making the $6.5-billion purchase. Lee Enterprises’ stock is down by three-quarters since it bought out the Pulitzer chain, the same year. America’s most prized journalistic possessions are suddenly looking like corporate millstones. Rather than compete in an era of merciless transformation, the families that owned the Los Angeles Times and the Wall Street Journal sold off the majority of their holdings. The New York Times Company has seen its stock decline by fifty-four per cent since the end of 2004, with much of the loss coming in the past year; in late February, an analyst at Deutsche Bank recommended that clients sell off their Times stock. The Washington Post Company has avoided a similar fate only by rebranding itself an “education and media company”; its testing and prep company, Kaplan, now brings in at least half the company’s revenue.



Until recently, newspapers were accustomed to operating as high-margin monopolies. To own the dominant, or only, newspaper in a mid-sized American city was, for many decades, a kind of license to print money. In the Internet age, however, no one has figured out how to rescue the newspaper in the United States or abroad. Newspapers have created Web sites that benefit from the growth of online advertising, but the sums are not nearly enough to replace the loss in revenue from circulation and print ads.

Most managers in the industry have reacted to the collapse of their business model with a spiral of budget cuts, bureau closings, buyouts, layoffs, and reductions in page size and column inches. Since 1990, a quarter of all American newspaper jobs have disappeared. The columnist Molly Ivins complained, shortly before her death, that the newspaper companies’ solution to their problem was to make “our product smaller and less helpful and less interesting.” That may help explain why the dwindling number of Americans who buy and read a daily paper are spending less time with it; the average is down to less than fifteen hours a month. Only nineteen per cent of Americans between the ages of eighteen and thirty-four claim even to look at a daily newspaper. The average age of the American newspaper reader is fifty-five and rising.

FULL seven (7) page article at link.

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bemildred Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-31-08 06:22 PM
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1. Newspapers are not dead.
The commercial model based on advertising and government propaganda is dead. They will have to make themselves useful to the public with information and entertainment to survive now. It's not like they were ever principled servants of the public good.
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magellan Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-31-08 06:36 PM
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2. The 4th Estate died long ago
It's about time the business model that destroyed it follows.
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Guaranteed Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-31-08 06:39 PM
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3. Read it yesterday. OUTSTANDING article. Don't miss. nt
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wellst0nev0ter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-31-08 06:48 PM
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4. Didn't Address A Big Reason Why Newspapers Are Becoming Irrelevant
It's because there are few papers that are owned privately, and most are run by Wall Street stockholders. It's not the first time that newspapers have lost market shares due to emergences of new media, but the fact that corporate board rooms have been spooked by decreasing profit margins into making kneejerk cutbacks has exascerbated the effect.
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GreatCaesarsGhost Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-31-08 06:50 PM
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5. eric alterman is scheduled to be on The Colbert Report tonight
also meryl streep is on, too.

chuck hagel on TDS.
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