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Home Front: Culture Wars
The sky is falling on print newspapers faster than you think
2016-01-22
A guardian of a free society continues its decline, in moral, spiritual as well as financial terms.
Last October, a McKinsey report declared, “We believe that many of the people likely to abandon print newspapers and print consumer magazines have already done so…. We believe most of this core audience — households that have retained their print subscriptions despite having access to broadband — will continue to do so for now, effectively putting a floor on the print markets.”
The instrument the chap in the photo is holding with the wires attached is the next item to go.
Wow. Just because of inertia? Is the only medium-term threat to print the fact that most of its current audience will gradually die over the next 30 years? That would be great news, especially because nearly all newspapers still get most of their revenue from print advertising.
Not just inertia. Some people have birds. Some still wrap fish.
But it doesn’t feel right in a world in which even mature adults’ media consumption habits seem to be quickly evolving.
There's a reason why Geritol and Depends are advertised on the network evening news...
The customers they really want have their noses buried in their phones.
Then, amid the hubbub about the Boston Globe’s delivery problems, I was struck by the Globe’s statement that they have only 115,000 daily print subscribers, and only 205,000 on Sunday. Really? I had had a sense that the Globe was still much bigger than that. So I poked around online, and, indeed found much larger numbers for Globe print circulation.

But they were from 2013, which is the last time print newspaper circulation figures were widely reported.

The simple chart below lays out the numbers for “total average print circulation” of the nation’s 25 largest newspapers as of March 2013. These are the basis for the figures you get if you Google search the issue or look for a list on Wikipedia. Then the chart compares these with the number of copies most recently reported to the Alliance for Audited Media (in September 2015) for “individually paid print circulation,” that is the number of copies being bought by subscription or at newsstands. This is the best indication of consumer demand for the product. In both cases, the figures are for weekday average circulation. Sunday numbers are generally higher.
Posted by:badanov

#9  It is not the medium it is the message. Every city is ripe for truely neutral newspaper.
Posted by: Zorba de Medici9541   2016-01-22 20:12  

#8  Negotiate NMBS, I got the TLH demagogue for a year free, then negotiable. They want eyeballs on print ads.

BTW my school gets 200 copies a day gratis. Eyeballs man, it's all about eyeballz. Free circulation isn't paid, but it is circulation of a type auditors will allow, it may also be a tax deductible charitable expense. Raj?
Posted by: Shipman   2016-01-22 18:02  

#7  I still get the paper on weekends. It's better than getting syrup or strawberry jelly on my laptop.
Posted by: texhooey   2016-01-22 17:30  

#6  After 20+ years, canceled the Sacramento Bee, paper had gotten physically smaller, cheaper paper stock, half the few pages in the Metro Section were obits, not only had the Editorial Page gone extreme leftie, but the news articles were all Climate Change, Gun Control, Obama accolades, no Hillary scandals, and other left coast tripe. The Monday edition was little more than a handbill, and even Sunday was mostly local human interest and LA/NY Times and WaPo reprints.But the Coup d' grace came when they upped the annual bill to $441, and when I called to cancel, got a call center in Pakistan. Since I cxl'd, have had seven calls to hype a new rate, but wanted credit card commitment, and when a management guy finally called to ask whey, when I told him my beefs, his answer was "Have you written a letter to the editor?"! They are quickly approaching DOA.
Posted by: NoMoreBS   2016-01-22 16:31  

#5  ...when they break bundling of cable/satellite TV service, just watch.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2016-01-22 11:11  

#4  Now if the sky would fall on the liberal news networks as well.
Posted by: JohnQC   2016-01-22 10:35  

#3  Bring back the Trees!
Posted by: Skidmark   2016-01-22 10:25  

#2  When my kids were in school, I kept a Sunday only subscription to cover the occasional school project. I mostly threw it out since the articles were largely slanted propaganda.
Posted by: Sven the pelter   2016-01-22 08:56  

#1  Sunday numbers are generally higher.

Coupons, sales flyers from major national and local distributors. Trying to read some of those flyers on line is sometimes awkward and sometimes nearly impossible. Then as mentioned, the left overs for wrapping and lining.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2016-01-22 07:59  

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