newspapers
Adverts Falling
Submitted by: rba on Sat, 03/29/2008 - 05:45
Jennifer Saba/E&P: NAA Reveals Biggest Ad Revenue Plunge in More Than 50 Years
According to new data released by the Newspaper Association of America, total print advertising revenue in 2007 plunged 9.4% to $42 billion compared to 2006 -- the most severe percent decline since the association started measuring advertising expenditures in 1950.
Oh goddam woe is me. You want some of that revenue back, idiot? Quit charging your locals a portion of one arm and a leg for a two-line, one-week advert to sell a $40 used washing machine. Craigslist has nothing to do with this.
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Ohio Print Editors Cry to AP Over Rates, Vow to Share Content
Submitted by: John Michael Sp... on Wed, 03/26/2008 - 00:53
OhioNews Bureau
ONB COLUMBUS: Ohio blog site DaytonOS posted a link to a story by Editor & Publisher about how the Buckeye State's top newspapers, looking for an alternative to the high rates the Associated Press (AP) charges for its stories, pictures and graphics, have inked an agreement share content amongst themselves.
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Saturday: Newspapers
Submitted by: rba on Sat, 12/01/2007 - 13:18

Paul Fahri/AJR: Online Salvation?
The embattled newspaper business is betting heavily on Web advertising revenue to secure its survival. But that wager is hardly a sure thing.
Washington Post Executive Editor Leonard Downie Jr. compares the current state of the Internet to television in the age of "Howdy Doody."
Which is probably a good comparison, given that America's sources of news and information more closely resemble the dummy, with advertisers filling in as the ventriloquists. The failure of the newspaper industry, and media in general to understand the basic dynamics of this "new" (oh puh-lease) medium is evident on every single one of their websites.
Like our political candidates, the news industry has come to rely almost totally on advertising firms and consultants, most (if not all) of whom meet around big tables with storyboards, recommending cockamamie floating adverts, embedded multimedia sidebar "billboards", and the ubiquitous "polly gets a cookie for the visit" crap as poor substitutes for a clean blank screen with a box enabling the visitor to simply ask a question.
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