GateHouse Media Inc. (GHS)
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GHS Forum Topics
- All Comments on GHS
- General Discussion on GHS
- Best and Worst Performing Stocks Seven Months Into 2008 [view article]
- Help Wanted: Newspaper Classified Ad Sales Continue to Slide [view article]
- Rethinking Newspapers vs. the Internet [view article]
- Newspapers' 'Near Death Spiral,' Courtesy Web 2.0 [view article]
- LA Times' Madness Is Brand Suicide [view article]
- What Is Wrong With Tribune's Math? [view article]
- Newspaper Industry, Summer 2008: The Smell of Burning Furniture [view article]
- GateHouse Media Q1 2008 Earnings Call Transcript [view article]
- Newspaper Circ Numbers: Talking Quantity and "Quality" [view article]
- WSJ and FT Buck the Newspaper Trend [view article]
- Nine Questions for 'Media Week' [view article]
Recent GHS Articles
- Best and Worst Performing Stocks Seven Months Into 2008
- Few Print Readers Use Local Newspaper Websites
- Rethinking Newspapers vs. the Internet
- Yahoo and the Newspaper Publishers: Playing with Fire
- Newspapers' 'Near Death Spiral,' Courtesy Web 2.0
- LA Times' Madness Is Brand Suicide
- What Is Wrong With Tribune's Math?
- Newspaper Industry, Summer 2008: The Smell of Burning Furniture
- Help Wanted: Newspaper Classified Ad Sales Continue to Slide
- Newspaper Stocks Down 3x More Than CEO Pay
- Full List of Articles »
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Best and Worst Performing Stocks Seven Months Into 2008 [view article]
I agree with helsi. The last seven months for RDN was looking pretty bad, but all it took was a little legislation to be passed for it to soar. This stock deserves to be on the other chart now. Who would have guessed an 80 cent stock would hit $5 in such a short time period?! Timing is everything. ReplyBest and Worst Performing Stocks Seven Months Into 2008 [view article]
Nice article, but more informative would be using the same criteria for the last 6 - 7 weeks. ReplyBest and Worst Performing Stocks Seven Months Into 2008 [view article]
Banks and Broker firms wrapped toxic waste i.e.: subprime, credit card debt, car loans, etc. into structured finance vehicles i.e.: CDO-ABS-MBS-SIVs and misled the market into buying them and bond insurers into insure them and now they have to clear their books from this toxic waste which is going to take time quarter after quarter but without a doubt will improve their book value. Replyfisayo
Help Wanted: Newspaper Classified Ad Sales Continue to Slide [view article]
We have got money to lend out to serious and prosprctive customers and all kind of business firms.Email:vinfinanci... ReplyRethinking Newspapers vs. the Internet [view article]
PastTense, now YOU'RE the one talking nonsense with your claim that AOL foresaw the bubble burst and presciently cashed out at the peak in exchange for a "solid business." AOL absolutely saw themselves as a content provider, which was absolutely wrong. They had always been (and are still trying to be) a service provider that simplified the process of getting online and doing email. And that's about it. ReplyRethinking Newspapers vs. the Internet [view article]
"AOL thought it was in the content business and that is what led to the disastrous purchase of Time Warner (TWX)"That's nonsense. AOL exchanged some of its internet bubble for a solid business (Time Warner). Far from being disastrous that was a brilliant move. Time Warner became the bulk of the value of the company. AOL stockholders would have lost much more stock value if that hadn't happened. Reply
Rethinking Newspapers vs. the Internet [view article]
I like your thought process!People pay for online ads since they can lead to clicks and sales.
Radio and tv customers are captive audiences - you get 15- or 30-second exclusives with them, which are valuable.
Print? People can breeze by without even noticing ads, so the model has to change radically.
Maybe have a few advertisers sponsor entire daily editions or sections so that readers can't help but notice at least some of the ads - and know that these ads, like radio/tv, are strictly brand-building or announcement-making tools, rather than direct and immediate sales drivers like the web is. Reply
Rethinking Newspapers vs. the Internet [view article]
Jeff, how does what you're proposing that Google (or AP, or whoever) do for newspapers differ from what they could get right now from any of a number of commercial hosting services? Replyjames
Help Wanted: Newspaper Classified Ad Sales Continue to Slide [view article]
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Help Wanted: Newspaper Classified Ad Sales Continue to Slide [view article]
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Newspapers' 'Near Death Spiral,' Courtesy Web 2.0 [view article]
I will still pick up the printed paper from the newstand for my train ride into the city from the burbs.. It's just not the same on my laptop.. Nothing will or can replace the printed pages.. !!! ReplyNewspapers' 'Near Death Spiral,' Courtesy Web 2.0 [view article]
the latest stats on newspapers indicate the median age of a reader is 57. the tail is fading away. ReplyNewspapers' 'Near Death Spiral,' Courtesy Web 2.0 [view article]
I am 57 y.o. and retired. Up until 2008 I subscribed to newspapers the last 30 years. Because of what I consider high cost subscriptions, I went to the internet for all my news, information and advertising. I have 3 daughters who will never subscribe to newspapers due to internet exposure. As for myself, I was receiving the newspaper 7 days a week, now my city newspaper is offering a 4 day plan I will probably go back to for a much reduced price. I know reduced rates are not the future for newspapers, and readers like me are not the future of newspapers survival. But I think we do represent a base that will contribute to newspaper survival for many more years to come. When I dropped my newspaper subscription in January 2008, my reason given was high cost of subscription. My reason for considering going back to the newspaper is reduced rates and my personal need for news and information offered in the newspaper. I know newspapers are not geared toward people my age, but never the less, I like walking out in the early morning, get my newspaper, can set and read it or take it with me to appointments and other places I go and still have reading material with me. Make of this what you will. But I will never totally give up reading the newspapers. ReplyNewspapers' 'Near Death Spiral,' Courtesy Web 2.0 [view article]
I'm a newsaholic and I have quit subscribing to all print media except Wall Street Journal - something to read with my daily coffee and doughnut....but that's it. Down from four or five magazine and three newspapers to one WSJ. ReplyPseudonym
Newspapers' 'Near Death Spiral,' Courtesy Web 2.0 [view article]
Paper has 15 years tops to figure out how to make money without printing anything.The subscription is dying off everyday and the next generation is not going to subscribe to a printed paper.
My local paper spent $30 million modernizing their presses and facilities just 5 years ago...I knew that was a huge mistake...they figured color pictures or readable print would save the business...LOL Reply