Clearly, the emergence of the Internet has put a bullet into the heart of a great number of newspapers. This is a paradigm shift that won't be reversed. There will always be newspapers but their hold on information is gone. Many will need to restructure their paper providing cheaper content for an ever smaller circulation. Foreign correspondents will be decimated while reliance on overseas AP reporting will grow ever larger. But in another way, newspapers are getting their just dessert for pursuing partisanship over news. It happens in so many ways. What to print, where to report it, and how often to run a story a particular topic is so much more about what any specific newspaper wants you to know and believe than what is newsworthy. The partisanship has peaked these last couple of years and so its appropriate that the wheels should be coming off the cart at this moment in time.
Clearly, the emergence of the Internet has put a bullet into the heart of a great number of newspapers. This is a paradigm shift that won't be reversed. There will always be newspapers but their hold on information is gone. Many will need to restructure their paper providing cheaper content for an ever smaller circulation. Foreign correspondents will be decimated while reliance on overseas AP reporting will grow ever larger. But in another way, newspapers are getting their just dessert for pursuing partisanship over news. It happens in so many ways. What to print, where to report it, and how often to run a story a particular topic is so much more about what any specific newspaper wants you to know and believe than what is newsworthy. The partisanship has peaked these last couple of years and so its appropriate that the wheels should be coming off the cart at this moment in time.
Could the LA Times Turn Off Its Presses? [View article]
This guy's headline made my heart go pitter patter. I'm giddy about the idea of the L.A. Times shutting down their presses. Here in So Cal, the L.A. Times has for years been the only newspaper that offered a decent sports page and a bit more international coverage, but their stubborn determined will to editorialize so many stories makes their paper one of indoctrination of the leftist viewpoint. They just can't seem to understand that people don't want to know their views and dislike them attempting to cast their view as part of the news. For this reason alone, I will be applauding their demise. Shutting their printers is the end game for the L.A. times because their influence online is minimal and will remain minimal as they continue to scale back to nothing at all.
A Sad Day for Newspapers [View article]
Newspaper Death Watch [View article]
Could the LA Times Turn Off Its Presses? [View article]