The Print Media |
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Newspapers Today
Some 48 million newspapers are sold everyday. Even newspapers whose companies are being reorganized through bankruptcy are still profitable. But revenues fell 14% last year, and have fallen a total of 23% in just two years. The industry in general lost about 10% of its newsroom jobs -- and the larger papers lost an even higher percentage. By the end of 2009, it is estimated that a quarter of all the newsroom jobs that existed in 2001 will be gone. The chart below shows why. Note that all the print media declined in readership while cable and online viewership more than made up the difference.
Sources: Arbitron, Audit Bureau of Circulations, comScore Media Metrix, Nielsen Media Research and stateofthemedia.org. One response to this has been conglomeration. By combining news operations, a newspaper that also acquires a TV or radio station can use a single newsroom and team of reporters to provide news for all of the owned news outlets.
Note that most ad revenue comes from local advertisers. This is followed by classified ads. For most newspapers (excluding national newspapers, such as USA Today and the Wall Street Journal) national advertising represents a distant third. Possibly the only local news consisted of contributions by area stringers (people who, while not being trained as journalists, receive money on a per-story basis for covering local events in their spare time).
Checkout Tabloids There has been considerable debate as to whether these weekly tabloids should be classified as newspapers, magazines, or something in between. The content of tabloids range from "somewhat believable" to "total fiction." With headlines such as "Two-Headed Woman Marries Two Men," and "Two-Headed Woman Has Baby With Two Heads" (complete with created "photos"), the tabloids strain many people's tolerance for freedom of speech. Countries that try to justify censorship often point to such stories as evidence that government control of newspapers is needed to protect naive audiences from such
travesties of truth. On the other hand, as this
Los Angeles Times reporter points out,
At the same time, after losing several multi-million dollar lawsuits, the tabloids have become rather careful about saying anything about a person that could be considered libelous. Although famous people -- especially actors -- bemoan the invasion of privacy by paparazzi and the tabloids, they also depend on them for their fame. "Leaking" a seemingly embarrassing story on some aspect of their lives has put more than one actor on the front page of tabloids at a time when they felt they needed a boost in their visibility. It is not unusual for the "mainstream press" to then pick up the story, resulting in an even bigger boost in the person's popularity. "Bad press" isn't necessarily a detriment to a career. As one famous person said, "I don't care what they say about me, as long as they keep my name in front of the public."
The Computerizationof Newspaper Production First, wire services such as AP send a constant flow of news via telephone lines and satellite links directly to newsroom computers. Editors can then search on key words to locate needed stories. Once stories are located, they can be pulled up on computer screens to be edited or rewritten as needed. Reporters also write their stories on computers -- generally laptops. Their stories may go directly to a personal blog or newspaper Internet site and beat the printed version by hours, if not days.
Internet Research With billions of pages of information, the Internet is now regularly relied upon by reporters for researching stories. And then there are blogs -- short for Web logs -- which are now read by about 35% of Internet users and many news organizations. The writers of blogs use web sites to post personal reactions to events, news of the day, rumors, and even their own personal diaries. When a story is finished it is sent to the editor for review. A reporter can also send stories into the newsroom from "the field" via
Digital Photography Once taken, the photos are uploaded into a computer for cropping, color balancing, sharpening, etc. Once the digital photos are saved in a file, they can be delivered to the newsroom in person or by an Internet connection. Cable news channels regularly get digital photos and videos from viewers -- generally sent in via cell phones.
The larger newspapers can transmit these pages to cities across a country to regional printing facilities -- which is how the New York Times, for example, can be on newsstands in Los Angeles within a few hours of being finished in New York. |
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