print is dead

The Good, Bad And Ugly Of iPad News Apps

The Good, Bad And Ugly Of iPad News Apps

Endgadget compares and contrasts some of the most visible newspaper and magazine iPad apps. The rundown: The New York Times sets the industry standard, the Wall Street Journal is slick but expensive, the Associated Press is clunky but free and USA Today is crash prone. [More]

Print Edition Of TV Guide Tells Me To Go Online To Read Most Of Cover Story

Print Edition Of TV Guide Tells Me To Go Online To Read Most Of Cover Story

Scott bought a copy of TV Guide — yes, apparently that still exists — because he was intrigued by the TV’s Top 50 Families story. He was dismayed to page through the magazine and discover the list stopped at 20. The article prompted him to go online to discover the remaining 30 families on the list. [More]

Big Media To Crack Down On Copyright Pirates

Big Media To Crack Down On Copyright Pirates

On his Reflections of a Newsosaur blog, Alan Mutter says a company called Attributor has rounded up several big media companies and is set to go after sites that hock their content for free. [More]

Miami Herald Stops Asking For Handouts

Miami Herald Stops Asking For Handouts

After asking readers for donations late last year, the Miami Herald has given up on the program, Reflections of a Newsosaur reports: [More]

After 3 Months, Only 35 Paying Customers For Newspaper's Web Site

After 3 Months, Only 35 Paying Customers For Newspaper's Web Site

Newsday is a Long Island newspaper. Some people bought it for $650 million and put it behind a pay wall. Three months later, they’ve got 35 subscribers. Yes, 35. [More]

Borders CEO Quits After A Year On The Job

Borders CEO Quits After A Year On The Job

Borders CEO Ron Marshall has decided to move on to better things after only a year. The troubled bookseller is currently in the process of closing 182 of its Waldenbooks stores (more than half of them), and is generally being frowned upon due to its lack of initiative in getting into the e-reader market. (Amazon has the Kindle, B&N has the Nook, and Borders has um…hmmm…) Now they’ll have to find a new CEO to turn things around. [More]

Get Ready To Pay For Your NYT Fix

Get Ready To Pay For Your NYT Fix

New York reports The New York Times is on the verge of charging for its online content once again, after abandoning its pay wall more than two years ago. [More]

Miami Herald Asks For Donations

Miami Herald Asks For Donations

Hurting for cash like all newspapers, the Miami Herald has found a way to scrounge up some extra cash — ask online readers to donate, NBC Miami reports. [More]

Denver Start-Up E-Newspapers Failed Because They Ignored Consumers

Denver Start-Up E-Newspapers Failed Because They Ignored Consumers

There’s a lot of newspaper failure going around, well, everywhere these days, but particularly in Denver, where the Rocky Mountain News and its online offshoots the INDenver Times and the Rocky Mountain Independent have all either ceased publication entirely or drastically shifted their business models to become shadows of their former selves.

Last Remaining Human Who Actually Wants To Subscribe To A Newspaper Can't

Last Remaining Human Who Actually Wants To Subscribe To A Newspaper Can't

Meet Michael. He likes to read the newspaper. Sadly, his attempts to resubscribe to the Washington Post have resulted in abject failure. Hmm, we thought that newspapers were sort of hurting for subscribers…

Newspapers Aren't Quite Sure Whether You'll Pay To Read Their Stuff Online

Newspapers Aren't Quite Sure Whether You'll Pay To Read Their Stuff Online

Alan Mutter, who pontificates about the print industry on his Reflections of a Newsosaur blog, cites a survey that says 51 percent of paper publishers think it’s a good idea to start charging readers for online content they’ve always given away for free

Some 71 Percent Of Newspaper Advertisers Stick Around

Some 71 Percent Of Newspaper Advertisers Stick Around

Enough with all the negative news about the newspaper industry. Let’s get positive, folks. For instance, instead of parroting this Bloomberg report that newspaper revenue plunged by 29 percent last quarter, let’s emphasize that 71 percent of advertisers stuck around.

Was Consumer Columnist's Demise Due To Editorial Cutbacks Or Advertising Interference?

Was Consumer Columnist's Demise Due To Editorial Cutbacks Or Advertising Interference?

The story of consumer columnist George Gombossy‘s departure from the Hartford Courant has become a “he said”/”company said” argument that seems like something out of a consumer affairs column. Was Gombossy let go for reporting on an advertiser, as he alleges, or was the elimination of his position simply part of the cutbacks taking place all over the Tribune Company?

Hartford Courant Consumer Columnist Fired For Pissing Off Advertiser

Hartford Courant Consumer Columnist Fired For Pissing Off Advertiser

Consumer affairs columnist George Gombossy has worked for the Hartford Courant since 1969—longer than most Consumerist readers have been alive. Yesterday was his last day at the paper, but he wasn’t caught up in one of the rounds of buyouts and layoffs hitting the newspaper industry. Gombossy claims that he was “was fired for doing [his] job,” after his last column exposed the bedbug-infested mattresses sold by a major Courant advertiser.

If Print Is Dead, Is TV Next?

If Print Is Dead, Is TV Next?

Newspapers and magazines aren’t the only media suffering from dwindling advertising. The TV industry is also readying for a downfall, reports The Atlantic.

Nick And Nick Jr. Magazines Fold; Subscribers To Receive Refunds

Nick And Nick Jr. Magazines Fold; Subscribers To Receive Refunds

Earlier this month, Nick and Nick Jr. magazines announced that they’re shutting down. Reports vary—either they will continue publishing until the end of the year, or there will be one big final issue in August.

You Like Video Games? Clearly, You Also Like Scantily Clad Women

You Like Video Games? Clearly, You Also Like Scantily Clad Women

Electronic Gaming Monthly magazine shut down earlier this year, leaving many disappointed fans. It’s what has happened to subscribers in the wake of the magazine’s death, however, that is problematic.

Snarky Weekly Paper Outsources Writing To India To Prove A Point

Snarky Weekly Paper Outsources Writing To India To Prove A Point