Internet Kills LA Times National Edition 245
Doc Ruby writes "The LA Times announced that it is folding its national edition on 12/31/04. The Times spokesperson said the paper's mission has been to reach 'key Washington, D.C., and New York audiences,' and that 'other electronic ways of reaching those audiences became more plentiful.' The folding edition will be replaced by "remote printing" by NewspaperDirect, and their email highlights, Top of the Times. Is this the way all our newspapers will be going?"
No (Score:5, Insightful)
No, they're just targeting the wrong audience.
Re:No (Score:2)
Re:No (Score:2, Funny)
True. Then again, sometimes it's hard to read a real news paper because you've beaten it on a fly. Still very handy to have though.
Re:No (Score:2)
Re:No (Score:2)
I believe there will always be a place for newspapers. They have a remarkable tendency to stay afloat even in the fiercest competition from more "exciting" and "modern" mediums. Take the saga [pacifichistory.net] of the Honolulu Star-Bulletin [wikipedia.org], which went from an abrupt 45-day notice of closure [starbulletin.com] to its own offices and press.
I won't be counting out the Times until they actually close. Granted, the Star-Bulletin and Times stories are radically different, but I wouldn't be too surprised if something happened at the last minut
Re:Bias Kills Newspapers. (Score:5, Insightful)
Wow, so they suffer from the same accusations as Slashdot of being too US-centric?
I would have taken it for granted that crimes by the US government would be of greater interest to the US public than crimes by a foreign dictator and would get more US press attention. Guess my vision is too narrow.
Were they upset by the massive coverage of the US elections in those publications compared to coverage of the Norwegian elections as well?
Re:Bias Kills Newspapers. (Score:2)
Give me a newspaper that shows both sides of every story.
If I'm going to get crap news, I might as well get free crap news. If I get different, interesting news, I'll be willing to pay for it.
Re:"New York Times" admits bias. (Score:2)
Re:Oh please (Score:4, Interesting)
So are you planning your trip to Sudan soon to save all the children there? No? Oh, so you only care to KNOW about children being murdered. Well that doesn't help much, does it? Especially not as much as KNOWING when government officials screw up, because unlike Saddam or the murders in Dafar our government changes its behavior when public ridicule embarrasses it internationally. Oh well, the great part about 2004 is that you can log on to Foxnews.com and find out every bad thing Saddam did wrong, and I can count on liberal national papers to embarrass our leaders (who deserve it by way of their actions) internationally and force them to change their wrong behavior.
Re:Oh please (Score:2)
The thing is that the news media can:
-embarrass local and national leader to force them to reform.
The news media cannot:
-invade other nations to remove murderous leaders (otherwise most of Africa would have been invaded by now)
Are you expecting too much out of the news media then? I prefer the news organizations effectively use what influence they have, then try to gain powers they don't.
Re:Oh please (Score:2)
I expect the news to observer and report. Leave it to those that read the papers to do the reforming.
Re:Oh please (Score:2)
Unfortunately the news media (which is very consolidated) determines what will be reformed when they decided to pick things on which to "observe and report." Even an so called unbiased news outlet theoretically can't chose to report on every single item every person in the audience feels is "newsworthy." Instead, they chose what to report on based upon their limited time, and the attention created by the re
Re:Oh please (Score:2)
Re:Oh please (Score:2)
I other words most americans are likely to overlook some inocent people getting roused around in order to get the ones that needed it. I'm not saying this is what all americans think or that all americans in certain areas think this. I will say it is a growing sediment amoung alot of americans not in the liberal parts of the country. I am having problems counting the times i hear different people at bars say why d
Re:Oh please (Score:2)
That "terrorist" is innocent until proven guilty. No trial occured - he, and everyone else at abu ghraib, is yet to be tried, and therefor innocent until proven otherwise.
Seeing as the US invaded Iraq because of Iraq's apparent unwillingness to comply by international rules, US troops violating international law is a big story - it kind of highlights the ridiculous hypocritical attitude of the US. There would be outrage if that was a US soldier being abused by Iraqis, but
Re: Oh please (Score:2)
For me i prefere not to hear about any children being murdered. There is very little i can do about it other then feel bad. Life is too short to have the exagerated attention of some child brought to my attention after it's ability to make an impact on my life has gone with her soul. I don't wan't to hear about any of it
Re:Bias Kills Newspapers. (Score:3, Insightful)
The news wasn't that torture was going on in the world. The news was that the USA (you know, the "good guys") was joining in on it.
You're just wrong (Score:2)
first post (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:first post (Score:2)
not to mention, what if you have family or business contacts or friends in LA but live in DC or NY, maybe you'd be concerned about the news eh?
Re:first post (Score:2)
Re:first post (Score:2)
Re:first post (Score:2)
Nah. I can even get the Fry's ads with the online version, and I don't have to sift through all the other ads that are stuffed into the paper version.
Newspapers are mostly ephemeral- you want the current information and as current as possible. It's easier to keep up to the minute online, and if you're interested in the archival value of newpapers, online is easier to search.
Re:first post (Score:2)
Newspapers are mostly ephemeral- you want the current information and as current as possible. It's easier to keep up to the minute online, and if you're interested in the archival value of newspapers, online is easier to search.
Yeah, that's all true. Still, I think you're missing the grandparent poster's point all the same. There are times when I don't ca
Re:first post (Score:2)
Yeah, that's about the only thing I use them for anymore, but it's usually one of the free alt-weeklies, rather than an LA times or something that would require me to find some quarters in my pocket. If I know that I'm going to have to kill some time (or have a high probability) I'd usually rather carry a book in my pocket. When I used to ride th
Re:first post (Score:2)
Its usually one of the free alt-weeklies, rather than an LA times or something that would require me to find some quarters in my pocket
The problem with these, of course, is that they are weekly. If you find yourself killing time on a regular basis, you'll probably have the darn thing memorized the day after it comes out. Daily papers at least have new content each morning. Whether in a coffee shop or on the bu
Re:first post (Score:2)
Not having constant updates is a plus for those who don't wan't to spend their whole day reloading sites like slashdot for fear of missing something.
If I had to rely on the newspaper to learn about the attacks on 9/11 I would've been clueless until 7am the following morning.
Maybe if you lived in the middle
Re:first post (Score:2)
Newspapers are great for commuting. I can stand and read the newspaper on the subway. It isn't so easy with a laptop, and a PDA is just annoying to use with such a small screen.
Interestingly, with 9/11, TV was a useless source of information for us in New York, since the WTC was where most TV antennas were based. The local newspapers however worked triple time to get the papers out the door as quickly as possible.
They were equally quick with the Blackout in Septemer, 20
Re:first post (Score:2)
Re:first post (Score:2)
Rus
Re:first post (Score:5, Insightful)
BOTH? Is the world limited to two viewpoints now?
Re:first post (Score:4, Interesting)
No. Just the US. Fisher's Deduction: "The more issues a person crudely shoehorns down into a liberal/conservative dichotomy, the more certain you can be that the person is an American"
Re:two viewpoints? In the US? (Score:2)
No, it isn't. CanWest runs a distant third to the CBC (television and radio; hard left) and (television and print; centre by Canadian standards, i.e. left by American), both of which, unlike CanWest, also have 24-hour news channels. In newspapers, Quebecor and Torstar are major players beyond those mentioned.
Re:first post (Score:2)
This is news? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:This is news? (Score:2)
Rus
Ah... the internet... (Score:3, Insightful)
The internet is probably a good thing for newspapers, I doubt that it will become the be all, end all (though reading a broad sheet on the subway/train/bus is a bit of a pain). It's a great way to deliver content, to kep people apprised of things up to the minute, and it keeps our newsstands from being crowded.
yes, but if newstands have to close down, (Score:4, Funny)
Re:yes, but if newstands have to close down, (Score:2)
Makes sense (Score:3, Informative)
just my $0.02
Re:Makes sense (Score:2)
I agree that online news has many advantages, but don't discount the familiarity and portability of more traditional outlets. TV news channels didn't kill newspapers, radio news didn't kill newspapers, I doubt that the Internet will either, at least until 'net-enabled portables are ubiquitous, cheap and fast.
Re:Makes sense (Score:2)
Re:Makes sense (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:strength of newspapers (Score:2)
In other news... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:In other news... (Score:3, Funny)
Electronic Paper (Score:4, Insightful)
Rus
Re:Electronic Paper (Score:2)
Re:Electronic Paper (Score:2)
Re:Electronic Paper (Score:2)
Syncs with New York Times Top Stories, Business, and Technology news. I also have it syncing with Reuters, which actually gives a better column at times. The coverage is more complete, at least.
Those two channels pretty much fill up my commute. I also have C|Net and a couple of others. More than enough news for most any commute.
It is not perfect, but it is free and it works.
Between that program, V [vindigo.com]
Re:Electronic Paper (Score:2)
Well, seeing how I don't have a fireplace, I'd much prefer the electronic one.
What next? (Score:2)
Re:What next? (Score:3, Informative)
Lots of papers probably having this problem... (Score:3, Interesting)
Frankly, papers are unwieldy; I'm always getting them out of order or tearing them, not to mention that they store germs quite well (so I hear) - no picking those up on the subway for me!
I think the biggest paper-killer, though, is that by the time the news is printed and in your hands, it's out of date. For local news where not much happens (or if it does, everyone immediately knows), a paper might still work - but for national/international news, it just lacks the immediacy of online news sources.
Re:Lots of papers probably having this problem... (Score:2)
Rus
Re:Lots of papers probably having this problem... (Score:2)
Is immediacy the only determinant of value? (Score:3, Interesting)
IMO this is part of the reason so much online news and TV news sucks. There is immediacy, but no depth. News agencies fall over each other to get the scoop on a story, but when I live in California is it *really* worth knowing that scant details about some breaking story from Lithuania at 10:13 am when a much more detailed and informative story will be showing up in the NYT or the Post a few hours later?
I'd rather absorb news from a source that is check
The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full (Score:5, Insightful)
USA Today - Marketed at travelers who might be interested in a snippet of hometown news. The McDonalds of newspapers.
The Wall Street Journal - Business oriented coverage with a solid conservative editorial page. The newspaper for Republican men.
The New York Times - Amazingly diverse coverage and in depth coverage, with excellent coverage of the Arts and a predictably liberal editorial page. The newspaper for literate urbanites.
The LA Time could have looked for another niche, but they basically are a poor clone of the New York Times. I used to read it quite often when I worked in LA and there is nothing about it that would recommend it over the other Times. Their whole market would be lonesome Southern Californians wanting to keep up with the music scene in Santa Monica.
It'd be nice if another newspaper could challenge the WSJ or the NYT for nationwide coverage. The Chicago Tribune and Washington Post have the potential to do so; I think the Post has the best liberal editorial page in the country, and the Trib is just a solid paper, but there is only so many people in the market for national papers.
Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full (Score:2)
I disagree with your assessment that the WSJ is for "Republican men." Its front page has among the most interesting, timely and unique stories of any news source in the country, and its Marketplace is valuable not only to corporate types, but those interested in what's going on in the greater American commericial sector. The recently launched Personal Journal and older Weekend Jo
Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full (Score:2)
Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full (Score:2)
Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full (Score:2)
Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full (Score:2)
Then again, maybe I've just been in LA to long...
As far as closing down the national edition-- it makes sense to me. I'm local and I read
Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full (Score:2)
Anyone who is interested in the Times' problems, which may or may not have been solved (depending on to whom one lisetns) should read Howell Raines' article [theatlantic.com] in the Atlantic.
Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full (Score:2)
Yeah, I almost started to put down the litany of things that have caused me to look more skeptically at the times, but the Wen Ho Lee thing was the turning point.
Add the Washington Post to that list (Score:2)
Honestly I can't think of any other paper you might want to consider as a "national newspaper."
Re:The Market for Nationwide Newspapers is Full (Score:2)
Isn't that what the meta-newspaper has done? I haven't bought a deadtree-paper in years thanks to the Yahoo & Google News aggregators. I think it's clear that this is the way things are headed, but the old way still has a lot of intertia.
It's nice being able to get news from all over the world. Since ALL news is biased you have to be able to go to more than once source in order to triangulate the truth.
"Solid" vs "Predictably" (Score:2)
Since you're a libertarian and not a conservative, then was it accidental that you didn't write that as "predictably conservative" and "solid liberal"?
Well I'm not a liberal either, and both papers are conservative corporate propaganda sheets IMHO.
Blame the Internet (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Blame the Internet (Score:2)
Re:Blame the Internet (Score:2, Funny)
It was only natural, video had been asking for it ever since it killed the radio star.
Re:Blame the Internet (Score:2)
Rus
maybe it was the opinions? (Score:5, Insightful)
But did it seem to anyone else that the L.A. Times in the past year or two had gotten WAY too opinionated in their HARD NEWS stories? I mean, I read the LA times occationally, but it seemed somewhere around a year after 9/11 it became VIOLENTLY anti-Bush/anti-republican. I mean, ALL media sources have bias. Here in NY, we have the amazing NY Times. And yes, it has an "opinion" on world politics. Despite what conservative radio says though, I felt that the NY Times still kept it's job of presenting the news in a fair way. The opinion/Op-Ed pages of the NY Times rightfully had opinions (and twice a week has "conservative" writers), so I felt there was fairness there.
But... take a crappy (although sometimes guilty pleasure) newspaper like the NY Post. It's a tabloid newspaper that 4/7 times a week the front page headline will be "OH NO PARIS HILTON (did whatever)" or this week, despite all the news in the world, the #1 story that took the entire front page cover was some guy buying a $10,000 martini (i kid you not). (I always assumed "The Daily Beagle" from Spiderman was based on the Post)
Again... this is NOT a political flamewar/troll post... and I like listening to talkradio, but if I listen to Air America or Hannity, I know what I'm getting. They'll focus on the topics of "their" side. But... I don't want that when I read hard news. Luckily, the NY Times doesn't do that. A typical page 1 lately has the #1 story of the day, something about Iraq, some economy/employment article, a local (NY) story, and big international news. Perhaps a blurb/picture about a big sports event. While they will often have stories showing porblems in the Iraq war - hey, problems exist. But they also recently had a story of how women are regaining power in Iraq and schools are being rapidly built (sounds fair to me).
But the LA Times seemed like the NY Post at times. Did anyone else notice during the recall election there was a story about Arnold, and it was negative EVERY DAY? I mean, come on.
For disclosure, I voted Kerry and I voted Gore in 2000. I watch opinion shows for their opinions. When I read about hard news, I want the news, not spin (with the exception of the Op-Ed page). Perhaps (i'm seriously asking here, not flaming), is this why their publication numbers fell? Comments? Once again, and finally, this is NOT a political flamewar/troll post. Just my opinion.
Re:maybe it was the opinions? (Score:2)
Nah, it's been a liberal democrat rag for decades. My dad complained about it every morning back in the 70's. Its chosen audience is smug urban democrats who like government programs. The righties hate the LA Times because it's too far lef
No. (Score:2)
Your examples of bias don't wash. There were negative stories about Arnold during the recall because the story of the democratic process being hijacked by an action movie star who refused to even discuss his political positions publicly was big news! The groping scandal was stupid, but the stories were true
Re:maybe it was the opinions? (Score:2)
Re:maybe it was the opinions? (Score:2)
Sloppy Headline (Score:3, Interesting)
Online newspapers are not a big success story. They cost a lot more to run (on a per-reader basis) than print editions, and they don't generate a lot of ad revenue. They're not going to replace print editions any time soon.
Well, let's see. (Score:2, Interesting)
Didn't it begin with the express business model of having personalized regional editions, with most of the stories being sent via satellite?
The clock's been ticking for a long time. Only the medium has changed.
Re:Well, let's see. (Score:2)
USA Today was founded in 1982 by Al Neuharth, chairman of Gannett, which previously was known as publisher of a vast number of undistinguished small newspapers.
In the first year or so most of the staff was "on loan" from Gannett papers around the country, and many even lived in a Gannett dormitory in suburban Washington.
> Didn't it begin with the express business model of having personalized regional editions, with most of the stories being sent via satell
Newspapers are not going away. (Score:2)
While there are some people who live on the Internet, there are many others who enjoy reading a book or newspaper. Newspapers are not going away.
Wrong (Score:2)
In two decades this entire industry will be gone. Not one paper, the entire industry. And yes, by that time you will be able to view digital content at paper resolutions.
Why do people love papers so much anyway? Most just get stock AP and Reuters content and repackage it...there is a huge amount if repeated content.
Mostly they have become transport mechanisms for huge multipage ads.
Newspaper = clunky (Score:2)
Internet killed the newspaper star? Maybe not, but crippled seriously, that's a sure thing.
Penenberg Wrote About This in Wired (Score:3, Interesting)
-Waldo Jaquith
Print on demand is the future (Score:2)
Print newspapers are obsolete (Score:2)
The actual news is Associated Press anyway (look at the bylines) and so often the same story just gets repeated. Those same feeds are also picked up by the TV syndicates, and they are doing a great job on the web. For real news, Fox, CNN, MSNBC web sites are just killing print. If I want diversity, I can check out the web sites for anything from Al Jazeera to the Wall Street Journal. The automotive
it's all just a little bit of history repeating (Score:3, Interesting)
It is called progress. (Score:2)
The jobs haven't been lost, they just moved to another market. Should we stop progress just because it creates products that replace others?
Cheers,
Adolfo
NEWSFLASH! (Score:2)
Motorized vehicles (horseless carriages) kill the horse and buggy industry! Story continues on page A5.
Folding? (Score:2)
Folding it, eh? I wonder if they'll enter it in the national origami championships?
Twas ever thus (Score:3, Funny)
NYTime (Score:2)
The LA "International" Times??? (Score:2)
Sure.
The LA "International" Times merely wanted to exert "progressive" influence on the United Nations and the US Federal Government. They couldn't tilt the playing field they way they wanted because there were too many others using blogging, forums, and email to present alternate views and news that nullified the LA "International" Times world view.
National newspapers are relics anyway.... (Score:2)
Can you give me a good reason why someone in New York or Washington, D.C. would be interested in the Los Angeles Times? And if you can, are there enough people in those two cities who want to read that paper and is the coverage that good they would
Some people don't get it, though... (Score:2)
I wouldn't expect anybody outside California to read or even care about the SF Chronicle, however great it is. Yet more than one friend from the DC area has reacted with condescending shock when informed that we don't read the Washington Post. (I've read it; it had the same basic stuff as the Chronicle, just with a DC slant rather than a SF one. It
LA Times finding something else to blame (Score:2)
Re:Please help me with windows! (Score:2, Funny)
Internet Kills local user's Windows XP Home
Re:Please help me with windows! (Score:2, Funny)
Get your windows CD and cover the shiny side ( don't make the mistake of putting the butter on the label side, we'd laugh at you then ) in a nice even layer about 5mm thick and place it in the drive and restart your computer.
Aftr this simple step, viruses will not bother you again.
Re:Future of the Newspaper (Score:2)
AP is a member-owned organization, and the membership doesn't want AP doing that. Neither does AP CEO Tom Curley, who specifically said it's a bad idea when speaking last month at the Online News Association conference in Hollywood. (He derided Reuters for going down that road.)
Electronic buggy whips! (Score:2)
Google News is probably the best vision we have today - dynamic, un