Newspapers aren't dying because readers are no longer buying them. The main problem is that <em>advertisers</em>, whose ads have always paid the cost of journalism, are deserting newspapers.
(UPDATES after the jump.) As we all know subconsciously, when a bad person does a bad thing, or when a bad thing happens to a bad person, the more extreme your public expressions of fury (in the case of the former) or joy (in the case of the latter), the better a person you are. […]
Newspaper sales in the US have been declining for years, but the global financial crisis looks set to push the American print media industry off a cliff. Is this the death of American newspapers?
Crikey takes a look at how Labor's stage three tax cuts flip has played in the nation's media.
Britain's national broadcaster relayed the queen's death, mourning and funeral to the world. Was this its finest moment?
The print media is stumbling as readers and advertisers go online. Only nostalgia and tradition will keep it alive. But for how long?
There are no takeover deals or foreign investors who will save Australia's major media companies from rapid death. The government finally has to confront the reality of who will pay for public interest journalism.
The central role that magazines have enjoyed in Australia over the last century has been shattered by an information-rich, attention-poor world.
Majestic steeds take over Sydney, a couple of Labor figures spotted at The European and a confusing tweet about the death penalty.
Newspapers might have smaller circulations these days but their attempts to get people to subscribe are tried-and-tested.