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On the Media

January 28, 2011

On the Media

WNYC Studios

News, Radio, Amendment, Transparency, History, Micah_loewinger, Technology, Advertising, Politics, Society & Culture, Magazine, Journalism, Tv, Wnyc, Newspaper, Brooke_gladstone, Studios, Npr, Newspapers, Media

4.69.1K Ratings

🗓️ 5 May 2011

⏱️ 50 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is a repeat of a great show we aired last summer. Enjoy. From WN.N.Y.C. in New York, this is NPR's On the Media. I'm Bob Garfield. And I'm Brooke Gladstone. I predict that soon the phrase reading the newspaper will be as quaintly outdated as dialing the phone. I predict that paper newspapers will be a luxury

0:23.1

reserved for those willing to pay a lot for the Sunday ritual of swapping sections with loved ones.

0:29.2

I predict that newspapers will cease to be one-stop info shops and begin to focus on reporting

0:35.1

in specific areas while also serving as reliable aggregators,

0:39.5

co-lators, and filters for the rest of the news.

0:42.5

I predict that many of America's great newspapers will survive.

0:47.5

I predict these things at very little cost to me,

0:50.8

because nobody will remember anyway.

0:53.0

For instance, Douglas McIntyre, editor of 24-7 Wall Street,

0:57.2

predicted that eight of the country's top 50 daily papers would cease publication within 18 months.

1:03.8

That was about 19 months ago and all of them are still publishing.

1:07.3

No, I think what we did is we picked our fault the wrong newspapers.

1:12.2

We looked at the large markets and what happened is that Denver went out of business and Seattle went out of business

1:17.0

and Arizona went out of business. So I think from the standpoint of sentiment, we were right

1:21.7

from the standpoint of picking the markets. We were wrong. I think newspapers will be around

1:26.9

in one form or another for a long, long time.

1:30.0

Margaret Sullivan is the editor of the Buffalo News in New York. If McIntyre's glass is half

1:35.3

empty, hers is half full. I think there was a period of catastrophizing about a year ago.

1:42.1

The combination of the recession and a very quick decline in newspaper revenue

1:46.4

combined to make it seem as though newspapers were about to close their doors, but they really haven't.

1:55.5

But many smaller papers have passed away. The Tucson Citizen, the Rocky Mountain News,

2:00.5

the Baltimore Examiner,

...

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