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MarketFoolery

Print Isn’t Dead Just Yet

MarketFoolery

The Motley Fool

Money, Business, Motley, Business News, Stocks, News, Investing, Market, Fool

4.71.7K Ratings

🗓️ 3 May 2016

⏱️ 21 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The team takes a look at earnings from The New York Times and Grubhub, two very different companies with some surprising parallels. Plus they dive into the future of Apple and if Tim Cook is to blame for the stock’s recent problems.

Transcript

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0:00.0

It's Tuesday, May 3rd. Welcome to Market. I'm Mark Wreath and joining me in studio today from

0:06.5

Million Dollar Portfolio, Jason Moser. Jason, how's it going?

0:09.7

Howdy. Happy Tuesday. Hey, happy Tuesday to you.

0:13.2

We got plenty to get to today, including some comments from Tim Cook that don't exactly make things

0:17.7

look good over at Apple.

0:19.3

But we begin with earnings and Jason W want, we start with New York Times. We've been telling the same

0:24.2

story about newspapers for a while now, you know money is heading in the opposite direction,

0:29.3

papers the way of the past, print is dead, but New York Times showing a little spark of life this

0:34.4

quarter. You're gonna have some big print fans some pro-print people that are

0:38.8

gonna say how dare you Mark wreath print isn't dead. Radio at fool.

0:43.0

Send him my way.

0:44.0

Send him via email because print is dead.

0:47.0

Facing, definitely facing some challenges there.

0:50.0

We had talked about this, I guess a little bit bit a couple of weeks ago in regard to the big Gannett

0:56.4

acquisition recently.

0:57.6

You start looking at the bigger question today is what's worth more, the information that you're getting or the brand that's giving it to you.

1:06.0

And I think for the longest time the brand was very important because it sort of signified

1:10.9

a reputation and it earned trust. I think as time goes on you sort of see a lot of these brands sort of maybe skew to one political side of the spectrum or the other and so then you have your sort of

1:26.1

You pick and choose your side yeah exactly I think that's fine there's no big deal with that but I think that the generally speaking the what what the internet has done has disrupted virtually everything that we do in our lives and newspapers indeed

1:38.1

Following this category I think when you look at the New York Times

1:48.3

I mean the good news for them, that they've made this pivot away from print and towards digital media subscriptions and circulation is growing in that regard.

1:55.3

So that's a positive.

...

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