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The Newspaper Revitalization Act would allow newspapers to operate as nonprofits similar to public broadcasting companies, barring them from making political endorsements. [ 37 ] [ 38 ] A 2015 report from the Brookings Institution shows that the number of newspapers per hundred million population fell from 1,200 (in 1945) to 400 in 2014.
This is a list of defunct newspapers of the United States. Only notable names among the thousands of such newspapers are listed, primarily major metropolitan dailies which published for ten years or more. [inconsistent] The list is sorted by distribution and state and labeled with the city of publication if not evident from the name.
This article is part of a series on the: Culture of the United States; Society; History; Language; People. race and ethnicity; Religion; Arts and literature; Architecture
Local newspapers are vanishing across the country: Nearly 1,800 U.S. newspapers have closed since 2004 and more than 100 newsrooms shuttered since the start of the coronavirus pandemic. Berkshire ...
Years after the death of its newspaper, Richmond's primary source of local news is a website funded by Chevron, the oil giant whose refinery looms over the city's horizon. This California city ...
Without the need to design and lay out a 20-page newspaper every week or pay to print it, mail it and deliver it, running an online news site is easier than ever. But that’s not for Steele.
The Newspaper Preservation Act of 1970 was an Act of the United States Congress, signed by President Richard Nixon, authorizing the formation of joint operating agreements among competing newspaper operations within the same media market area. It exempted newspapers from certain provisions of antitrust laws. Its drafters argued that this would ...
Berkshire Hathaway (NYS: BRK.A) (NYS: BRK.B) CEO Warren Buffett's decision to buy a hoard of newspapers from Media General seems like a strange one. The world's foremost investor has always been ...