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The circulation decline, coupled with a 23% drop in 2008 newspaper ad revenues, have proven a double whammy for some newspaper chains. [36] Combined with the current recession, the cloudy outlook for future profits has meant that many newspapers put on the block have been unable to find buyers, who remain concerned with increasing competition ...
There may be a cohort effect for newspaper readership: [7] younger cohorts appear to read fewer newspapers than older cohort groups, [8] even though newspapers generally target a wide range of age groups. As time passes, older cohorts will die out and be replaced by younger cohorts, resulting in a decline in newspaper readership.
Since the 1950s, there has been a gradual decline in newspaper sales. [2] The availability of multimedia news platforms has accelerated this decline in the 21st century, and by the close of 2014, no UK daily or Sunday newspaper had a circulation exceeding two million. [5] [6] The overall circulation of newspapers declined by 6.6% in 2014–15. [7]
It was a good six months to be The Wall Street Journal. It was a bad six months to be just about anyone else. On Monday, the Audit Bureau of Circulations released its official figures for the half ...
No wonder executives at The Wall Street Journal are so eager to emphasize their newspaper's circulation gains as a sign of its vitality. Small as those gains may be, they are a unique phenomenon ...
Doug Hensley's column looks at the implications of the recently released State of Local News report 2022 from Northwestern University
A report in 2009 highlighted the decline of newspaper circulation as figures showed that the industry as a whole sold fewer newspapers than at any other time since the 1940s. [2] Within the report, free online content and business models were blamed for their part in the downturn; an opinion in agreement with Murdoch's article.
Alcona County Herald: On March 10, 1910, the newspaper changed its name to the Alcona County Herald, with Rola E. Prescott as the publisher. Interestingly, it was the only country weekly in the United States to have its own cartoonist, providing readers with lively cartoons on county subjects in every issue.