The circulation data is clear:
Fewer people are taking the daily newspaper in the United States. Readers and, increasingly, advertisers are moving online.
As online journalists, many of us straddle both worlds. Many of us work for newspaper-dot-coms; others at least started their careers in print.
Are any of us still reading the "dead tree edition?" If so, how many newspapers a day are you reading? And how many did you read a decade ago?
Journalists, one might presume, ought to be the biggest fans and consumers of journalism. Can online journalists, folks at leading edge of industry change, still be counted on to take the print edition? Or have we bailed on print, too?
Tell us in the comments which papers you still read in print, and which you would recommend. Or, if you are not reading papers in print, tell us what might help you change your mind and subscribe to a print newspaper in the future.
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From 69.61.222.143 on May 12, 2008 at 12:40 PM
I would read a local weekly stuffed with enterprise and investigative reporting about topics ranging from race to immigration, non-profits to religion, arts to music, education to adult learning and informational graphics that sort out complex subjects with multiple points of view -- and fill in a lot more blanks.I get all my national/international news and commentary (in two languages!) from sites around the world. And I get a lot of it. What I'm starved for is local reporting that goes beyond nuts and bolts and who shot whom last night. I'd read it in any medium but would prefer digital.
Mike Phillips
Retired E.W. Scripps editor, corporate type