Skimpy newspaper

toysoldier

Hunter
Joined
Aug 23, 2006
Messages
3,332
City & State/Province
Hutchinson, KS USA
The morning paper was pretty skimpy. As I leafed through, I realized there was no separate Sports section, just one inside page. Industrial hemp production in Kansas got almost as much column inches. I don't give a hoot about any sports, so I don't miss it, but there are no ads for auctions, either. I'm glad I skipped a couple of gun auctions earlier this year. When this is all over, I expect the auctions will come thick and fast.
 
I quit buying the paper. It got to be so small and the price so high it wasn't worth it. I've read the paper since I started delivering it when I was 10. It was tough to do but it got so annoying I couldn't help it.


It used to be Mon, Wed, Fri and Sat, were average size with three or four sections. Tuesday was always the little one, with two maybe three sections. Thursday and Sunday were the big ones, full of ads and fluff. It started bugging me a couple years ago when the Thursday paper was smaller than the old Tuesday paper. You can imagine the other days. More like store sale flyers.
 
I hate to see the demise of newspapers. Between online news and loss of ad revenue its taken a toll on traditional papers. Our dominant newspaper in my state now only publishes a Sunday print version. A few months ago they went to electronic and gave each subscriber a tablet at no charge. It has the same format as the paper version and is available as a daily. It was a difficult transition for me because I still prefer a real book, magazine, or paper in my hands but at least I still get a broad array of local, state and national news.
 
That's what slowly happened to our local fish wrap over the years. It slowly got smaller and smaller until it was basically down to one section with front-page local and national, maybe a page of national than a couple of pages of local, a couple of pages of sports, the comic page, an "opinion" page, and the classified. All the while the subscription price crept up and up until it was more expensive to have a subscription than it would have been to walk down to the corner news rack and buy one every day. And, to top it off if you could put a liberal/conservative meter on the paper it would have perceptively kept sliding further and further left with every week that went by. Since I didn't have a bird cage to line I finally had no use for it.
 
I used to enjoy reading the San Antonio Express News “want ads” while I had breakfast at the cafe. The last time I bought a paper, the entire classified section fit in the bottom half of one page. I actually wondered if the people who placed ads had seen how small the classified ads section had become.
 
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Ours is a weekly. I is delivered by the mailman. Lately it has started coming a day late. At least it still reports on the sale barn and beef prices.
 
I still get the Chicago Tribune daily, but only the online edition. It gets my blood pressure up most days, but on the positive side, they have published many of my Letters to the Editor promoting pro-2nd Amendment and pro-American positions. I stopped getting the local paper, the Rockford Register Star because other than some rehashing of national news which I already get in the Chicago paper, it had nothing of value and was quite expensive.
 
I worked in a newsprint mill for nearly 40 years. The downsizing of the newspaper itself greatly impacted the newsprint industry, and our mill, as well as many other mills, shut their doors forever.

A huge impact on the size of the newspaper itself was because of the decline in printed advertising. But I stopped buying or reading the liberal Oregonian fishwrap long before the shrinking advertising affected them.

Newsprint in many areas is required to have a high percentage of recycled fiber. Our mill pioneered the recycling of old newspapers into new newsprint. Eventually, it was the Chinese that put us out of business. They began buying up all the old newspapers in this country and shipping them back to China in otherwise empty shipping containers to be used in making other paper products. That drove the prices so high, and the availability so low in America for old newspapers, eventually we could not buy them at all. It killed our industry.

Some sidenotes about newsprint...
Before we went out of business, much of our newsprint production had turned to making other consumer products that were based on newsprint. For example, McDonald's became a huge customer for newsprint that was being converted into placemats and carry-out bags. Newsprint was a perfect material for this purpose. And to satisfy the treehuggers, they wanted our product not as perfectly de-inked as the publishers would require. They figured tiny little specs of ink in their bags would make it more believable that they were in fact using a recycled product.
 
Who needs to buy a newspaper these days. I can make up the news myself if need be. I don't need to pay a liberal to do it for me.
 
arfmel said:
I used to enjoy reading the San Antonio Express News “want ads” while I had breakfast at the cafe. The last time I bought a paper, the entire classified section fit in the bottom half of one page. I actually wondered if the people who placed ads had seen how small the classified ads section had become.

With Craigslist,and facebook marketplace,you can reach a much broader audience for free.
The price the newspapers charge for ads are ridiculous for the amount of coverage you get.
 
Mega Twin said:
arfmel said:
I used to enjoy reading the San Antonio Express News “want ads” while I had breakfast at the cafe. The last time I bought a paper, the entire classified section fit in the bottom half of one page. I actually wondered if the people who placed ads had seen how small the classified ads section had become.

With Craigslist,and facebook marketplace,you can reach a much broader audience for free.
The price the newspapers charge for ads are ridiculous for the amount of coverage you get.

You should see what the newspapers get for running an obituary. :shock:
 
Here in southern NJ, each county had their own daily paper - Cumberland, Salem and Gloucester. About 15 years ago they combined into one, and it is crap! Not nearly the local coverage about what's going on where I live. No fire co. report, no local police log. In fact, the paper that now covers 3 counties has 1/2 the number of pages that it used to when it covered news in one. And it's gone very left wing and anti-Trump. I don't know how it stays afloat.
 
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