Media Watchdog: Newspapers Now Just a Keepsake

Friday, November 7th, 2008

It looks like my print subscriptions to the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times might have actually earned me some money. That’s because, in the wake of Barack Obama’s historic election, the Wednesday edition of major newspapers are selling on eBay and Craigslist for upwards of $200.

Newspapers are printing hundreds of thousands of extra copies and still selling out. USA Today increased its print run by 380,000 copies and sold them all. The Washington Post tripled its newsstand rate to $1.50 and still sold out. In fact, it sold so many copies the paper ran off another 250,000 copies of Wednesday’s paper on Thursday. People lined up in front of the Chicago Sun-Times’ printing plant to buy copies practically straight from the baler. The examples go on and on.

This seems to indicate a couple of things about the state of print journalism. First, it puts into stark relief just how many people have dropped their subscriptions over the years. Of course, not every person of the millions who bought extra copies used to be a newspaper subscriber. But some certainly were, and it took a presidential election to get them to go out and buy a copy of the magazine.

More important is the concept of commemoration. The Sun-Times is selling framed copies of its cover for $99. The Times will send you a copy of Wednesday’s paper for $14.95, which includes a protective plastic sleeve. Newspaper companies that put their emphasis on their print product used to say newspapers were still valuable journalism because they provided context and analysis, something that couldn’t be delivered immediately. The millions of people buying these extra copies aren’t buying them for the news analysis, they’re buying them because it’s tangible proof of what happened on Tuesday night.

In some ways it’s gratifying that people still turn to papers in momentous times like these. But the newspaper is acting as little more than a photo to frame.

This election was something more than the beginning of the end for print papers—that happened long ago. This election was a true changing of the guard. Political sites like the Huffington Post and Politico saw huge increases in page views—HuffPo was up 472 percent compared to a year ago, and Politico was up 344 percent. Even traditional newspapers’ Web sites saw large increases in traffic. Want to see more polling data? Go to Pollster, FiveThirtyEight or 270toWin, don’t wait for the newspapers to summarize their own polls for you later.

Granted, I said I subscribe to both the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times, which is unusual for someone my age. It’s mostly because I want something to read while eating breakfast, and the L.A. Times was practically giving the paper away. I certainly wasn’t waiting until Wednesday morning for my election analysis.

Newspapers love to write about themselves (see all that self-congratulatory Pulitzer coverage), so of course there were plenty of stories (previously linked to throughout this column) about the millions of extra newspapers printed to document Obama’s victory. And most of them had a slight air of gloating. “See, we aren’t dead yet!” the stories seemed to say.

Fair enough, but isn’t it a little sad for your goal to be stuffed in a protective sleeve, then stuffed in a closet and then likely never read again?

Related: Urb magazine founder Raymond Roker compiled a cool slideshow of covers celebrating Obama’s win. Here’s a taste.

Amuse Bouche: Celebrating Nathaniel Mayer

Friday, November 7th, 2008

I like to end the week on a bittersweet note. Blues great Nate Mayer passed away this week, at the age of 64.

At the age of 18, Mayer released the top 40 hit “Village of Love.” He released two more albums before disappearing from the public eye for 35 years, during which time he was rumored to be living in the ghetto of East Detroit.

Mayer returned to the music scene in 2002, with a rougher, almost garage-band sound. He toured for the rest of his life, releasing albums in 2005 and 2007.

Here is Mayer performing in February of this year. RIP, Mr. Mayer.

The Week in Gossip: Presidential Pup Fight

Friday, November 7th, 2008

When Obama let the cat out of the bag that he would follow through with his campaign promise to get the kiddies a new pup for the White House, all barking let loose. The Dog Whisperer weighed in, The New York Times had some suggestions, ABC News aired a search-for-the-First-Pup segment as part of its “election coverage,” and then—the pups themselves engaged in heavy duty campaign mudslinging and self-promotion. The week in gossip doesn’t get any juicier (or more catty) than this.

Oprah tells Brad Pitt who she thinks he should think he’s in love with. That’s right. The Queen Bee has spoken and she thinks Angelina Jolie is the love of Brad Pitt’s life. And Oprah is never wrong. (You know what this means, Jennifer Aniston—a lifetime of Johnny Douchebag for you!) Pitt reportedly told Oprah in an interview (set to air Nov. 18) that six kids ain’t enough. “It’s the greatest endeavor I’ve taken on,” he said, and went on to indicate that he’d like more. To which I say: STOP. THE. MADNESS. I believe the children are our future, but I also believe his kind of hotness needs to spend more time in front of a camera. Wearing the bare minimum. Am I wrong?

J.Hud says farewell. Funerals for Hudson’s deceased mother, brother and nephew were held at Chicago’s Apostolic Church on Monday. Oprah Winfrey, Queen Latifah, Clive Davis, “American Idol” winner Fantasia Barrino, and the mayor of Chicago were in attendance. It’s been two weeks since Hudson’s mother and brother were discovered dead and still no one has been charged. However, Hudson’s brother-in-law is still a “person of interest.”

Who is that on the cover of Vanity Fair? Your guess is as good as mine.

50 Cent + ol’ Bette Midler = For reals. Who would’ve thunk the two would ever share a headline, but here it is. Midler apparently hit up the rapper to collaborate with her on a community service project in Queens, New York. The project? A gangsta garden—w00t! w00t!

R.I.P. Sarah Palin, I mean Tina Fey, I mean . . . whoever the hell I mean. Or maybe I mean SNL. Fey announced that she’s retiring her Palin impersonation, which is a little hasty, if you ask me. With Palin stepping off of airliners in Alaska to crowds cheering “2012! 2012! 2012!”—methinks we’re gonna need something to laugh about come four years. Caribou Barbie’s candidacy is funny, but without Fey, it’s not that funny.

Daily News Round Up: Where’s the Money, Honey?

Friday, November 7th, 2008

Give Me Your Tired, Your Unemployed Jobless rates haven’t been this low in about 14 years. What with the credit crunch emptying coffers and Wall Street offering a desolate face to the world, unemployment lines have been snaking ’round corners at lengths inching dangerously close to those seen in the 1980s.

A Paperless Immigration Application Trail? Backlogging has long been a problem in the immigration application reading system. But the nation’s $500 million “effort” to convert the process to an electronic one could, perhaps, speed things along to the point that the pile up may go down 20 to 50 percent, welcoming more people to the American fold sooner.

Another LAPD Scandal to Add to the Already “Lovely”Record Officer Russell Mecano, on the force for eight years, is facing indictment today as he’s charged with “sexually assaulting a young woman” and “soliciting sex from another while on duty” in West Los Angeles.

Obama’s New Economic Advisory The President-elect has just called a Chicago-based economic advisory board meeting in order to begin filling more administrative positions while quickly zoning in on our feeble economy.

Georgia on our Minds: Uh Oh, our Hindsights may not be Kind We’ve been chastising Russia all this time, but it turns out this summer’s Russo-Georgian war may have begun not by Russian, but Georgian, aggression…