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Beverly Hills buyout firm to acquire San Diego Union-Tribune

Beverly Hills buyout firm to acquire San Diego Union-Tribune

La Jolla-based Copley Press Inc. is selling its flagship paper for an undisclosed sum.

 

The 'Post-Intelligencer' Is Dead; Will Seattle News Live On?

The final edition of the Post-Intelligencer is further evidence of the decline of print, leaving the city's journalists to map the unknown territory of a new media landscape.

 

Seattle paper moves online only

Tuesday's edition of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer will be the last copy to be printed, as a slimmed-down edition moves solely online.

 

You "Dittoheads" Are Killing America's Newspapers!

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The biggest challenge facing America's struggling newspaper industry may not be the high cost of newsprint or lost ad revenue, but ignorance stoked by drive-by punditry.

 

Washington Post to End Business Section

The Washington Post plans to fold its business news coverage into the main news section, making it the latest newspaper to reorganize in difficult times for print media.

 

Newspaper publisher McClatchy cutting 1,600 jobs

Newspaper publisher McClatchy said Monday that it will shrink its work force by an additional 15% as it contends with sharply ...

 

The Ten Major Newspapers That Will Fold Or Go Digital Next

The Ten Major Newspapers That Will Fold Or Go Digital Next

Wall St. has created its list of the ten major daily papers that are most likely to fold or shut their print operations and only publish online.

 

How Silicon Valley Can Help Save Newspapers

How Silicon Valley Can Help Save Newspapers

How badly does the newspaper industry need new ideas? Here's the story I often tell when that question comes up.

 

Newspapers' Woes Worsening

Newspapers' Woes Worsening

Rocky Mountain News Is Latest Casualty, SF Chronicle May Be Next; What Are Implications For Nation Of Industry Problems? The Rocky Mountain News' Friday edition was its last.

 

Yahoo Teams With Newspapers To Sell Ads

More on NewspapersTerry Widener has been selling newspaper ads for 35 years. But until last fall, Ms. Widener, a 53-year-old saleswoman at The Knoxville News Sentinel in Knoxville, Tenn., had never sold an Internet ad.

Then in a two-week sales "blitz" intended to test an innovative partnership between newspapers and Yahoo, she persuaded advertisers to buy $200,000 in online ads that ran on the paper's Web site and on Yahoo. That represented about a seventh of the amount she typically sells in an entire year.

 

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