By: laurence haughton
So Pruitt said “that he’s confident at their ability to build audiences but his concern is whether there is a business model that has advertising supporting journalism.” Did anyone ask him to...
View ArticleBy: Guy Love
Seems the institutional players are still lingering in the denial stage and haven’t quite made the jump to the acceptance stage of their situation. “People are looking for a once-a-day stop that is...
View ArticleBy: Tansley
This is just so classic. People in an entrenched insitution seem to voluntarily put on blinkers and simply cease thinking along certain lines. Just because you ignore it, doesn’t mean the tidal wave...
View ArticleBy: JoeC
For a glimpse of a possible future for newspapers, check out <a href="http://offonatangent.blogspot.com/2007/03/boston-bloggers-summit-version-20.html" rel="nofollow">Steve Garfield's...
View ArticleBy: Howard Weaver
Guy (and Jeff, et al): Probably not much credibility from a person talking about his boss (I work for McClatchy) but please don’t confuse Gary’s observation about the viability of a “once-a-day” news...
View ArticleBy: MORE ABOUT THE FUTURE OF NEWSPAPERS at WHAT’S NEXT: INNOVATIONS IN...
[...] Jeff Jarvis covers a recent breakfast in New York about the future of newspapers with Gary Pruitt, the CEO of McClatchy, and Dean Baquet, the former editor of Los Angeles Times, and now bureau...
View ArticleBy: Juan Giner
Jeff, The comments of Mr. Pruitt are a shame for a company that now owns two of the papers that were worldwide leaders in the online world. Nando and Mercurynews, in North Carolina and California were...
View ArticleBy: George Kelly
Mr. Giner: MediaNews, not McClatchy, now owns the San Jose Mercury News.
View ArticleBy: Mark Rutledge
Everyone here should go back and read Howard Weaver’s post again. Newspapers are in the unique position to do anything anyone else in the news business can do, only better. That’s a hell fo a business...
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