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sunny wrote:aimed at a much smaller, and wealthier, readership.
Of course. Who else can afford to spend money on utterly useless crap?
Newsweek Plans Makeover to Fit a Smaller Audience
Ozier Muhammad/The New York Times
Newsweek is planning a redesign and some shifts in content to fashion [b]an opinionated take on events, aimed at a much smaller, and wealthier, readership.
By RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA
Published: February 8, 2009
.....
A new graphic feature on the last page, “The Bluffer’s Guide,” will tell readers how to sound as if they are knowledgeable on a current topic, whether they are or not. ...
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/09/busin ... sweek.html
JackRiddler wrote:sunny wrote:aimed at a much smaller, and wealthier, readership.
Of course. Who else can afford to spend money on utterly useless crap?
Except that this is a predictable PR claim aimed at the advertisers. The facts in this story are painfully clear: readership is declining and the company feels forced to downsize on the expense of actual reporting. So they're turning the magazine into a kind of printed blog and putting a positive spin on it. From the sound of it, the "makeover" means yet another format-heavy small-byte format with sexy columnists blathering in the mode of politico.com.
waugs wrote:Walter Isaacson was on Colbert the other night, desperately trying to argue why people should start paying for Newsweek articles online (or maybe he's with Time, not that it makes much difference). He was whining about the internet and how it's hurt their bottom-line. What an idiot. He seemed completely out of touch with the way media works. Go ahead, start charging to read your already-hollow articles--see how fast your readership closes that browser window.
Hugh Manatee Wins wrote:Um, yeah. Newsweek is owned by the CIA-Washington Post.
The CIA media has been reducing the amount of information given to the public steadily ever since widespread resistance to the Vietnam War and the end of the conscription draft made this a critical strategy for carrying out permanent economic war.
News rooms were purged of anyone not On the Team.
Investigative journalism became almost extinct after the Pentagon/CIA coup known as Watergate.
Now that some of We the People online know too much, more information must be subtracted from the mainstream media to maintain acceptable levels of Strategic Ignorance.
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