Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Seattle 'paper' drops paper

The Web claims a 'victim.'

The Seattle Post-Intelligencer became the first big American newspaper (2008 circulation 117,572) to succumb to the rigors of printing a daily product, and find a refuge -- and perhaps prosperity -- in the new technology.

It ran its last copy today and henceforth will be a strictly online enterprise.

As I have noted in class many times, the future is bleak for the newspaper industry, but bright for journalism.

The P-I, founded in 1863 as the Seattle Gazette, is believed to be the city's oldest paper. In 1921 William Randolph Hearst bought it and it continues to be a Hearst Corp. enterprise. The company put it up for sale early this year because it was losing. Failing to secure a buyer, it decided to stop printing.

Read also:

No comments: