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Online News Readers Surpass Print Readers For First Time: State Of The News Media 2011

Nyt

03/14/11 09:25 AM ET  AP

NEW YORK — The rapid growth of smart phones and electronic tablets is making the Internet the destination of choice for consumers looking for news, a report released Monday said.

Local, network and cable television news, newspapers, radio and magazines all lost audience last year, according to the Project for Excellence in Journalism, a research organization that evaluates and studies the performance of the press. News consumption online increased 17 percent last year from the year before, the project said in its eighth annual State of the News Media survey.

The percentage of people who say they get news online at least three times a week surpassed newspapers for the first time. It was second only to local TV news as the most popular news platform and seems poised to pass that medium, too, project director Tom Rosenstiel said. Local TV news has been the most popular format since the 1960s, when its growth was largely responsible for the death of afternoon newspapers, he said.

"It was a milestone year," he said.

People are just becoming accustomed to having the Internet available in their pockets on phones or small tablets, he said. In December, 41 percent of Americans said they got most of their news about national and international issues on the Internet, more than double the 17 percent who said that a year earlier, the report said.

In January, 7 percent of Americans owned electronic tablets, nearly double what it was three months earlier. Rosenstiel said it's the fastest-growing new digital technology, ahead of cell phones when they were introduced.

From a business standpoint, however, the growth in Internet news consumption hasn't been harnessed by news companies. The project didn't have numbers available but said online ad revenue was expected to surpass print newspaper ad revenue for the first time in 2010.

"The news business used to be the intermediary," Rosenstiel said. "You needed newspapers and TV stations to reach your customers. In this age, it's the device makers and software developers."

Newspaper circulation continued to decline last year, but the rate is slowing, the report said. A survey by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press found that 40 percent of Americans read newspapers, in print or online, at least three times a week, down from 52 percent in 2006.

Jobs have followed the exodus: Newsroom staffs are, on average, 30 percent smaller than they were in 2000, the project's report said.

In a telephone survey, the project found that 28 percent of Americans said the loss of their local newspaper would have a major impact on their ability to keep up with local information. Thirty percent said it would have a minor impact, and 39 percent said it would have no impact. (Based on a survey of 2,251 American adults, with a margin of error of 2 percent.)

A long-term viewership decline continues for network news, although the evening news programs continue to have significantly more viewers than cable news networks. Cable news viewership was down 14 percent last year and, for the first time since the project has been tracking it, dropped for each of the three networks – CNN, Fox News Channel and MSNBC.

Although local news broadcasts are continuing to decline in their traditional hours, there is a bright spot: The addition of newscasts at 4:30 a.m. and at 7 p.m. at some stations is generally proving popular, the report said.

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NEW YORK — The rapid growth of smart phones and electronic tablets is making the Internet the destination of choice for consumers looking for news, a report released Monday said. Local, network...
NEW YORK — The rapid growth of smart phones and electronic tablets is making the Internet the destination of choice for consumers looking for news, a report released Monday said. Local, network...
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blogisti
Approved Knowledge Only
09:19 AM on 03/15/2011
Corporate media is the worst kind of propaganda. They pretend to inform but in reality they avoid the hard questions and support the status quo. That is why corporations have taken over America. The news business was first taken over and then brainwashed the population into passively standing by and allowing the corporate coup. Now they are after the final piece, the internet.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mountainweb
Conservative Commonsense
07:13 AM on 03/15/2011
Why get the news once a day when you can get it at ANY time of day. The big news stations on TV are still good for massive amounts of news and pictures, but during the day, the internet wins. The winners have a solid presence on the internet.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bobbythompson3333
GOP President Jan 2013
07:01 AM on 03/15/2011
Time to let the Gray Lady go into that good night.
08:10 AM on 03/15/2011
The day the Gray Lady goes into that good night is, IMO, the day that the country will be on the curve to becoming just another 3rd world country. There are still far too many literate and cultured people willing to pay for the Gray Lady delivery, and when they start charging on the internet, I will be most happy to pay as I have done before.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bobbythompson3333
GOP President Jan 2013
08:34 AM on 03/15/2011
If by "literate and cultured people" you mean liberal and uppity, pinky in the air types, thankfully we don't take you seriously.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Barringtonmorr
Democracy: Where any two |diots outvote a genius
06:55 AM on 03/15/2011
the NYT.com and the Huffpost are the only one's for me ... does anyone have any suggestions on other good sites
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mountainweb
Conservative Commonsense
07:10 AM on 03/15/2011
To get a good grasp, BBC, Fox News and Drudge. Helps to get the news from more than one perspective these days because in some cases you are getting a reporters OPINION of the news and not the news itself. Journalism has truly died, regardless of political leaning.
08:11 AM on 03/15/2011
I recommend The Guardian, and The Christian Science Monitor as well as The Atlantic Magazine.
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waldopepper
I'd tell you all about me if you were my friend.
06:27 AM on 03/15/2011
News is not cheese, or wine. Nobody likes aged news.
06:21 AM on 03/15/2011
Whenever I happen to catch the radio or TV news, I have already seen it on the internet.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Barringtonmorr
Democracy: Where any two |diots outvote a genius
06:57 AM on 03/15/2011
Yeah I noticed that too ... TV news is usually a day or two behind on everyday news stories (like surveys or things in that nature) ... I really don't have any need for TV News unless its for catastrophes such as the recent
llyd wlsh
bio hazard
06:13 AM on 03/15/2011
newspapers did most of this to themselves. when i'm asked to pay 75 cents for 10 pages of ads and 3 pages of content i'm not going to do it. especially when the content is mostly cr@p. they started on a downward spiral and hastened the process by raising prices and diluting substance. why pay for bird cage liner when i can get better news on the radio, internet and even [OMG] the tv.
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Djabout Mauren
Shameless huffjunky
06:42 AM on 03/15/2011
Agreed...but you might be overstepping with the TV bit....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Barringtonmorr
Democracy: Where any two |diots outvote a genius
06:58 AM on 03/15/2011
Atleast with the newspaper you can skip the ads .. you can barely do that online anymore
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Freedom35
Eppur si muove
07:50 AM on 03/15/2011
I use a program called Ad Muncher which works very well to eliminate ads and speed up browsing. You can download a trial here:
http://www.admuncher.com/
06:13 AM on 03/15/2011
Good!!!! Now to go after the stewpid television "news"!!! They are becoming more and more irrelevant every day. Like dinosaurs. Let them become extinct.
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blogger x
Both parties sold us out a long time ago.
05:46 AM on 03/15/2011
People are hungry for the truth not propaganda. Alternative online news sources have more freedom to report, they don't have to worry about corporate sponsors as much.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JacksonAndy78
Usury Interest FEEDS BANKSTERS
05:32 AM on 03/15/2011
D1RTY to touch filtered MEDIA!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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TheOuroborus
It's NOT paranoia if they really R out to get U.
05:10 AM on 03/15/2011
Print? What's that? OH YEAH... it's what I do when I need a hard copy of a GoogleMap.
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earthboy
heavily censored for your protection
04:57 AM on 03/15/2011
Here is some news: With guns drawn, jackbooted DEA thugs did a statewide raid on medical marijuana production facilities yeaterday and confiscated all their stock, under a sealed warrant, and against the vote and approval of 70% of the population. America, land of the free and uninformed.
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earthboy
heavily censored for your protection
05:00 AM on 03/15/2011
That happened in Montana.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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TheOuroborus
It's NOT paranoia if they really R out to get U.
05:11 AM on 03/15/2011
That's all Obama, baby!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blogger x
Both parties sold us out a long time ago.
05:42 AM on 03/15/2011
So much for ending the war on drugs.
04:57 AM on 03/15/2011
If Nytimes.com added a penny donation electronic jar, I would donate. Business model: put a penny donation link on each news page. Readers donate when they read a news article by clicking on the penny donation link that is set to their account.

I admit, I fee guilty for reading news online, and I want to contribute to the journalist's paycheck. Sometimes when I read CNN.com I fear for a full-on news blog edition of the world's news.
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pickles n pops
No more payroll tax cuts Mr. Obama!
10:44 PM on 03/18/2011
It's one thing to be asked to contribute. Itsa whole other ball o' wax to be forced to pay tribute for the privilege of reading the NYT online. There are plenty of other fish in the ocean to choose from. Don't encourage others to replicate this new business model (or Rupert's New Deal) by patronizing this one.
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IllTakeTheRedEye
Do you know what a nonemployer business is?
04:43 AM on 03/15/2011
Speaking of getting news online...
 
During the last several hours, I tried to upgrade to IE 9, which just became available
 
RESULT: I had to switch back to IE 8
 
At HuffPo alone functionality to
+ drill down to see further comments 3 replies in was no longer functional
+ click refresh for new comments was gone
+ underline button was disabled
+ italicize button disabled
+ boldface button disabled
+ strikethrough button disalbed
+ blockquote button disabled
+ font size was now 6 within this box
+ arial font was gone within this box
+ html for returns was random between single and double
Etc.
 
I suggest HuffPo open a feedback on the front page regarding this.
I am not certain but I believe that going back to IE 8 helped so far...
We will see
 
Anyone else have a similar experience please let me know by reply
Thanks
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pickles n pops
No more payroll tax cuts Mr. Obama!
12:11 AM on 03/19/2011
You must have a magic version of IE8 with HTML buttons and other goodies. HuffPo's FAQ sez HTML is verboten, regardless of which browser you're using.. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/p/frequently-asked-question.html