LA Observed
Clock is Ticking Down on Print Newspapers
Kevin Roderick on the future of print journalism.
The recently installed CEO of Dean Singleton's MediaNews chain of newspapers isn't shy about saying that his papers and a group that takes in the Daily News, Daily Breeze and a bunch of other smaller papers in SoCal and NorCal, including the San Jose Mercury and will be changing. John Paton is a former reporter and editor, and a digital evangelist who also at one time led the group that owns La Opinion. Inevitable in his MediaNews calculus is that, someday, the business logic for publishing newspapers in print will go away, to be replaced by a digital product written in part by reporters and in part by the community and aggregated from other sources. From
The second-largest newspaper chain in America is now being run by someone who thinks that print is, if not exactly dead, dying a lot faster than anyone thought.
It casts in a new light the moves made in the past month to combine key editing functions and leadership at the Daily News, Daily Breeze and Press-Telegram. I think they're a long way from discontinuing print at the SoCal papers -- for one thing, the websites aren't nearly robust enough in content or technology to become the whole product. But the clock is ticking.