I am a newspaper reader and have been since I was 7 years old (I learned a certain sad truth about Santa Claus by reading Dear Abby).
I intend to be a newspaper reader until the day I die. I am old enough that I believe newspapers will still be around until at least that point, though they certainly would seem to be in their death throes.
The newspaper I have read for the last 16 years, the Orlando Sentinel, has undergone a number of cost-cutting ravagings of its size and scope, all in the guise of “re-designs” that purport to make the paper better. Of course, they do not. They reduce it to a shadow of its former self. At the same time, newspapers like the Sentinel attempt to drive readers to their online version. I rarely seek news online unless some breaking story catches my attention through Twitter tweets. One effect has been that I also watch a lot less television than I used to because the Sentinel puts most of its TV reviews online, where I don’t read them.
In retrospect, I realize that my lifelong attraction to newspapers relates directly to my passion for storytelling.
As Jack Lail reported recently, Howard Weaver, McClatchy VP for News, told the Associated Press Managing Editors conference that “doing everything incrementally worse is a death spiral.”
The Orlando Sentinel — and most newspapers — are doing everything incrementally worse. As I write this entry, I am in Wilbur, WA, about an hour outside Spokane, the daily paper of which (The Spokesman-Review) just announced 60 job cuts and the editor’s resignation. I can’t really blame newspapers for their cutbacks. Newspapering in the 21st century is a Catch-22; fewer and fewer people are newspaper readers like me, so circulation is declining, advertising revenues are sinking, cost-cutting measures are making newspapers do everything incrementally worse, which means fewer and fewer people are newspaper readers. I am always astonished that people for whom I have enormous respect don’t read newspapers.
At the same time, newspaper publishers and journalists are learning to tell better stories online. The Readership Institute recently ran a piece on “Improving your visual storytelling on the Web,” with lots of graphic examples, and the site Interactive Narratives “capture[s] the best of online visual storytelling as practiced by online and print journalists from around the country and the world.” The site’s goal “is to highlight rich-media content, engaging storytelling, and eye-popping design in an environment that fosters interaction, discussion, and learning.”
I suppose improving journalistic storytelling online is a good thing, and reading online journalism is better than reading no journalism. I should never say never about becoming a reader of online news.
But as Howard Weaver also said, print journalism is about great storytelling and staying mission-focused on the communities newspapers serve, Lail reported.
Yes, it’s about the storytelling. For me, that means in print — newsprint.
I am a dying breed. I am a newspaper reader.










I, too, am a newspaper reader. I started reading on the living room floor as a child because the breakfast table was not big enough for all of us to read at once. My family would negotiate for sections we hadn't read yet.
I have tried to get my children interested in reading the paper, and occasionally my son will look at the Mini Page and do the puzzles inside. At this point, it appears they will not be long-time newspaper readers and I know I will be ceding ground to them for my future information.
I think newspapers hold great appeal for me because I am a visual and tactile learner. The newspaper delivers wonderful serendipity I have yet to achieve with the internet versions. The other appeal is I know when I am done with the written word, the printed newspaper. On the internet, I can drill down eternally into the worm hole...
Storytelling? You mean just keeping to the left-wing narrative.
If newspapers did less storytelling and more reporting, I might still be reading them.
I'm posting this on behalf of Stephane Dangel, who had technical problems posting:
Stephane Dangel said…
As a journalist, teacher and storytelling practicioner in France, I'm very interestd in the future of news teratment (and newspapers).
Some trends :
- interaction with readers and continuous coverage of news : twitter and tumblr are more and more commonly used by journalists
- networked journalism : Jeff Jarvis from buzzmachine says to journalists "do what you do best, link to the rest" (on the web) (see MoneyMeltDown)
- collaborative journalism : real life people are the authors of the newspaper, framed by real journalists (in France, we have lepost.fr)
Thanks to all for your comments. I especially like Mary K's comment:
Keith, I'm sorry you feel the way you do about newspapers. I read one newspaper that leans Democratic and one that leans Republican, so I have difficulty lumping ALL newspapers into the category of "left-wing narrative."