วันจันทร์ที่ 30 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2555

New Orleans needs a daily dose of its Times-Picayune | Jim Gabour

printing paper, just three days a week do not know what makes this city unique. We are a planet similar in a digital world

Buddy

and Punk would not care if a copy delivered to the homes of 175 years of Times-Picayune stopped banging against the door every day at sun up, to scare them from their sleep. In fact, my cats do not mind if the newspaper ceased publication altogether. They dream of being allowed to take a nap without interruption to the floor to spread their refills plates, coffee brewing, and finally, reading the newspaper.

But the spirit, and so does the rest of this city. Well-intentioned international headlines and bloggers far to one side, on the ground in New Orleans are still writing in the daily demonstrations of the editorial page plans for the paper to go three days a week, call the politicians government to stop the dismantling, the franchise owner of local football and basketball taking ads in the paper to say that could help the rescue, and more than 70 social and political organizations meet in person, with a new website dedicated to keeping the presses rolling day.

not matter. Advance Publications, owner of the Picayune, and his new publisher Ricky Mathews entry, has delivered more than 200 employees their final documents. Its self-service top of the page explaining the stone walls mainly through the city: "It is a fact and can not be great to continue offering coverage that you, our readers tell us that you require, if we print seven days a week, "he proclaimed." It is not possible. "

despite the fact that the nation and the June 7 issue of the report of the fortune that the penetration of Picayune on the market is the fourth largest in the country 65%, the paper made your budget with ease last year and had $ 64.7m in advertising revenue last year, compared to $ 5.7 million from their website nola.com. This site, according to Mathews, is to be the source of real money, when the off-Picayune. The comments follow the publication of his diatribe reading nola.com Bear.

course, dragging New Orleans kicking and screaming into the digital future is ignoring the heart of the city itself, things that make it unique. We are a planet similar in a digital world. That's why people love this place, why come and stay here, why people visit. Why shake hands and backup Pat and tweet instead of "friend". It also ignores the fact that this is a place with a disproportionate number of poor people who can not even access a computer, let alone their own.


And if a customer wishes to continue receiving the same three-day version of the paper, the direction has already published the new rates as of September 30. Three days of the new and improved Times-Picayune, then, will only cost three dollars less per month than the paper seven days. And yet they say it is not the bottom line.


Find best price for : --Ninth----Lower----iPads----Orleans----Fortune----Advance----Punk--