Saturday, June 2, 2012

The Newspaper Should BE a Model T

A childhood memory is looking out the living room waiting for the newspaper. Typically a sibling and I would race out to be the first to retrieve it. Some days I think we almost grabbed it before it hit the ground after being thrown from the "paper ladies" car. We would often all be in the living room passing around sections of the paper until we had all read it. Growing up I read The Decatur Daily every day through high school.

In college dorm students were given a great rate of $20/year for The Greenville News. All four years I paid for it and was willing to do so even if my roommates didn't want to go in on it.

In Illinois I read the Peoria Journal Star essentially daily for 11 years. My first two years I think I read Jack and Irma's copy upstairs or they would set it at the top of the stairs for me when they were finished with their subscription. Their sharing saved this poor beginning school teacher $10-15 a month. I got my own subscription when I moved in the Jefferson St. apartment and transferred that when I moved to Peoria.

One of the first things I did in my moves to Daphne, Xenia, Chattanooga, Xenia again, and Hudsonville was to get a subscription to the local newspaper. While in Chattanooga the Chattanooga Times (left wing) and the Chattanooga Free Press (right wing) merged to become the Times Free Press. My move to Hudsonville was newspaper shock as the Grand Rapids Press was an afternoon paper.

In February of this year, the Press began home delivery only 3 days a week--Tuesday, Thursday, and Sunday. An e-replica version of the paper is available for subscribers so daily paper reading is still available. However, reading the newspaper online is different than holding it in your hands.


One of my favorite traditions was grabbing the Saturday morning paper and sitting down with a cup of coffee. I always read a paper from front to back except for when the Press put Sports after Living as I like to end with the comics. Typically it would take an hour to read the paper on Saturdays unless I had more important plans and had to rush.

I hate not getting the paper delivered every day as my paper reading habits have changed. These are my observations of the last four months.

1. I don't read the paper every day including online anymore.
2. It is easier to read the paper online as I can do it anywhere and no longer have to wait until I'm home to get it off the porch.
3. I connect to other news sources more with apps on my Touch and hopefully now with my smart phone so I don't need the newspaper to get the details of the news.
4. Trying to read the Press on my Touch is not the same as the physical paper or the computer.
5. When I read the newspaper now especially on Tuesdays and Thursdays I've already read or seen that news on other sources so it's old news.
6. Just realized calling it a news"paper" when reading it online is an oxymoron.
7. I've adjusted to the changes of my newspaper reading, but I don't really like it. Sitting here with a computer on  my lap on this Saturday morning is not the same as hearing the pages crinkling when turned.
8. The change in delivery schedule is making the newspaper even less viable.

My Dad always says that change is necessary--after all we could still be driving Model Ts, but the change in reading a newspaper is still a downer for me.

2 comments:

Ann said...

I agree.

The paper is useless for hard news. Most of that I've already read online as much as 24 hours earlier.

I read the paper for local feature articles as well as the columns and comics of the lifestyle section.

Most people in our town are only interested in the Wednesday Hometowner section, which prints pictures of winning little league teams, school honors, etc.

The year I wrote a column for the Religion section on Saturdays, the ONLY people who commented on it were people over 40. If someone under 40 heard us discussing it, they'd say "You write a newspaper column? Oh, I don't take the paper." That was without exception.

I believe that the print newspaper will be a thing of the past within the next ten years.

rk2 said...

Since living here I've had three letters to the editor in the news section and two letters to the sports editor. One person commented on one of the "news" letters and quite a few (5ish)commented on the sports ones. All of them were 40ish or over as well.

Like you its the comics and advice that keep me going to the paper. That and the Sunday ads.

With the change in delivery the local paper has changed and it's not as good as previously and is close to useless.