Newspaper

360 Staff Pick: State of Play

Arts, Culture & Media

The movie starring Russell Crowe and Ben Affleck doesn’t hold a candle to the gripping BBC series on which it was based. A newspaper investigates the death of a young woman, uncovering layer after layer of intrigue in the process. The plot is watertight and the pace is riveting. Bill Nighy is sublime as the […]

paper

Why you won’t see Ho Chi Minh City appear in this newspaper in California

Media
Jose Luis Farrera (with his sons) runs a newsstand in Venezuela. But business is down, because he can't get enough newspapers.

First toilet paper, now Venezuela is running out of newsprint

Journalism in the digital age

Newspapers in financial trouble

The World

Top of the Hour: ‘News of the World’ to Cease Publication, Morning Headlines

After 168 years in print, The News of the World, Britain’s most widely read newspaper, will publish its final issue on Sunday. News Corporation, NoW’s parent company, made the decision in order to stanch the bleeding from an ongoing hacking scandal.

The World

The Black Market in Newsprint

A national paper shortage has caused the price of used newsprint to soar. Joe Richman reports on a night he spent on patrol with the New York City “recycling” police. Their mission: to rid the city of curbside newspaper bandits.

The World

Advocate Ads

Non-profit advocacy groups haven’t always been able to reserve full-page advertising to promote their messages. Rates have traditionally been too high for start-ups and non-profits to afford. But Joe Therrien says major newspapers like the New York Times are starting to offer special rates for non-profits that may change the face of advertising.

The World

Another newspaper folds and Seattle bids farewell to the PI

Jacqueline Banaszynski, who holds the Knight Chair in Editing at the Missouri School of Journalism, talks to Farai and John about what it means to a community to lose a newspaper.

The World

New media, meet old media

Arts, Culture & Media

Newspapers are struggling to find a workable business model as readers migrate on-line, but one entrepreneur thinks paper and ink still have a place. Joshua Karp explains his start-up, a twice-daily free print newspaper called The Printed Blog.