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Current Events => General Discussion => Topic started by: formerlurker on July 13, 2010, 04:46:51 AM

Title: What Newsweek's decline means
Post by: formerlurker on July 13, 2010, 04:46:51 AM
Quote
What Newsweek's decline means
E-mail|Link|Comments (43)Posted by Kara Miller, Culture Club July 12, 2010 09:09 AM


The Washington Post Company announced recently that it was putting Newsweek up for sale. The Post claimed it had no choice, that the magazine was hemorrhaging money.

And, in fact, they were right.

Newsweek lost more than $13 million in 2008 and more than $28 million in 2009. I’m sure that’s not the kind of earnings trajectory that excites the Post – or potential buyers...

Kara  :bawl: about the death of liberal media.   
Title: Re: What Newsweek's decline means
Post by: DumbAss Tanker on July 13, 2010, 08:49:55 AM
Saw its editor on Imus, he apparently just wrote some giant blow-job about Obama and was flogging the book.  He clearly doesn't get it.
Title: Re: What Newsweek's decline means
Post by: JohnnyReb on July 13, 2010, 09:00:48 AM
Saw its editor on Imus, he apparently just wrote some giant blow-job about Obama and was flogging the book.  He clearly doesn't get it.

Yes. Liberal shit just doesn't sell like it once did.
Title: Re: What Newsweek's decline means
Post by: PatriotGame on July 13, 2010, 09:28:31 AM
Saw its editor on Imus, he apparently just wrote some giant blow-job about Obama and was flogging the book.  He clearly doesn't get it.
Liberalism is a mental disorder and liberals are clinically insane. These asshats will NEVER admit nor ever possess the intellectual horsepower to understand the failings of their twisted ideologies. They are in denial which in and of itself is a mental illness and the longer they remain that way, the harder their final fall will be.
In other words, the larger the crap stain will be from their final splat.
Title: Re: What Newsweek's decline means
Post by: franksolich on July 13, 2010, 06:37:05 PM
To me, Newsweek was always only a Time-lite, but of course I'm talking about Time when it was great, run by Henry Luce.  As a child, I used to collect old editions of Time magazine, building up a near-complete set of them 1923-1967 (the editions after 1967 were not worth anything but scraping one's butt on them), and so I'm pretty familiar with the magazine, once an Institution.  I also collected old Newsweek magazines, but not nearly as many.

The extinction of the weekly newsmagazine was perhaps inevitable, given changes in technology and communication, but I bet both Time and Newsweek could've staved off the Grim Reaper for at least another 20 years, had they adhered to the standards of Henry Luce, relaying the news rather than propagating viewpoints not really popular with the public.

I haven't even looked at a Time magazine the past three years, when il Duce Bo began being a common cover-figure--39 times in 52 weeks, or something like that.  It was too too too much; even Franklin Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan, not to mention other prominent world leaders, appeared on the cover that much.

Overkill.

Actually, my final disillusionment with Time dates from 1990, when the magazine named Mikhail Gorbachev as "Man of the Decade," rather than someone else who, uh, did a great deal more than the Soviet dictator.  It was obvious why the magazine selected Gorbachev, because the alternative was someone who did not represent the liberal elites' point of view.

And so that's what's killing the weekly newsmagazines perhaps 20 years sooner than they have to go; their strident advocacy of political views not really popular with the general public.  There's a place in the "market" for such magazines--the Nation being a good example--and while such magazines may flourish and prosper, they also lack the big circulation numbers.

And the problem with both Time and Newsweek is that the market was already glutted with Bo fanzines; they were offering nothing new or different, just the same stuff as all these others.