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Considering going to weekends or Sunday only
The features (comic strips, crossword puzzles, etc.) also usually do not appear on web sites.
I get the Trib on Sundays, mainly for the ads and the comics. Otherwise, the Trib is fish-wrap.
That said I got one 5 days ago but it was only for an obituary.
Wish the Sun Times, or Trib would open up a southern branch.
To answer the question, I only buy the paper on Sunday, and why buy a paper when I can go to Capitol Fax!
I did recently cancel my home delivery of the NY Times, since I just can't justify $50 a month for it. If I had enough time every day to go through it, that would be a good deal since it really is a great newspaper.
Although, to answer the question, I did pay a buck for a Saturday Tribune on the way to Michigan this weekend, but only because I didn't have internet access.
While I get the majority of my information from the internet, I love the feel of newsprint.
(And I'm not a young techie. Kids probably think I'm old enough to remember when the news was spread by heralds in the square.)
I do have hardcopy subscriptions to many news magazines and that probably won't change until there is an electronic alternative that is lightweight and has a very, very long-life battery.
You miss a lot if you go only online; plus, I think the actual layout in the hardcopy can be important to understand if you're interested in the possible significance to a candidate for a positive or negative story, i.e., is it on the front page or inside, above or below the fold, buried somewhere in a corner, or in a big spread with lots of pictures and sidebars.
We subscribe to the Trib... though they've tested our patience several times, it's still worth it for the coupons (the daily subscription pays for itself).
We used to subscribe to the Daily Herald but after having it stolen too often, and encountering an incredibly rude customer "service" rep after one such incident, we canceled it and never went back.
The rest of you need paper's anonymous :)
I also grab the Chicago Reader, New City, La Raza and Hoy. sometimes NY Times, Crain's, Baseball Weekly, the Onion. I always sneeringly reject the free Red Eye they hand out at the el (newspaper with training wheels).
It got an "A" from my JFK-worshipping teacher.
I drop 5 quarters for a Sun-Times and Tribune every single day. I will occasionally pick up the Daily Herald, but its layout format seems to be scrambled every single day, e.g. "What section is local news and/or the funnies in today?" Reading the paper shouldn't be a chore.
I've tried home delivery, but one wet paper is too many.
I never -- ever! -- bought a paper until I was in my mid-twenties. A co-worker let me read the front section of the Trib while he did the crossword puzzle. It was back in the day when the Trib had arts coverage on the last page of the first section and I distinctly remember seeing a Greg Kot review of a show by the Jesus Lizard. I thought, "Wait a minute... They cover this kind of stuff in the paper. I'm actually interested in this kind of stuff!" And I started reading the Sun-Times after discovering Jim DeRogatis on the original incarnation of Sound Opinions. I then began reading each and every issue, starting with the funnies and working my way out.
My theory is if you can't find a full dollar's worth of information and entertainment in a newspaper, you are probably some kind of illiterate half-wit.
-- SCAM
so-called "Austin Mayor"
http://austinmayor.blogspot.com
I buy the SOuthtown to get local news. Also I like the newspaper to read items that I would not search for online.
It's hard to lug my laptop into my library - the bathroom - for newspaper stories review!!
And yes, I'm a dinasour - in my early 60s.
I try to buy or borrow the Wall Street Journal most day
I gotta ask: where can you get hard copies of the Trib, Sun Times, AND the WaPost? I hope it's someplace in Chicago or Springfield (not DC), because the online version of WaPo stinks.
...and I'm a tiny bit too old to be called boomer.
I'm hoping for that as a Father's Day gift. Now, my typical morning is locate sports section of paper, read a half article, attend to one twin, read a bit, stop the other twin from feeding toys to the dog, read a line, give twins (who by this time realize that I have breakfast and look like birds with their mouths open) bites of my breakfast, read three lines, stop twin from poking Germ. Shep in eye, drink swig of coffee, and then rush out to walk dog.
Reading the paper and drinking a cup of coffee? That would be wonderful. My wife is very generous, but I'm not sure she is up for that though.
We get the local paper every week as well.
Buy a hard copy once a month.
Mostly look at other folks' hard copies.
The price of Comcast DSL one has to give up tradional newspapers.
Local public libraries get hard copies of many of these papers, but I don't always have the time to get there. Normal Public Library has less parking now that there is all this construction in Uptown Normal including a three-story parking garage.
Also, many public libraries have online subscriptions to newspapers and periodicals. You can get the info from your local public library along with the URLs and passwords so you can read them at home. Very helpful in that you get access to the archived issues. This is your tax dollars at work.
Both Barnes & Noble and Borders have daily papers national and international for sale or perusal in their cafes. Cost of coffees and other drinks are kinda high so that is a treat from time to time.
You people are driving advertisers, media buyers and media companies absolutely nuts because they don't know where to find you.
There's still a market for traditional print, but it's shrinking and aging; there's a growing, younger market for "new media," but it's hard to measure and establish value -- plus it's changing all the time.
By the way, advertisers value the young ones more, on the theory they have yet to establish brand loyalties. If they want to reach the AARP crowd, they figure they can just advertise on "Wheel of Fortune" plus local and network TV news.
The only advice I can give -- don't read the Red Eye on the train. People will judge you for that.
Belleville News-Democrat for the Glenn McCoy Editorial cartoons and local news.
St. Louis Post-Dispatch for Cardinals News
Wall St. Journal for real journalism and in-depth reporting.
If newspapers die, it won't be my fault!
This is corny, but I learned how to read in part by picking up my late father's discarded Tribunes; don't think I'll ever be able to give up the print Trib no matter how p***ed the lefties on the editorial page make me some days.
I, like a few others, still enjoy print and see it as a leisurely thing to do. Reading the papers on-line seems more like a chore and I find myself skimming and skipping around much more and I hate the annoying pop-ups and even static ads overall because they seem more dumbed down and hokey.
As a matter of fact, I'd consider switching completely to on-line if the papers were nothing more than clear .pdfs of the hard copy. I guess I have a general dislike for reading the news off of web-sites because it's too much effort to click click click. I'd rather turn a page.
getting my news solely from the internet...I do like perusing the Washington Post and the New York Daily News online ...TV news is a joke...public radio is a thinking persons best car friend other than your IPOD...
(* Illinois Times)