Papers are far from extinct
TONY DODERO
Readers of this column may recall a piece I did some weeks ago about
the declining readership of newspapers and the concerns that many in
the newspaper industry have about readers turning to other sources
for news, such as radio, TV or the Internet.
But the past couple weeks highlighted just how relevant newspapers
remain on the media landscape when you consider the governor recall
race.
As many of you know, our sister paper, the Los Angeles Times, was
criticized mightily for stories it did about now-Gov.-elect Arnold
Schwarzenegger that chronicled some of his alleged conduct toward
women.
Many accused the Times of trying to skew the election results,
something the Times’ editor vehemently denied.
Nonetheless, the stories prompted several readers to cancel
subscriptions to the Times, which also affects Daily Pilot
readership, since we are delivered as one.
But in the middle of all the squabble over the Times and its
stories on the new governor came a survey on newspaper readership
that left me a little more confident in the future of this medium.
The study released two weeks ago by the Audit Bureau of
Circulations, the organization that regularly monitors and regulates
newspaper readership, came up with the following findings:
* Current calculations often underestimate the actual
readers-per-copy figure of most newspapers;
* Newspapers do an effective job of reaching full-time working
women, the most time-pressured segment of society;
* Young adults aged 18-34 actually do read newspapers, albeit on
an occasional basis;
* Newspapers deliver to an upscale audience that wields
considerable spending power; and
* The number of adult readers per copy is actually increasing,
particularly on Sunday.
According to the audit bureau these findings were gleaned from 160
newspaper markets in North America, coming from 180,000 interviews
and the findings represent more than 60-million readers who answered
the same readership and demographic questions.
Dr. David S. Neft, a newspaper industry research consultant and
co-author of the study had this to say in a prepared statement:
“What the responses tell us, collectively, is that there are a
great many loyal newspaper readers who routinely pass the publication
on to friends, family and colleagues, and who represent a great deal
of spending power. Advertisers who understand these key usage
patterns can use newspapers to their greatest advantage.”
The survey showed newspaper readers tended to be four-year college
graduates who have family incomes in excess of $75,000 annually. For
more specifics on the survey, go to this Web site at: at
https://www.accessabc.com/ reader
Upscale audience, loyal readers who pass along the news? Man, that
sounds like Daily Pilot readers to me.
Maybe we aren’t ready for dinosaur-land after all.
*
Some of you may recall that we lost our city editor James Meier
about a month ago as he went off to be the assistant metro editor of
the San Bernardino Sun.
But as of this week we are back in good hands as Danette Goulet,
the Daily Pilot’s former education reporter has returned to take over
the city editorship.
I interviewed and hired Goulet just about four years ago exactly
from the Boca Raton News in Florida.
I distinctly remember her telling me that she wanted to come to
California and learn to surf.
She did exactly that. In fact, every once in a while we have a
newsroom surf session with me, Goulet, Managing Editor S.J. Cahn and
former Daily Pilot editor Bill Lobdell.
But I digress.
Goulet has spent the last two years as the city editor of another
sister paper, the Huntington Beach Independent. She has done a great
job there as the paper has brought home eight California Newspaper
Publisher Assn. awards with her at the helm.
Goulet will oversee the reporting staff for both the Independent
and the Pilot and I’m looking forward to great things to come.
*
Speaking of Bill Lobdell, I’d like to extend my congratulations to
him and I know many Daily Pilot readers will be pleased to hear that
he was recently awarded second place for the Templeton Award given by
the Religion Newswriters Assn., a group with members from media
outlets across the nation.
Lobdell is now working at the Los Angeles Times as one of two
religion writers for the paper.
According to the association the award is given for: “excellence
in enterprise reporting and versatility in the field of religion in
the secular press. Named for Philanthropist Sir John Templeton and
funded by the Templeton Foundation.”
The award was based on five stories written by Lobdell.
*
Finally, get ready this Wednesday for our annual Daily Pilot list
of the 103 most influential people in Newport-Mesa.
We often get complaints from those who believe they belong on the
list, and right about summer we start getting names of nominees from
readers.
We can’t put everyone on the list I know, and this is just a
reminder to take the list in the spirit of fun that it was originally
created.
And for another reminder, for obvious reasons we don’t put media
people on the list. Imagine the fight that would cause in the
newsroom. So if you’ve nominated a media person, you’ll now know why
he or she doesn’t appear on the list.
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