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2012 newsweek final print7/4/2023 These magazines have been my childhood they are what hooked me to popular reading. I will cherish the outcasts, the IEEE and the Chem Club! newsletters, but remember the glory of Reader's Digest. There is only one direction to continue to proceed down, but until Farenheit 451 comes around, I will gladly hoard my old Time, my old National Geographic, the Harper and the New Yorker, the Scientific American to the Popular Science. And while I have been slightly dismayed by some of the sensationalism that is in it, I am so down with the idea of print journalism, that people can publish ideas for a nation to read. I am a Time loyalist by accident, not by choice, as an airline rewards program would only allow me to renew Time subscriptions. or, you know, the already passed Newsweek. And although I thoroughly embrace the free flow of information that the internet has brought to the world, I am very sad to see the passing of Newsweek! toilet reading (heh), books and magazines have always been a part of my life. ![]() I've always been a big reader From being a young'un crawled up under the bed to some light. This last Feature was interesting because I saw a photo I had never seen before, a picture of some of the press reacting to the attacks aboard Air Force One.Īnd there is a "Hats Off" dedication to the staff of Newsweek and The Daily Beast on page 78.Īnd the final page is 12 facts about Newsweek and a vertical column for all of Newsweek's' 8 Logos through the years.ġ0 cents was the cost of Newsweek when it was debuted in 1933 Newsweek, the American weekly news magazine published in NYC, is going all-digital from the start of 2013, marking the end of an era for the almost 80-year-old publication. The features of this last print issue were as follows:Īfter decades, correspondence recalls perils of war. Now it may have been from a Toyota Add (pulling the Endeavour shuttle)but the words still inspired me. Those were the first words I read when I opened it. The thick of the magazine is mostly a reflection, a look back in time. I read this magazine simply because it was the end, a finale to almost 80 years in print. Or already died since this review is long after the fact. Now Newsweek may not be gone forever, only the physical paper part of it is dying. ![]() By Michelle Chapman AP Business Writer,October 18, 2012, 10:33 a.m. The cover for the final print edition of Newsweek released in December 2012.It is always sad when something comes to an end. Newsweek plans to end its print publication after 80 years and will shift to an. Read more: Newsweek Plans to Return to Print One page… //read more a circulation of about 100,000 for the print version in the first year. Its new owner hopes to hit Hit The record of a single online transaction event stored in a log file. It will contain 64 pages and rely on subscription sales more than ad pages to keep it in print. 2 The total web audience for these magazines extends well beyond subscribers to their print or digital titles. The re-launched print edition will be positioned as a premium product, costing subscribers more than it used to. Newsweek’s 1.5 million print subscribers at the end of 2012 fell to only 470,000 digital subscribers in the first quarter of 2013. ![]() In August 2013, the magazine was acquire by International Business Times Media. In 2010, the Washington Post Company sold the magazine for US$1. ![]() But the dawn of the Internet eroded its readership and advertising revenue. In 1991, it had about 3.3 million readers. Newsweek was a vital weekly magazine that competed with the Time magazine for decades but had not adapted to the new digital world well, so in October 2012, it announced the end of its print edition and continuing as a digital-only publication. Newsweek magazine returns to a print edition after one year
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