Newsweek ends 80-year run, goes all-digital | Inquirer Technology

Newsweek ends 80-year run, goes all-digital

09:02 PM October 18, 2012

AP

WASHINGTON—Newsweek announced Thursday it would end an 80-year run as a print magazine at the end of the year, taking the venerable publication all-digital to cope with a harsh media environment.

“We are transitioning Newsweek, not saying goodbye to it,” wrote Tina Brown, editor-in-chief and founder of the online Newsweek Daily Beast Company, in a statement posted on the Daily Beast website.

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“This decision is not about the quality of the brand or the journalism — that is as powerful as ever. It is about the challenging economics of print publishing and distribution.”

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Newsweek, which had a fierce decades-long rivalry with Time magazine, has been losing money steadily.

Brown acknowledged the merger of the print edition and the online Daily Beast operations, called “Newsweek Global,” would require layoffs.

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“Regrettably we anticipate staff reductions and the streamlining of our editorial and business operations both here in the United States and internationally,” she said in a memo to staff.

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She said the all-digital publication “will be a single, worldwide edition targeted for a highly mobile, opinion-leading audience who want to learn about world events in a sophisticated context.”

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It will be available on the web and on tablets via a paid subscription, with “select content” available on The Daily Beast website.

The company operating the magazine had indicated in July the move to all-digital was likely.

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Barry Diller, chairman and chief executive at the conglomerate IAC, said his firm was looking at options now that its partner in the Newsweek/Daily Beast operation has pulled out.

The Washington Post sold Newsweek to California billionaire Sidney Harman for one dollar in 2010, ahead of a deal with IAC to merge the magazine with the online operation to become known familiarly as “Newsbeast.”

After Harman’s death in 2011, his family ended its financial contributions.

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Like other US magazines and newspapers, Newsweek has been grappling with a steep drop in print advertising revenue, steadily declining circulation and the migration of readers to free news online.

TOPICS: digital, Media, Newsweek
TAGS: digital, Media, Newsweek

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