Adviser Update Summer 2012 | Page 10

P10.V53.I01 black cyan magenta yellow SUMMER 2012 Page 10A Adviser Update Have newspapers become irrelevant? By RICHARD HOLDEN he announcement that the T Times-Picayune in New Orleans would cut back its printed product to three days a week from seven drew quick and vociferous criticism from many corners. Pundits mourned the loss — at least partial — of another newspaper icon while local residents lost the source of easily obtainable coverage for four days each week. Interestingly, Advance Publications, which owns the TimesPicayune, announced similar plans for its Alabama papers in Birmingham, Mobile and Huntsville. Hardly a word of complaint or criticism was heard. True, the Times-Picayune drew national and international praise for its coverage of Hurricane Katrina and its long-term effects on the area. But why no complaints about the Alabama papers? John Archibald, a columnist for The Birmingham News, had an interesting take on the issue. He said, “New Orleans has identity and pride. Birmingham has division and hostility. We can’t Director’s chair get together to ‘save’ anything, because we can’t agree that anything is worth saving.” David Sullivan, an editor at the Philadelphia Inquirer and author of the blog “That’s the Press, Baby,” has made a number of observations on this and the broader issue of the future of print journalism. In a post this spring, he wrote, “The Internet utopians and digiterari for years have been saying, ‘Stop trying to defend your dying or dead print business.’ Had they simply used the word ‘declining’ they might have gotten more traction.” These critics, Sullivan suggested, were saying that “newspapers have to be smaller. People have more things to read and no longer are willing to block out 20 minutes to ‘just read the paper.’ Newspapers that simply state the next morning what people already know are irrelevant.” So, have newspapers really become irrelevant? Based on anecdotal evidence from the Dow Jones News Fund intern programs for this summer, I think the answer is no. And Warren Buffett agrees with me — though he didn’t ask for my advice or opinion. More on Buffett in a bit. For us at DJNF, the number of internships we p