Two New York City newspapers, including one immorted in “sopranos,” are disappearing from the Newstand, and Jersey City is leaving Jersey City without the news printed as a media struggle for the nation’s headwinds.
The Jersey Journal, read by the star -led fate of New Jersey (Tony Soprano of the virtual mobs) crossing the river in New York, is leaving the physical paper, some journalists, paper and printers.
STAR-LEDGER is online for online, and Jersey Journal is closing all stores according to NJ.com, which publishes content in other stores. NJ Advance Media owns Jersey Journal, The Star-Ledger and NJCOM.
Margaret Doman, at the foot of the Mushroom Building in Manhattan, said Margaret Doman.
Long -term residents and community activists said, “I use the journal for many things to publish information as well as to read the news and to harmonize with what happens around the village.
One letter to the editor said, “Stopping the journal journal is like losing an old friend.
Founded in 1867, the Daily Journal Square, the “Jersey Journal” of a huge red letter, decorates a huge red letter after a long -standing building. .
Jersey Journal could not stand Body Blow, a closure of prints shared with STAR-LEDGER, the largest number of New Jersey, while selling 17 employees and less than 15,000 copies of Journal.
WES Turner, chairman of Star-Ledger, pointed out the OP-ED of NJ.COM and said that the closure was forced due to “rising costs, reducing circulation and reducing print demand.”
The newspaper, which appeared in the symbolic New Jersey Mafia TV series, won a greedy Pulitzer Prize in 2005 and received a series of articles about the political upheaval of the governor Jim McGreevey.
However, since sales plummeted and Papere went through painful purchases in several rounds, small organizations could not save every day.
The editorial committee will be abolished by the transition to All-Digital, and one of the members, TOM MORAN, has announced.
Regional newspapers across the country are declining
The decline of the local media was a slow and painful death throughout the United States.
According to the latest report from the Medill School of Journalism in Northwestern University, more than one -third of the newspaper (3,300) has not been printed since 2005.
They were victims of rejecting readers and integrating titles into a small number of corporate masters.
Zach Metzger, director of the report, said, “When the newspaper disappears, there are many practical results.
“Voters’ participation tends to decrease. Split ticket votes tend to decrease. Inc coven will be re -elected more often. Corruption rate can increase.
In the news cycle, the domination of local papers and major national problems is often given as a reasons for the widespread polarization of American society between the left and right and the right.
Steve Alessi, the chairman of NJ Advance Media, shows the following steps to represent the following steps on the next step of the digital future of the journalism of New Jersey, and promised a new investment in the website and more than 15 million people He insisted on a unique monthly visitors. .
He promoted a newsletter to attract new readers in private schools in this region, and to attract new readers.
Kenneth Burns said, “There are still digital divisions nationwide. … My interests are interests for those who have not adapted to digital. New Jersey Expert Journalist Society.
“There aren’t many outlets that already keep the tabs for local work,” he said, “STAR-LEDGER.”