US: The Capital Times publishes final printed edition, moves to web
Posted by Carolyn Lo on April 28, 2008 at 8:31 AM
Early February, The Capital Times announced that would reduce its print to and shift most of its content to its website. On Saturday, the paper published its final printed edition with the headline "Beam Us Up."
WISC-TV reported that The Capital Times is down to a daily circulation of 17,000.
"(The circulation decline) really brought into focus for us a conversation about irrelevancy. How can we still be relevant if we have so few printed copies, particularly in a market of this size," said editor Paul Fanlund.
Its free publication will print twice weekly distributed within the Wisconsin State Journal with about 48 pages of in-depth stories, analysis, and commentary on Wednesdays with a circulation of about 80,000 and a revamped Rhythm arts and entertainment insert on Thursdays, with a distribution of at least 115,000.
"The sad part is being able to hold that newspaper in your hand, which for me, is going to be a big loss, personally," said Dave Zweifel, the newspaper's editor emeritus.
The Capital Times, printing since December 13, 1917, is believed to be the first daily newspaper to "make this kind of a transition to the Web," according to WISC-TV. "If it's successful, it's likely other struggling papers will follow suit."
For more information, visit our partner blog SFN.
Source: WISC-TV, Madison.com
WISC-TV reported that The Capital Times is down to a daily circulation of 17,000.
"(The circulation decline) really brought into focus for us a conversation about irrelevancy. How can we still be relevant if we have so few printed copies, particularly in a market of this size," said editor Paul Fanlund.
Its free publication will print twice weekly distributed within the Wisconsin State Journal with about 48 pages of in-depth stories, analysis, and commentary on Wednesdays with a circulation of about 80,000 and a revamped Rhythm arts and entertainment insert on Thursdays, with a distribution of at least 115,000.
"The sad part is being able to hold that newspaper in your hand, which for me, is going to be a big loss, personally," said Dave Zweifel, the newspaper's editor emeritus.
The Capital Times, printing since December 13, 1917, is believed to be the first daily newspaper to "make this kind of a transition to the Web," according to WISC-TV. "If it's successful, it's likely other struggling papers will follow suit."
For more information, visit our partner blog SFN.
Source: WISC-TV, Madison.com
Posted in :
Related Entries
- US: New daily launches in Kansas, to compete with two existing papers
- US: AP launches news service for Apple's iPhone
- OJR's Robert Niles: Three roadblocks to successful online journalism
- UK: Local Northcliffe titles working together to create business news website
- US: Paper uses CoverItLive for user feedback
0 TrackBacks
Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: US: The Capital Times publishes final printed edition, moves to web.
TrackBack URL for this entry: http://www.editorsweblog.org/mt/mt-tb.cgi/6652

Leave a comment