I remember the famous line of Sargent Joe Friday – “Just the fact s ma’am, just the facts.” It was nice when journalists only wrote about the facts. No personal opinion, no slant, no spin, no politicization.
This plugger gave up on newspapers years ago. They have turned into flyers interspersed with a few opinions and paying for them just seemed to be too much.
The editorial slants, no matter the direction, are the reason I quit taking the paper here and I haven’t watched a news show in several years. I was talking with someone who challenged me on my decisions about the news and I explained I would simply like the all the facts with no editorial bias, I’m still capable of forming my own opinions.
I still have a subscription to my local newspaper, town population about 35,000. Not hard copy now, but digital. Helps keep me informed on local news, functions, elections, sports, obits, ads, etc. Nowadays, news hits the internet and TV so fast, a local paper can’t really keep up, but still plenty of news for them to print.
I miss the newspapers. Not these things that end up free in my mailbox. I used to take the Detroit Free Press, The Lansing Journal and The Grand Rapids Press. They don’t deliver anymore.
When I was young I remember my Grandfather saying be open minded, only believe 1/2 of what you read and 3/4 what you see (That was in the ’60’s) ….. now-a-days I believe that it has to be updated to only believe 1/2 of what you see and maybe up to 1/4 of what you read …… :(
I still get the newspaper every day. However, since the start of Covid I have not been comfortable with having something someone else (who might be ill) touched the same day sitting on my kitchen table to read so I have been reading online – though I hate reading anything of length on a computer, too much concentration needed to follow it.
(At start of Covid mail would be taken from the box with plastic sandwich bag on hand – fit better than plastic gloves on me, easier to find then and much cheaper – and placed in large ziplock bag in porch for a week before being read and did not want to let newspaper to sit like that as would be even staler news by then. Now only leaving the mail in a bag for one day before opening – and, yes, still either wipe down items coming into the house with alcohol or it sits at least a day before using/storing So I started doing something I hate – reading the paper online – comes with subscription. I continue to do same while paying for paper delivery as it is cheaper than the online version for me as I kept complaining over the decades about newspaper increases and since with them so long – and they have fewer and fewer subscribers – they keep turning the price back. Papers keep coming when not stopped and stay in side porch – just took most of them plus other recyclables out which I do about once a month, and kept a few papers so we have for putting down when painting or something else messy, but read paper online) Also I put it on vacation hold a couple of times of year – still get online version to read.)
The was a headline in USA Today, “Was 2009 The Year We Stopped Reading?” I mentioned it to my English professor, and she said, “I’m surprised it made it this far.”
Templo S.U.D. over 1 year ago
no kidding
yaakovashoshana over 1 year ago
Yeah, it’s hard to roll up an iPad when you want to swat a fly.
jmolay161 over 1 year ago
But nowadays, nobody agrees on what “the news” really is. There is always a slant.
jmolay161 over 1 year ago
The plugger when he was young got his TV news the same time every evening from Walter Cronkite.
jmolay161 over 1 year ago
The plugger says, “Just give me the bear facts.” (Apologies to Gent!)
juicebruce over 1 year ago
I Agree …. X gets the square ;-)
grassler over 1 year ago
especially the “Comics” pages
Hoosier Guy over 1 year ago
“If you don’t read the newspaper, you are uninformed. If you read the newspaper, you are misinformed.” — Mark Twain
cor_en_fa over 1 year ago
I give it another 12-18 months. The caption here will then read “Pluggers are the last generation to understand how important newspapers WERE.”
exness Premium Member over 1 year ago
I now pay more per month for a real paper than I used to pay for a full year. I think I’m paying the salary for the rural delivery person.
ctolson over 1 year ago
g04922 over 1 year ago
Today’s News in on perpetual spin cycle…
Homerville Premium Member over 1 year ago
There are comics in each one.
tcayer over 1 year ago
Newspapers and magazines are going under because they’re Liberal rags that no one trusts.
Alberta Oil Premium Member over 1 year ago
This plugger gave up on newspapers years ago. They have turned into flyers interspersed with a few opinions and paying for them just seemed to be too much.
VICTOR PROULX over 1 year ago
In New York, in 1900, there were 15 Newspapers publishing in english, and numerous Hebrew and Chinese newspapers. The internet of its day.
ladykat over 1 year ago
I miss being able to afford a newspaper.
Gent over 1 year ago
Eh me used to reads newspapers just for them comics. These days me gets em from Go Comics.
Larry S over 1 year ago
Advertisers left the newspapers. The price of the newspaper went up. More people stopped subscribing. More advertisers left the newspapers.
I can download and print the crossword puzzles and read the comics here.
Just-me over 1 year ago
The editorial slants, no matter the direction, are the reason I quit taking the paper here and I haven’t watched a news show in several years. I was talking with someone who challenged me on my decisions about the news and I explained I would simply like the all the facts with no editorial bias, I’m still capable of forming my own opinions.
Watchdog over 1 year ago
It has to do with learning how to read when schools taught that subject.
jr1234 over 1 year ago
If you live where there is snow you know how important newspapers are.
After you read them, you put them on the garage floor.
NaturLvr over 1 year ago
I still have a subscription to my local newspaper, town population about 35,000. Not hard copy now, but digital. Helps keep me informed on local news, functions, elections, sports, obits, ads, etc. Nowadays, news hits the internet and TV so fast, a local paper can’t really keep up, but still plenty of news for them to print.
Back to Big Mike over 1 year ago
I miss the newspapers. Not these things that end up free in my mailbox. I used to take the Detroit Free Press, The Lansing Journal and The Grand Rapids Press. They don’t deliver anymore.
rickmac1937 Premium Member over 1 year ago
Sadly not anymore
kathleenhicks62 over 1 year ago
I love a good newspaper- – any around?
bwswolf over 1 year ago
When I was young I remember my Grandfather saying be open minded, only believe 1/2 of what you read and 3/4 what you see (That was in the ’60’s) ….. now-a-days I believe that it has to be updated to only believe 1/2 of what you see and maybe up to 1/4 of what you read …… :(
Pesky bannan-ah over 1 year ago
News is important, newspapers are not.
mafastore over 1 year ago
I still get the newspaper every day. However, since the start of Covid I have not been comfortable with having something someone else (who might be ill) touched the same day sitting on my kitchen table to read so I have been reading online – though I hate reading anything of length on a computer, too much concentration needed to follow it.
(At start of Covid mail would be taken from the box with plastic sandwich bag on hand – fit better than plastic gloves on me, easier to find then and much cheaper – and placed in large ziplock bag in porch for a week before being read and did not want to let newspaper to sit like that as would be even staler news by then. Now only leaving the mail in a bag for one day before opening – and, yes, still either wipe down items coming into the house with alcohol or it sits at least a day before using/storing So I started doing something I hate – reading the paper online – comes with subscription. I continue to do same while paying for paper delivery as it is cheaper than the online version for me as I kept complaining over the decades about newspaper increases and since with them so long – and they have fewer and fewer subscribers – they keep turning the price back. Papers keep coming when not stopped and stay in side porch – just took most of them plus other recyclables out which I do about once a month, and kept a few papers so we have for putting down when painting or something else messy, but read paper online) Also I put it on vacation hold a couple of times of year – still get online version to read.)
MichaelSFC90 over 1 year ago
The was a headline in USA Today, “Was 2009 The Year We Stopped Reading?” I mentioned it to my English professor, and she said, “I’m surprised it made it this far.”