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Newspapers
Big papers take bigger circulation hits
By Lisa Snedeker
Apr 28, 2008 - 10:38:26 AM

The circulation declines that have accelerated in recent years for large daily newspapers have grown steeper still.

With the exception of the Wall Street Journal and USA Today, the latest Audit Bureau of Circulations numbers, released this morning, show declines for some papers that would not have been imaginable a few years ago.

For the six months ending March 31, newspapers’ print circulation fell an average 3.6 percent for 530 newspapers on weekdays. Sunday circulation fell even more, about 4.6 percent on average for 601 papers.

Both the weekday and Sunday numbers are down sharply from just a year ago, when weekday circulation declines averaged 2.6 percent for the comparable period and Sunday circulation fell an average 3.5 percent.

These steeper declines reflect two trends, and one is the continuing erosion cause by the internet. The other is the decision by a number of papers to voluntarily trim circulation, shedding distribution outside their immediate markets that’s of only marginal value to advertisers.

This time around, the only really positive numbers came from the nation’s two largest dailies. USA Today was up 0.3 percent and The Wall Street Journal rose 0.3 percent.

The New York Times saw a daily circulation drop of 3.8 percent, to 1,077,256, while The Washington Post saw similar losses at 3.5 percent, to 673,180.

Tribune Co.’s Los Angeles Times circulation tumbled 5 percent, the Chicago Tribune was down 4 percent, while Newsday dropped nearly 5 percent.

The New York Post and the New York Daily News, whose parent companies are battling for ownership of Newsday, both took daily circulation hits, the Post declining 3 percent and the News down 2 percent on weekdays.

But it was the mid-tiered metro dailies that took the brunt of the circulation declines.

The Dallas Morning News plummeted nearly 11 percent and both the Boston Globe and the Atlanta Journal-Constitution were down more than 8 percent on weekdays.

The publisher of the Dallas Morning News told Media Life last spring that its rapid declines were directly tied to cutting out wasteful circulation and pulling in its outer reaches to focus on its coverage of its core readership base.

Presumably, at least some of the declines at Dallas and the other mid-tier papers are from voluntary trimming.

Other big declines include the Newark Star-Ledger, off 7 percent, the Minneapolis Star Tribune and the Detroit Free Press, each with 6 percent drops, and the Philadelphia Inquirer, which fell 5 percent.

The Denver Post/Rocky Mountain News took the biggest Sunday paper circulation hit at 15 percent, followed by the Newark Star-Ledger at 12 percent.

The New York Times and the New York Daily News both saw 9 percent-plus Sunday losses while the New York Post was down close to 9 percent.

Tribune’s Los Angeles Times and Boston Globe saw 6 percent losses on Sunday.

Top 25 Daily Newspapers – Mon.-Fri.
Six Months Ended March 31, 2008

Newspaper

2008 Circ (Daily)

2007 Circ (Daily)

% change

USA TODAY

2,284,219

2,278,022

0.27

WALL STREET JOURNAL

2,069,463

2,062,312

0.35

NEW YORK TIMES

1,077,256

1,120,420

-3.85

LOS ANGELES TIMES

773,884

815,723

-5.13

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

703,137

718,173

-2.09

NEW YORK POST

702,488

724,748

-3.07

WASHINGTON POST

673,180

698,116

-3.57

CHICAGO TRIBUNE

541,663

566,827

-4.44

HOUSTON CHRONICLE

494,131

503,114

-1.79

ARIZONA REPUBLIC

413,332

433,731

-4.70

NEWSDAY

379,613

398,231

-4.68

SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE

370,345

386,564

-4.20

DALLAS MORNING MORNING NEWS

368,313

411,920

-10.59

BOSTON GLOBE

350,605

382,503

-8.34

NEWARK STAR-LEDGER

345,130

372,629

-7.38

PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

334,150

352,193

-5.12

CLEVELAND PLAIN DEALER

330,280

344,705

-4.18

ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTION

326,907

357,399

-8.53

MINNEAPOLIS STAR TRIBUNE

321,984

345,252

-6.74

ST. PETERSBURG TIMES

316,007

322,771

-2.10

CHICAGO SUN-TIMES

312,274

N/A

N/A

DETROIT FREE PRESS

308,944

330,242

-6.45

OREGONIAN

304,399

319,624

-4.76

SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE

288,669

296,331

-2.59

SACRAMENTO BEE

268,755

279,032

-3.68

Source: Audit Bureau of Circulations


Top 25 Daily Newspapers – Sunday
Six Months Ended March 31, 2008

Newspaper

2008 Circ

2007 Circ

% change

NEW YORK TIMES

1,476,400

1,627,062

-9.26

LOS ANGELES TIMES

1,101,981

1,173,095

-6.06

CHICAGO TRIBUNE

898,703

940,621

-4.46

WASHINGTON POST

890,163

930,989

-4.39

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

704,157

775,544

-9.20

HOUSTON CHRONICLE

632,797

677,425

-6.59

PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

630,665

672,953

-6.28

DETROIT FREE PRESS

606,374

639,531

-5.18

DENVER POST/ROCKY MOUNTAIN NEWS

600,026

704,169

-14.79

MINNEAPOLIS STAR TRIBUNE

534,063

574,385

-7.02

BOSTON GLOBE

525,959

562,273

-6.46

DALLAS MORNING NEWS

520,215

563,079

-7.61

ARIZONA REPUBLIC

515,523

541,757

-4.84

NEWARK STAR-LEDGER

500,382

570,523

-12.29

ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTION

497,149

523,687

-5.07

NEWSDAY

441,728

464,169

-4.83

ST. PETERSBURG TIMES

432,779

430,893

0.44

CLEVELAND PLAIN DEALER

428,090

442,482

-3.25

SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE

424,603

438,006

-3.06

ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH

414,564

407,754

1.67

SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER, TIMES

409,231

423,634

-3.40

NEW YORK POST

401,315

439,202

-8.63

MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL

384,539

400,317

-3.94

BALTIMORE SUN

372,970

377,561

-1.22

OREGONIAN

361,988

375,914

-3.70

Source: Audit Bureau of Circulations



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