Harvard's Shorenstein Center recently released a report suggesting that the Internet is redistributing news audience in a way that benefits large national papers but hurts daily papers without nation-wide readership.
Hank Price, Sr. Fellow at the Media Management Center, discusses the implications for local TV news stations of recent research findings on how news media build emotional connections with audiences.
A Harvard University Shorenstein Center report on how young people use news finds that news consumption is not a routine part of their days and that they're more likely to use TV and the internet to find news than older Americans.
The Center for Public Integrity released a license for the non-commercial use of its Media Tracker, a free online database containing records of government sources, corporate disclosure documents and original research on media ownership and lobbying activities.
A recent Harris Interactive poll suggestions that TV network news remains the top source of news and information in most countries, including the U.S., but that residents of several countries expect the Internet to assume that role within five years.
An April 2007 report by Hitwise, an online competitive intelligence service, reveals several emerging trends in online news consumption - including increased traffic to celebrity gossip blogs and fragmenting news consumption.
A recent NAA study shows that innovative circulation marketing strategies at newspapers are contributing to greater subscriber retention and significant declines in subscriber "churn."
A May 2007 Pew Internet & American Life Project report finds that although 85% of American adults use the internet or cell phones, only 8% truly exploit the connectivity, capacity for self-expression, and interactivity of modern information technology.
Research by Nielsen/Net Ratings and the Newspaper Association of America shows that 37.6% of all active Internet users visited a newspaper website during the first quarter of 2007, a 5.3% increase over the same period last year.
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