tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9097125.post2241536963736994182..comments2023-10-17T07:36:16.777-04:00Comments on NA Confidential: The newspaper's dead and buried, so welcome to electronica.The New Albanianhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10757531658514051905noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9097125.post-78865810196314380922011-05-26T13:32:52.571-04:002011-05-26T13:32:52.571-04:00AMEN to that, IAH!AMEN to that, IAH!SBAvanti63https://www.blogger.com/profile/10546730557425316713noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9097125.post-61129305170169682562011-05-26T09:49:13.133-04:002011-05-26T09:49:13.133-04:00The newspaper's staff may disagree with you(an...The newspaper's staff may disagree with you(and me)but they better come up with some compelling reasons for subscribers to continue, especially the ones in Floyd County.<br /><br />I love newspapers. My wife will tell you that I'm a damn bear if my morning paper is not promptly delivered. Wherever I have lived, I've subscribed to the local paper and a more major paper. Heck, I still subscribe to the twice weekly newspaper from Tell City. I've never cancelled a subscription because I was always able to glean enough "product" from them to justify continuing. Did I mention that I love newspapers?<br /><br />That said, unless something changes with the "local" newspaper, I don't see much to glean from it anymore. With the multitude of other information sources and the shrinking content of the local paper, I have to ask my checkbook, "Why?"<br /><br />I understand that the newspaper business is, and has been, changing. Still, cost cutting has it's limits. Any business, sooner or later, has to ACTUALLY offer something. Roger has to put beer in the bottles for them to sell--or least to sell very many. That business concept hasn't changed--not even for newspapers.Iamhoosierhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15010741592130752752noreply@blogger.com