Newspapers Suck

I had a great morning.  Up at 6.  Dropped my daughter off at Mill Creek High School at 630.

Went to the gym (back on track it seems).  After all of that, I stopped at one of my favorite coffee joints to grab some joe and some breakfast.

I wanted something to read while I chilled out for 15 minutes or so. I didn’t have my iPad with me or a book, so I decided to buy a newspaper (gasp!).  First I went for the USA today.  It was actually sold out.  So, I picked up the Atlanta Journal & Constitution.  It cost me a buck! (same as USA Today).

I took the paper out of the machine (the outdoor kind that takes quarters).  The first thing I noticed was how super thin and light this one dollar paper was.  Once I sat down with it, I scanned the front page for something worth reading.  Sadly, nothing seemed worth 4 minutes of my life.  I flipped through all of the sections.  The very last section was called “living” or something like that.  I found one story there that I liked about “the moments that sustain us”.  It was a cool little piece about how the small things in life are the ones we remember forever.

If I’d had my book or my iPad or my Mac, there’s no way I’d have paid $1 for this lame excuse for a paper that gave me one sorta “meh” story.

I’m quite certain that I’m stating the obvious here, but…

Newspapers are dead!

btw, I’m not saying that print is dead.  But newspapers definitely are.

3 Responses to “Newspapers Suck”

  1. mattfagioli1 August 17, 2010 at 10:06 pm #

    Dear me me me,

    No, Sorry but I missed that little gem :)

    btw, future anonymous comments will be deleted. Glad for anyone to join the conversation, but please be willing to announce yourself.

  2. me me me August 17, 2010 at 9:49 pm #

    Huh, you found no value in this story that was published today, written by AJC staff writers Jeremy Redmon and Rhonda Cook?
    http://www.ajc.com/news/state-has-just-weeks-5934…

    "Georgia officials didn’t apply for federal stimulus funding to help struggling low-income families keep their homes until more than a year after Congress made the money available through the Recovery Act.

    Now they are scrambling to distribute about $7.6 million of this aid before a federal Sept. 30 deadline. Any stimulus money left unspent by that deadline is supposed to go back to the federal Temporary Assistance for Needy Families fund."

  3. Rebecca Chandler August 17, 2010 at 2:23 pm #

    Maybe it's just the AJC. Try the NYTimes next time!

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