Two oclock in the morning and papers and just coming off the press. Three hours later at five am angle of a but is already on her paper rich in the laos its region in Eastern Germany but the number of papers she has to deliver is dwindling. Then. We lose subscribers either when somebody dies because no new subscribers take their place or when the price goes up and. There may soon come a dawn when there are no more newspapers in mailboxes. Robert dallek has just opened his News Agency Store but he already knows that most of his newspaper buying customers that day will be senior citizens. Because our customer
base you see that mostly older people buy these papers which sort of lost our young the Customer Base and thats also due to the internet richard was a sheep but. Since the advent of the internet the circulation of daily newspapers in germany has fallen off by nearly fifty percent. Even though germany is a press can trade with over Three Hundred daily newspapers most of which are loc
which is straight after this programme. hello. welcome to the media show. well, on this week s programme, we ve talked about a couple of subjects which are pretty familiar to us on the media show, but they re no less pressing because of that. one is howjournalists should cover donald trump and of course, he s trying to become president of america again and the other is about the business models of news, because they are under ever more pressure. and when it comes to the business model, we are also looking at al and journalism, because several news organisations have done recent deals with the big tech firms. so that is all coming up. on this week s programme, we re going to hearfrom andrew neil, who has a brand new show on times radio. he s also the chairman of the spectator group. and we rejoined by caroline waterston, the relatively new editor in chief of the daily mirror. yeah, we ve also got two guests coming out of the states one, katie notopoulos, who s the senior
class= nosel > and of course, he s trying to become president of america again and the other is about the business models of news, because they are under ever more pressure. and when it comes to the business model, we are also looking at al and journalism, because several news organisations have done recent deals with the big tech firms. so that is all coming up. on this week s programme, we re going to hearfrom andrew neil, who has a brand new show on times radio. he s also the chairman of the spectator group. and we rejoined by caroline waterston, the relatively new editor in chief of the daily mirror. yeah, we ve also got two guests coming out of the states one, katie notopoulos, who s the senior tech and business correspondent at business insider. but the first person we spoke to isjeffrey goldberg, who is editor in chief of the atlantic. and we started off by asking him just to sum up what the atlantic is. how is that even possible? on the rare. just in case people do
Google is working on the biggest shake-up of its search business by charging for new “premium” features powered by generative artificial intelligence, the.