With more than 20 million readers, The Daily Mail shows its dominance as a newsbrand in the latest NRS PADD report combining both print and online platforms.
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The newspaper industry had already swallowed many tough proposals, but the balance has now been tipped so unacceptably against them that the future course is clear: The Government insists this is a self-regulatory body – if that is so then membership is by definition voluntary and all the leading newspaper groups have to do is…nothing. By Raymond Snoddy.
In the same week a ‘historic’ deal was met by the three main political parties for a new press regulation, Lord David Puttnam has spoken about press freedom, democracy and the future of the press.
News International’s Abba Newbery explains ‘News 3.0’ – a new face-to-face consumer engagement project to help define the future of news.
The three main political parties reached a ‘historic’ agreement yesterday on a new regulatory regime for the press, however the newspaper industry is today being described as “shell shocked”. Here, Newsline has captured the reaction from both the press and major publishing groups.
A cross-party deal for a new press regulator underpinned by statute has been reached this morning after Labour said reopened talks had ended with a workable agreement that could be put to MPs.
Lloyd Embley, editor of the Mirror titles, and Benedict Brogan, the Daily Telegraph’s deputy editor, were interviewed in front of a packed audience at ISBA’s 2013 conference on Wednesday to discuss the evolving business models of newsbrands in a digital age.
Trinity Mirror’s preliminary results for the year ended 30 December 2012 show revenues fell by £54.2 million, blamed, in part, on the launch of the Sun Sunday in February 2012.
In the scrum of attention that has surrounded the trial and imprisonment of Chris Huhne, slightly less attention has been given to the fact that this has been a media story throughout and there are even lessons in crisis management for the PR industry, says Raymond Snoddy . We also now know that it was a story that might never have even seen the light of day…
The Telegraph Group has announced that it will be cutting print jobs to make room for new digital roles as it merges its titles into a seven-day operation.
