Chicago Tribune
Until recently, newspapers have been unstoppable economic juggernauts, notes former Chicago Tribune editor and publisher
Jack Fuller. Now they're going through a period of adjustment to a more competitive market. "They will have to shrink some and will certainly have to change. But they will survive the generation that thinks it doesn't depend on them." FULLER'S CONCERN: Can anything replace things newspapers stop doing as staffs shrink -- things like covering government meetings, crimes and auto accidents?
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Alvaro Vargas Llosa: "Nobody killed the newspaper. It's just that information, which used to flow from the top down, is now starting to flow from the bottom up."
(Independent Institute)