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Forget The Future—Web-Alike Newspapers Are Here Now

As more readers go online to read their newspapers, the newspapers of the near-future—say, 2011— will look a lot like and read a lot more like the web, or so the theory goes via today’s IBD. Here’s a news flash: The slides flipping past during an NAA presentation at the UBS conference last week demonstrated that a large part of that future is already here. It’s particularly obvious in advertising as ads break from the straightjackets of the past and take over the page, splashing across in patterns, pushing the text down the page, clamoring for attention in the most clever of ways. The pragmatist in me says, oh, goodie, at least there are ads and they appear to be working. But the reader—and the reporter—in me cringes when text becomes hard to follow or somehow seems secondary to the ads. Online, splash ads, interstitials, cute cars driving across the screen usually can be made to disappear. Not so in print. It’s a reminder that what works in one medium doesn’t always translate.
That doesn’t mean it can’t. Good examples of the webification of print editions increase everyday. Unfortunately, so do bad.

Dec 11, 2006 5:24 PM ET

Posted In: Media & Publishing, Newspapers

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Comments (2)

Dec 12, 2006 10:31 AM

Perhaps you all have seen this example of an ad poking itself almost web-like into the print edition: (no picture, here just description and commentary)

http://www.registerguard.com/news/2006/11/22/ed.col.upshaw.1122.p1.php?section=opinion

The Register-Guard in Eugene, Oregon ran an ad for a medical center in which a photo of an index finger jutted into an article. But you couldn’t click it away, and at least one reader wrote in unhappy.

The ability of users to somewhat control ads on the web seems to make them more tolerant of the intrusion into editorial.

Mary Specht

Dec 12, 2006 12:57 PM

You see ads online. Why? Just block them.

23badgers

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