Showing posts with label broadsheets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label broadsheets. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Clever Germanic Races point way to future (if any) of newspapers : the A4 micro size

A newspaper the size of a magazine !
Don't you just hate jumped-up newspaper chain owners who insist on their newspaper spreads sprawling to 3 feet by 2 feet, to compensate for their "weiners" being, er,  very much smaller than that ?

This newspaper spread, the so called quality "broadsheet", is emblematic of the oversized egos of the super-rich, who insist that their newspapers must be B.I.G. to show that their readers are somebodies who require a lot of space, to read and reflect on the news.

But most people who hang a strap in a subway actually read a tabloid-sized newspaper - roughly half the size of a broadsheet : now a spread of only  1.5 feet by 2 feet , it is still much too big to read on a crowded train or bus.

Best is the A4 Micro newspapers common in Germany, Austria, Switzerland and their surrounding neighbours : a quarter the size of the broadsheet, they are a spread of one foot by one and a half feet.

Each page is ever so slightly bigger than an ordinary-sized  sheet of letter paper in the North American (non-metric) dinosaur world of paper.

But, you sputter, "that is just a magazine or newsletter by another name !"

Yes it is : and that it why it is so successful as a magazine format size, all throughout history and in every nation in the world.

It fits the hand well and the eye well - a pleasure to hold and read and a size that allows the design of each "spread" to be taken in at a glance and as a whole : print designers love it !

It would be equally successful as a daily newspaper, but for their publishers' well-founded fear that readers might stop regarding daily newspapers and their billionaire owners as demi-gods if their offering was the same size as every Tom, Dick & Harry's magazine or newsletter.

The biggest attraction to retaining the broadsheet size is that it severely limits potential competitors to just the super rich.

The  press to print a broadsheet costs tens of millions to hundreds of millions of dollars : to make a4 newspapers only costs about $250 at the minimum (aka the Tabloid sized inkjet computer printer) .

As a heavy duty newsprint webpress for small runs of a few thousand copies a day, the prices - if the format became popular - would probably be in the hundreds of thousands of dollars to a million dollar range.

That is scary thought for billionaires like Rupert Murdoch who has relied, for a lifetime,  on the high entry costs to owning a big iron broadsheet press (rather that the non-existence "quality" of his junky-fakey newspaper columns) to keep potential competitors at bay...