How long to the national freesheet?
Declining sales of The Sun and Daily Mirror have analysts like Douglas McCabe at Enders predicting the red-top price war descending into a soaraway giveaway war before too long.
Roy Greenslade thinks it is a long way off, but you can bet that at Trinity Mirror and News International there will be ambitious sorts doing the sums and re-doing them and trying to think of a way it might just work...
Metro would argue that it is a "national freesheet" already.
from memory its overall ABC figure (including the half a dozen or so metropolitan cities it goes into), is well over 1.5 m.
[hope you are well]
Posted by: Kevin May | 14/01/2008 at 09:08
Cheers, Kevin!
Well they would argue that, wouldn't they? and while 1.5m is a lot of readers, it ain't really a national is it?
Posted by: Antony Mayfield | 14/01/2008 at 09:27
it's more than the mirror ;) http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2008/jan/11/abcs.pressandpublishing
Posted by: kelvin newman | 14/01/2008 at 16:35
It will be interesting to see what happens if we do get a free Sun or Mirror.
Will there be an incentive for a distinctive brand still or will it all be about distribution slots and will the editorial follow the Metro, London Paper (and the Manchester Evening News) and basically be wire copy plus ents guides?
I guess the England football manager might be pleased at having no sports columnists painting his face on vegetables and there will be less incentive for politicians to court the editors, so as to gain screaming endorsement from an opinion leading organ, but it will be really, really boring.....
Posted by: Mark Hanson | 16/01/2008 at 09:17
Rupert Murdoch has already made the online Wall Street Journal free, Spain has 51% of its newspaper circulation free and Sweden 32%. On a more close to home subject when you see how much the current french president Sarkozy is controlling the media then free publication may start to be more representative of free speech.
Posted by: Francois Steque | 18/01/2008 at 15:05