Updating the newspaper: TV book, A2, stocks

We have some changes coming.

Starting Sunday, you will see some new things in the Herald-Leader. These changes have been designed with you in mind, and we hope you’ll let us know what you think about them. Here’s what’s in store:

•    In Sunday’s paper, you will notice a slimmer TV Book. We have added programming highlights for the week and put each day’s schedule on facing pages. The same number of channels is listed. Because much of the night-owl programming was paid or repetitious, those grids have been condensed into a highlights list. You can always access complete TV listings on our Web site, www.kentucky.com. To tell us what you think about the TV Book, please contact Angela Allen at 859-231-3214 or aallen1@herald-leader.com.

•    Soon, we will change the content on page A2 to invite you to interact with us more. We will run excerpts from the many blogs we offer at www.kentucky.com – from Sharon Thompson’s “Flavors of Kentucky” about food to Mike Fields’ “Fields Notes” about high school sports – and invite you to comment online. On Mondays, we will bring back the popular “Ask Us” column, in which you ask us questions about what’s going on around town, and we try to get you answers. We will invite you to submit your own photos for publication as the “1,000 Words” photo of the day. And we’ll return the “Pop” column of celebrity news to the second page of the paper.

•    We have been running a comics survey this summer, asking you to vote for your favorite and not-so-favorite comics. The results are in, and we’re considering changes in the comics lineup. Some of the less popular strips will be dropped, and we will add some of the more popular newcomers that we auditioned this summer. We thank the more than 4,000 of you who participated in our survey to help us with those decisions.

•    Starting Tuesday, we will change our presentation of stock market news. Since stock and mutual fund prices are readily available on our Web site, www.kentucky.com, and others, the traditional stock and mutual fund tables will be limited. Instead, we will offer a look at what the markets might do next and which stocks and industries are making news, as well as a summary of interest rates. We invite you to comment on these changes by contacting Linda Niemi at 859-231-1673 or lniemi@herald-leader.com.

Some, especially those without computer savvy, may not like these changes, particularly those in the stock tables. Newspapers have been carrying stock tables since 1835, but print is no longer the best format for such listings. Online, you can search and customize listings, as well as get current prices during the trading day.

As more listings, such as stocks and TV programming, gravitate online, we and other newspapers will be carrying less of them in print. A study this year by the Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism found that “barely one out of 20 papers in the country now print two full pages or more of stock market and other financial tables.” That was what we were doing in the Herald-Leader until now. About a third of U.S. newspapers print no financial tables.

As newspapers and other media companies cope with challenging financial times, we must allocate resources, such as newsprint, toward content that is unique – preferably local – and well-suited to the format.

Whether you love or loathe what we’ve done, we look forward to hearing from and learning from you. Please contact me or my colleagues listed above with your thoughts on the Herald-Leader and www.kentucky.com. Thanks for reading and for caring about what we do.

Linda Austin
Editor

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4 Responses to “Updating the newspaper: TV book, A2, stocks”


  1. 1 Linda Herrington

    This is the worst book ever! Iam 68 years old with good eyes, but this is so hard to read (too small print & too close together). Please take into consideration folks like us. Do we need to stop the paper & buy TV Guide? I don’t want to do that, but at least I can read it.

  2. 2 Lee

    Haven’t we been through this before with such radical changes? After finally realizing what was wrong with TV section I was just waiting for the Color bards to come on TV like it did back in the early years. Its embarasing the Lexington isn’t big enugh for the paper to publish all of its TV schedule for the whole week. after all we accepted the daily cancellation. Don’t we deserve at least 1 listing. I agree with the above comment TV Guide looking better and better, but the most insulting part of it all is that design change is made for the “reader” in mind.

  3. 3 ernie henninger

    condensing the TV book and modifying stock market data is like trimming the whiskers on a six ton walrus. I value the Herald-Leader immensely and applaud your range of coverage, local, national and international.
    BUT the sheer bulk of the paper is almost enough to make one quit. I did quit the Sunday edtion for a while for that reason. I realize the economic necessity of advertisng, but the amount of that has become insane (the ’sports’ section has become 50% car ads, 5% girlie clubs and 45 % sports news (and even there, of what possible interest is learning that Acme University has hired a new assistant field hockey coach??). For all of us who cringe at the loss of trees and accumulation of waste paper this explosion of newspaper bulk is a serious concern. (We realize that all newspapers are in the same boat; a boat that may well be sinking under its own tonnage!) Sincerely, eh

  4. 4 Pat

    Do not like the new TV Book. It would take
    30 minutes, at least, to find what’s on at
    3:00 am on any particular day.

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