I agree with you,
@cptn60, these are not good times for any kind of media. Over the last four or five decades, people have been shepherded into this gotta-have-it-now mentality. Why wait to save the money for a new toy, here is a credit card that will allow you to buy it now. And look, you can make this little payments, until it is paid off. Interest? Don't fret the interest, the payments are really low, plus you got your new toy today, rather than having to wait. Get it now, and play today.
Remember watching newsreels at the movie theaters? Those were all replaced by the nightly news, which has since been replaced by 24-hour news broadcasting.
I remember waiting months to watch N.H.R.A. National Event coverage of maybe two or three events a year, on Wide World of Sports. And it always took the print media 90 days to report on races. But National Dragster would have race results in your hands within two weeks. And now, all of that has been replaced by online reports. This afternoon, I was watching qualifying results from Englishtown, which were being broadcast on ESPN before results were available on Drag Race Central. I was an N.H.R.A. member for decades, but when I realized I was only reading stale news in National Dragster, I ditched the membership expense.
People have come to a point where they cannot wait for anything. If we take a really interesting story, then bottle it up for the amount of time required to publish a print magazine and get it sent to subscribers and news stands, our interesting story has become 60-day old hat. Never mind subscribing to magazines any longer, I'll just read it online.
But then, we come to the phenomena whereby everyone has the misconception that everything on the InterTubez is free. If something is on the Web, then there must be some kind of Primary Law of the Universe, which says it has to be free.
Our local newspaper doesn't even bother to try to veil it's extreme-left position, so I refuse to subscribe to the rag. If I need local news, I will find it online. Heck, I'll go read the same articles on the newspaper's Web site, if I am that desperate. But now, they have warnings that pop up on every page, telling me that I will have to subscribe to their online reports, as they will only be available to me for a limited time. Excuse me, don't I know how to block cookies from their site? But since I am in the same boat with them, in trying to get Web sites to at least earn their own keep, let alone actually earn a profit

, I have just stopped visiting their site, entirely. Not really fair for me to burn up their resources, without kicking in a few dollars each month, is it? But that brings me full-circle, refusing to pay for their publication. Rather than pay them a dime, I will simply go elsewhere to get the news.
About the only course of action left is for a Web site to display contextual ads, in an effort to earn some additional revenue. But then, people start griping about seeing ads and running ad blockers in their Web browsers.
The print media cannot afford the cost of materials to produce stale news. Paper, ink, postage, etc. So they exchange those expenses for things like processors speeds, memory allocations and bandwidth. But when people refuse to offset even those costs, then suddenly the company is running in the red. And yes, that is when more folks end up out of work. But the average John Doe doesn't give a rat's rectum, because he wants everything, he wants it right now, and be damned if he will pay a thin dime for any of it.