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Print newspapers alive and kicking in Brazil: editors
by Staff Writers
Rio De Janeiro (AFP) July 24, 2012

AOL posts profit in 'milestone' quarter
Washington (AFP) July 25, 2012 - AOL on Wednesday posted a profit for the second quarter of $970.8 million, boosted by a big sale of patents, while citing signs of progress in turning around the struggling Internet firm.

The profit was the result of a billion-dollar deal announced in April to sell a large number of patents to Microsoft, but the company said the operating results showed improvement.

"Today's results represent a significant milestone for AOL," chairman and chief executive Tim Armstrong said, noting that the company for the first time in four years posted operating earnings excluding decpreciation and amortization.

"The strong results and consumer performance we announced today are clear signs our strategic and operating efforts are translating into significant financial progress."

AOL, formerly known as America Online, has been struggling since the collapse of its leadership as an Internet subscription service, and has been seeking to become a more diversified Web firm.

It fused with news and entertainment giant Time Warner in 2001 at the height of the dotcom boom in what is considered one of the most disastrous mergers ever.

It was spun off by Time Warner in December 2009 into an independent company and has been struggling since then as it tries to focus on media and news.

AOL's revenue declined two percent, its lowest rate of decline in seven years, to $531 million. Advertising revenue grew six percent, its fifth consecutive quarter of year-over-year growth.

Subscription revenues fell 12 percent, the lowest rate of decline in five years.

The research firm eMarketer said AOL's share of US online ad revenues is declining. The company's share of online ad revenues in the US declined to 2.8 percent in 2011, down from 3.4 percent in 2010. The group predicts AOL's share of revenues will fall further to 2.4 percent this year.


Print newspapers are alive and kicking in Brazil, where circulation continues to grow despite the economic crisis, but editors here warn they must offer readers deeper perspective and analysis.

Brazilian newspapers' average daily circulation grew around 2.3 percent to 4.5 million in the first half of this year compared with the same period last year, according to data from the Circulation Verification Institute (IVC).

Advertising revenue is also up, in contrast to most markets in the developed world, where rates crashed as advertisers took their business to the web.

But Internet advertising is growing faster in Brazil than print, and is expected to surpass it in 2015, according to Wark International Ad Forecast.

Brazilian print newspapers had an advertising gross turnover of about 1.62 billion dollars in 2010, against 608 million dollars for websites.

The figure for print showed growth of 3.4 percent compared to 2009, while the web was up 27.96 percent over the same period, according to Meio and Mensagem, a group that analyzes media trends.

So traditional newspapers are holding on better than their North American or European peers, but they still have to revise their strategies if this is to continue, editors said at an event this week.

Given the avalanche of news on other platforms, readers expect newspapers to provide "more analysis, more reporting, more opinion, a lot more debate and above all a great deal of depth," said Ascanio Seleme, O Globo news director.

"A daily cannot just publish yesterday's news. It must explain what comes next and why," he noted, during a debate organized here ahead of O Globo's launch of a new graphic design project next Sunday, when the paper turns 87.

"There is a crisis knocking at the door. We need to be prepared," he warned.

Amid a global crisis which has slowed down the Brazilian economy, O Globo is seeking to attract new readers and advertisers with a new look, new typography, more space for pictures and greater importance for supplements, he explained.

At a time when an "excessive abundance of news can produce total alienation" journalists "can be the guides," said Ricardo Gandour, content director at the daily Estado do Sao Paulo.

"We don't have to fear this role, this task of choosing, putting in context, serving the human being," he added.

Vera Brandimarte, news director at the economic daily Valor, predicted that the print newspaper would survive.

"Conservative as I am, I believe the print newspaper will survive, maybe in a more compact manner," she said. "An intellectual elite will want to pay more for this privilege. There will be changes, but the print daily will continue."

Despite the plethora of news sources on different digital platforms such as blogs, Twitter, Facebook and so forth, most Brazilians now prefer to get their news from the websites of major dailies, she added.

"We have to think about the added value in deepening the themes, captivating the reader, this requires specialized staff," she noted.

And Brandimarte said the websites, which compete with news agencies in providing real-time news, are seeking "greater identification" with their daily print parents.

The goal, she added, is "to keep the reader updated throughout the day."

Meanwhile Sergio Davila, executive editor of Folha de Sao Paulo, said the print newspaper "continues to be a successful product" and reinforces "the unity of the brand" on all platforms.

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Newsweek likely to become digital magazine
Washington (AFP) July 25, 2012 - The company operating the US magazine Newsweek indicated Wednesday the venerable publication is likely to go digital to stem its losses and could undergo other changes by next year.

Barry Diller, chairman and chief executive at the conglomerate IAC, said his firm is looking at options now that its partner in the Newsweek/Daily Beast operation has pulled out.

Diller told a conference call that the Harman family, which had been part of the news operation, had pulled out following the death of magnate Sidney Harman.

He said one of the options is a transition to a digital magazine, but did not offer any specific plans.

"The transition will happen," Diller told a call on IAC earnings. "I'm not saying it will happen totally but the transition to online from hard print will happen."

Diller said a plan for the coming year will be in place by September or October.

"The plan in place for next year will be different than it was this year," he said. "I can't tell you in what ways, but it is going to be different."

The Washington Post sold Newsweek to California billionaire Sidney Harman for one dollar in 2010, ahead of a deal with IAC to merge the magazine with the online operation to become known familiarly as "Newsbeast."



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