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Sep 15, 2009

Lost in Transition?

The WSJ website has a nice interactive on the anniversary of Lehman Brother's bankruptcy, which displays the WSJ front pages from that momentous week. For those of us who followed the markets and the story, the series of images captures the urgency and drama of the Lehman collapse and its aftershocks in the financial markets.

But for me, what is most striking about these headlines is that until yesterday, I had never seen them. I'm a regular reader and have been a WSJ subscriber for twenty-five years, but gave up the print edition several years ago. Consequently, I consume my WSJ one story at a time and unless I see the print edition at a newsstand or on someone's desk, I generally don't see the front page the way the editors pasted it up.

One thing that newspapers do well (that Google hasn't automated... yet) is to make editorial decisions about how the day's most important or interesting stories are laid out, with subtle emphasis conveyed by position, allocation of space and type size. So it's somewhat surprising that as newspapers wrestle with the transition from print to online, their websites (well at least the WSJ, New York Times and San Francisco Chronicle) don't feature the front page more prominently on their home page.

As readers inevitably gravitate to the web, it would be a shame if we lose the shared recognition of those iconic front pages that mark the major news events of our lives.

1 comment:

  1. The NYT has an article that touches on the same theme for booksellers in the era of the e-reader.

    In e-book Era You Can't Even Judge a Cover

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