News Corp Australia

I wonder how long the broadsheet format will endure.

Apart from a few copies in cafes, does anyone see anyone reading an actual newspaper these days?

The Australian is still a broadsheet?? It’s more a dinosaur than I even thought :wink:

The front page of Delicious liftout which debuted in News Corp papers today. The 4-page wrap also includes Matt Preston’s column which used to appear in Stellar magazine.

1 Like

News Corp Q4 results

Digital subscribers at News Corp Australia as of December 31 were 1,126,000 (979,000 for news mastheads), compared to 1,051,000 (940,000 for news mastheads) in the prior year.

Daily Tele on-line.

When did they start publishing in Latin :wink:

1 Like

Is the masthead “The Weekend Australian” not much longer for the world?

Today’s paper has been redesigned along the lines of The Australian, with all colour coded sections now mono, just like on a weekday. They didn’t just use the wrong template as there are other clear design changes, such as dropping “Australian Business Review”, now just back to “Business”.

After page 1 top of the page is just The Australian, and all supplements are now monikered without the word “Weekend”.’ Eg. The Australian Magazine.

Unifying the brand according to the paper last Monday.

No big deal, but just wondering if it’s the first step in a longer term plan for more changes: no weekday print editions? Shifting supplements to weekdays to bolster sales, like Mansion was?

Probably no surprise Superbowl LIX was front page of the Bulletin yesterday, seeing as the NFL has an academy on the Gold Coast.


Front page in the Courier Mail too (no surprise either).

What is a little surprising is that it makes the front page of the Chronicle today.

Slow news day? Or is it just that football is so big right now…

The altercation between senior News Corp writers Jon Ralph and Jay Clark occurred at Bells Hotel in October of last year, with SEN’s own David King there to get between them.

1 Like

Pathetic attempt at click baiting. As if there weren’t a hundred other posts that revealed the RBA’s decision without having to click a link to find out.