Advocate, Picayune wage rare fight for print readers

When The Times-Picayune decided to print only three days a week, The Advocate saw a chance to expand in the newspaper’s backyard and fill a void that for some in the New Orleans area is as much a part of the morning routine as beignets and French coffee.

By starting a daily New Orleans edition Monday, the Manship family-owned Advocate in Baton Rouge is setting up an old-fashioned newspaper war. The battle for print readers comes even as more people get their news online and from cellphones — generally from newspaper websites — and more news media share stories to save money.

The experiment will be closely watched by an industry that has struggled in recent years as print advertising declined during the recession.

Locally, readers will decide whether they still want The Times-Picayune, a Pulitzer-winning, 175-year-old New Orleans icon that will print every Wednesday, Friday and Sunday.

At the Morning Call coffee shop in Metairie, manhandled sections of The Times-Picayune littered the chairs recently as Louis Gomez, 77, and three friends sipped cafe au lait. Wireless Internet was available, but the printed newspaper was the medium of choice.

“I will get The Advocate,” Gomez said. “I will quit the Picayune.”

Other people in this tradition-bound city don’t want to lose the Picayune, as most locals call it. Hundreds of people have rallied against the changes, and elected officials and community leaders have been quick to criticize. Some people even embarked on a futile campaign to get the paper’s owner to sell it.

Advocate Publisher David Manship said phone calls for subscription information jammed lines when the paper’s expansion into New Orleans was announced.

The Picayune has had a stranglehold on print news for decades, consolidating other dailies under its banner. The newspaper — named after a Spanish colonial coin worth about 6 cents — has had its finger tightly on the pulse of the people and events. Its coverage of hurricanes such as Betsy and Katrina, the New Orleans Saints, entertainment, political corruption and ties to the Mississippi River all forged tight bonds with readers.

The Advocate’s challenge entering the city is the first by a major daily newspaper in New Orleans in more than 50 years. The Advocate has built its reputation on accountability reporting in state government and coverage of LSU, particularly school sports.

Both newspapers have steadily shifted to online news.

In June, The Times-Picayune’s owner, privately held Advance Publications Inc., and a new subsidiary, Nola Media Group, announced the paper would lay off 200 employees and shift its focus to the free website Nola.com. Advance is pursuing similar three-times-a-week print strategies with several other newspapers in the chain, including publications in Michigan, Alabama and Pennsylvania.

Edward Atorino, a media industry analyst at Benchmark Co., said other newspapers in major metropolitan markets will closely watch The Times-Picayune’s experiment.

“The day of the seven-day newspaper is fading,” he said. “This has been a long, deteriorating situation. It’s not a shock, and we’re going to see more of it.”

Atorino said total print advertising dollars in the United States dropped from roughly $23 billion in 2008 to $19 billion in 2011.

While The Advocate takes steps into the New Orleans market, Nola Media is planning to strike back. The company said it will expand its operations in The Advocate’s home turf with a 16-member staff and offer a customized version of Nola.com for Baton Rouge residents.

“There are a lot of competitors in the market,” new Times-Picayune Publisher Ricky Mathews said. “We’ve always got to strive to be the best we can be.”

Nola Media is telling readers the print edition will be familiar, complete and even better. Prototype pages included an expanded opinion section and color comics for the Wednesday edition, which will carry three days’ worth of comics and crossword puzzles.

Editor Jim Amoss, who oversaw a news operation that won four Pulitzers, said there will be plenty of news.

“Reduction is something of a misnomer,” Amoss said. “Yes, we’re reducing frequency of printing, but the three editions that we will be printing will hold their own in news hole and amount of content against what is now distributed over seven days.”

Even after recent layoffs, including more than 70 from the newsroom, Amoss said the new operation is employing 156 people to gather and disseminate news.

The Advocate hopes to grow its print audience by 20,000 in the New Orleans area. Currently, it sells about 400 papers a day there.

Manship said 10,000 free copies were being distributed this week.

“I will be able to give the people of New Orleans, on a daily basis, news from around the state and around the world — and from New Orleans,” Manship said.

A New Orleans nonprofit news website, The Lens, is also beefing up its staff, and local television and radio stations are ramping up their online presence.

“Between The Advocate and The Lens and other things that may come up, yes, I think there will be more competition than they’ve faced to date,” said industry analyst Rick Edmonds, of The Poynter Institute.

Advance is usually reluctant to release financial figures, but Mathews has been revealing some details.

Unique visitors to Nola.com — those who visit the site once or more — were up 31.7 percent in August from a year ago, he said. Print advertising revenue has been down for the past five years, he said.

Audit Bureau of Circulation figures show paid circulation for The Times-Picayune at just under 155,000 for Sunday and more than 134,000 daily. It has never come close to the more than 257,000 figure prior to Hurricane Katrina in 2005. The paper won two Pulitzers for its coverage of Katrina.

“We’re going to give it a minimum of six months,” Manship, The Advocate publisher, said. “We think we’ll be able to achieve some good numbers by then.”


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Comments (12)


1) Comment by Terd Handler - 30/09/2012

Let's see, the picayune won two pulitzers for its coverage of katrina, which was almost all on-line stuff. And how many pulitzers has the advocate won? I guess manship is hoping no one will notice the difference.

2) Comment by Das Rheingold - 29/09/2012

We need an unbiased presentation of news. No slants, please. Tell us the truth and we will stay with you. No "hit" pieces just to get people to fight in order to built readership. We have had enough of that in the "other" on-line paper. I wish the Advocate much success and asfor me simply increased knowledge and awareness. It is good to see Rhett'sWife and ultimate liberal already on here. This is Siegrune from the "other" blog but no longer.

3) Comment by RhettsWife - 29/09/2012

I, dears, remember the times of three newspapers in New Orleans - the T-P, the States, and the Item and then the States and Item combined. In our family we read all three, and then two, and then only the one, the T-P. Being someone older than many of your readers, I began to read the T-P online and became one of its many posters. Now that you are aboard the New Orleans Express, I will be reading and commenting on both. Keep your online edition uptodate, dears. In fact I am reading some of the comments here and must say this could be quite interesting. Will check you during the day to see how you keep uptodate. Utltimate Liberal, dear, you are correct about the teaching of English.

4) Comment by taylor2285 - 29/09/2012

Can't wait to see what the Advocate's BTR edition looks like this week, since 2/3 of the news is already from the Lafayette area. I welcome new coverage in the area, but NOLA.com has a long way to go before it can compete even with this amateur site. I want Gambit Weekly back in town! There was more journalism in that weekly than in seven days-worth of The Advocate.

5) Comment by ultimateliberal - 29/09/2012

Ringeaux, the reason readership dropped is that the younger generation (15-35 yr olds) have not been educated enough to enjoy reading substantial information every day, nor do they care to ponder and debate what is happening around them. Additionally, journalism is suffering because English is no longer taught properly in both secondary and post-secondary institutions. No one seems to know how to write anymore. U 4 real?

6) Comment by ultimateliberal - 29/09/2012

Regardless of the quality of the print edition--which I NEED to satisfy my book-worm personality--both newspapers (?) should redesign their web versions to look more like the Washington Post's clean listing of REAL news. Where is the access to the news feeds from world-wide bureaus that cover national and international news? Both the Advocate and the Times-Picayune offer "next-to-nothing" of REAL NEWS. Clean up your acts and present substance, not stupidity.

7) Comment by old yat - 29/09/2012

Whoa!! Mr. Ringaux, " are you my huckleberry?". First , the murders in New Orleans are not driveby or random,most are done up close and face to face.Also when it comes to corruption,what do you think happens everyday in that tall building that you see when you drive thru Baton Rouge? We don't need you folks to remind us that New Orleans has crime and corruption,we know that! What we do have is people that would give you the shirt off their backs,a great meal if you were hungry,and a place to lay your head if you are weary.So come on down,let us show you some luv,podnuh!!!! God Bless and Go Tigers!!!!

8) Comment by JohnRingaux - 29/09/2012

gtinla wrote, "Not sure how the Advocate hopes to cover New Orleans with just four reporters." Easy, gt. Station two at police HQ to cover driveby shootings and random murders, and put the other two at the courthouse to cover political corruption.

9) Comment by Mr. T - 29/09/2012

If the Advocate was really serious about covering the news in New Orleans, you would have thought that they would have used their own writers to do this article instead of using this one by the Associated Press. They left out the part about the Advocate's layoffs that watered down their news product a couple of years ago, and they are apparently on shaky financial ground themselves. Manship giving this experiment six months isn't exactly a vote of confidence.

10) Comment by gtinla - 29/09/2012

Not sure how the Advocate hopes to cover New Orleans with just four reporters.

11) Comment by qwerty - 29/09/2012

I guess it would be more rare...if lets say the advocate didn't already compete with The Daily Advertiser...but if you ask me Gannett newspapers suck.

12) Comment by JohnRingaux - 29/09/2012

"Atorino said total print advertising dollars in the United States dropped from roughly $23 billion in 2008 to $19 billion in 2011." What a coincidence. This is the same time period in which Barack Hussein Obama has wrecked the rest of the U.S. economy. Subscribe to the Advocate, and vote nobama in November.