Will the print edition of The Age be around 5 years?
The print-version of The Age does have a future says editor Paul Ramadge, but it will be a slimmer paper, with fewer stories and sections — and deeper coverage.
The print-version of The Age does have a future says editor Paul Ramadge, but it will be a slimmer paper, with fewer stories and sections — and deeper coverage.
20 years after the first Hottest 100, Lawrie Zion tried to predict this year’s top 20. Now he’s taking a stab at guessing what’s going to top the chart in nine years time.
Friday 17 July 2009 — upstart editor-in-chief Lawrie Zion speaks with Barbie Zelizer, Professor of Communication at the University of Pennsylvania, about journalism and the academy.
The print-version of The Age does have a future says editor Paul Ramadge, but it will be a slimmer paper, with fewer stories and sections — and deeper coverage.
20 years after the first Hottest 100, Lawrie Zion tried to predict this year’s top 20. Now he’s taking a stab at guessing what’s going to top the chart in nine years time.
Friday 17 July 2009 — upstart editor-in-chief Lawrie Zion speaks with Barbie Zelizer, Professor of Communication at the University of Pennsylvania, about journalism and the academy.
People will pay more for quality, right? Not always. Take journalism for example.
The print-version of The Age does have a future says editor Paul Ramadge, but it will be a slimmer paper, with fewer stories and sections — and deeper coverage.
20 years after the first Hottest 100, Lawrie Zion tried to predict this year’s top 20. Now he’s taking a stab at guessing what’s going to top the chart in nine years time.
Friday 17 July 2009 — upstart editor-in-chief Lawrie Zion speaks with Barbie Zelizer, Professor of Communication at the University of Pennsylvania, about journalism and the academy.