United Kingdom
Related: About this forumLondon Evening Standard sells its editorial independence to Uber, Google and others - for 3 million
For all the bluster about George Osborne occasionally attacking the government over their idiotic policies on leaving the EU, it is worth remembering that the London Evening Standard is a free newspaper, and "churnalism" is very prevalent with free magazines and newpapers.
https://www.opendemocracy.net/uk/james-cusick/george-osborne-s-london-evening-standard-promises-positive-news-coverage-to-uber-goo
The project, called London 2020, is being directed by Osborne. It effectively sweeps away the conventional ethical divide between news and advertising inside the Standard and is set to include favourable news coverage of the firms involved, with readers unable to differentiate between "news" that is paid-for and other commercially-branded content.
Leading companies, most operating global businesses, were given detailed sales presentations by Evening Standard executives at the newspapers west London offices in an effort to sign them up to the lucrative deal.
Among those that have paid half a million pounds each to be involved are international taxi-app firm Uber, which is facing an imminent court appeal against the decision to cancel its licence to operate in London. The Evening Standard has previously come under fire for not declaring Osbornes £650,000-a-year part time job with the fund managers BlackRock, who hold a £500m stake in Uber.
OnDoutside
(20,656 posts)Russian oligarch, or was, and he made it a freesheet.
T_i_B
(14,800 posts)It went downhill a little over 10 years ago, then was brought by Evgeny Lebedev. He turned it into a freesheet to compete with the likes of Metro.
I have to agree that buying a copy of the Standard to read on the tube or train used to be a little part of visiting London for me. But those days have gone.
RandomAccess
(5,210 posts)muriel_volestrangler
(102,483 posts)RandomAccess
(5,210 posts)Thanks.
I think.
T_i_B
(14,800 posts)The Standard's loss - £9.98m - comes after a recorded profit of £2.2m in the previous year, representing a £12m swing into the red.
The causes of the sharp financial deterioration reflect both long-term, structural changes in the newspaper industry - above all the downward pressure on print display advertising - and specific issues arising in that financial year.
Those exceptional circumstances include a London food festival which was, commercially at least, and allowing for sub-optimal weather, an expensive failure. The weakness of sterling pushed paper costs up for all newspapers. And the slowdown in London's property market always augurs ill for the Standard, whose Homes & Property supplement is a key driver of revenue.