It's Official: Providence Journal is Sold

GoLocal News Team

It's Official: Providence Journal is Sold

As GoLocal first reported on June 13, the 185-year-old Providence Journal has been sold to GateHouse Media's parent company for $46 million.

In a press release issued Tuesday, New Media Investment Group Inc. (GateHouse's parent) announced that it had "reached an agreement to purchase The Providence Journal and related print and digital assets for $46.0 million in cash from A. H. Belo Corporation."

According to the press release, Jim Moroney, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of A. H. Belo, said, "We are pleased that New Media is purchasing The Providence Journal assets and we are confident that New Media will continue the great journalistic tradition of The Providence Journal. We thank our colleagues in Providence for their hard work and support as we have been privileged to own and operate The Providence Journal for the past seventeen years."

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The sale of the Providence Journal is just one of a number of dramatic changes shifting the landscape.  The announced acquisition of WPRI-12's parent company, LIN Media by WJAR-10's parent Media General is next on the Rhode Island media landscape. 

Both of the deals - the sale of the Providence Journal and the merger of WJAR and WPRI - come at a time when massive amounts of media dollars are shifting from print and local broadcast to digital and mobile. Wall Street Media analyst and futurist Mary Meeker predicts billions will shift from print and local TV.

Specifically, in her annual "State of the Internet: KPCB, Internet 2014", Meeker outlines that both print and local broadcast television receive far more in advertising revenue then they have in audience and that these dollars will shift to mobile and online digital.

How much will shift? Meeker says if advertising dollars align with actual time with media, then $30 billion will shift.

According to Meeker, print only has 5% of the audience time, but still commands 19% of advertising dollars. Similarly, TV has over 45% of the spend and an ever decreasing 38% of the audience's time.

Local TV News

The news is similarly bad for local TV news.  According to Pew Research, every age group has decreased its local TV news watching.

The biggest decline is 18-24 year-olds who have decreased their viewing by 14% from 2006 to 2012 - the most recent data period reported by Pew.

 

 

The sales of the Providence Journal to GateHouse's parent company will have a significant impact of the news gathering organization of the paper which has realized more than 60 layoffs and early retirements in the past three-years. The Providence Journal's newsroom that now more than 150 staffers may be trimmed by 60 to 70 through buyouts and layoffs.


Rhode Island's Changing Media Landscape

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