Special report | Making news pay

Reinventing the newspaper

New business models are proliferating as news organisations search for novel sources of revenue

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ON THE MORNING of September 3rd 1833 a new kind of newspaper went on sale on the streets of New York. With its mix of crime reports and human-interest stories, the Sun was intended to appeal to a mass audience, and its publisher, Benjamin Day, made it cheap: at one penny, it was one-sixth of the price of most other papers. The most popular newspaper in America at the time, according to Mitchell Stephens, author of “A History of News”, was New York's Courier and Enquirer, which sold 4,500 copies a day. Day's new “penny paper” appealed to people who had not bought newspapers before. Within two years the Sun was selling 15,000 copies a day.

This article appeared in the Special report section of the print edition under the headline “Reinventing the newspaper”

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From the July 9th 2011 edition

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