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Of course, the newspapers informed. But as it disappears, those who use it for other things will also have to adapt

KANIKA SINGH RATHORE, 27/12/202527/12/2025

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the sun will rise in rocky mountainsRobin Gammons would run to the front porch to grab the morning paper before going to school.

She wanted comics, her dad wanted sports, but Montana standards meant more than their daily competition for “Calvin and Hobbes” or baseball scores. When one of three kids makes the honor roll, wins a basketball game, or dresses a freshly killed bison for the history club, being on the Standard Edition makes the accomplishment feel that much more real. Robin became an artist, had a one-woman show at a downtown gallery, and had a front-page article placed on the refrigerator. Five years have passed, and the yellowed article is still there.

Two years ago, the Montana Standard cut its print circulation to three days a week, slashing printing costs for 1,200 U.S. newspapers over the past 20 years. About 3,500 papers were closed at the same time. An average of two plants have closed per week this year.

It turns out that this slow fade means more than just changing news habits. It speaks directly to the presence of newspapers in our lives – not just in the information printed in them, but also in its identity as a physical object with many other uses.

“You can pass it on. You can keep it. Of course, there’s a lot of interesting stuff,” said Diane DeBlois, co-founder of the American Ephemera Society, a group of scholars, researchers, dealers and collectors focused on what they call “rare original source information.”

“There are fish wrapped in newspapers. They clean windows. They show up in outhouses,” she said. “And – free toilet paper.”

The decline of the media industry over the past two decades has transformed American democracy—some say for the better, many say for the worse. What is indisputable is this: the gradual decline of printed paper—read by millions to gain knowledge and then repurposed into home workflows—has quietly changed the texture of everyday life.

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American Democracy and Pet Cages

people Use to learn about the world and then preserve their precious memories, protect their floors and furniture, wrap gifts, line pet cages and build fires. In Butte, San Antonio, Texas, much of New Jersey, and around the world, life without printed paper is a little different.

For newspaper publishers, the cost of printing is simply too high in an industry burdened by the pressures of a networked society. To ordinary people, physical paper is disappearing as objects that mark the passage of time, along with payphones, cassette tapes, answering machines, bank checks, the sound of internal combustion engines, and ivory-white women’s gloves.

“It was hard to see it while it was happening, but even modestly looking back, it’s easier to see something like this,” said Marilyn Nissenson, co-author of “Vanishing America: The Vanishing America.” “Young women would wear them to work for a while, and then one day they looked at them and thought, ‘This is ridiculous.'” It was a small but telling icon that foreshadowed larger social change. “

Nick Matthews thinks a lot about newspapers. Both his parents worked at the Pekin (Illinois) Daily Times. He later became sports editor of the Houston Chronicle and is now an assistant professor at the University of Missouri School of Journalism.

“I have fond memories of my parents wrapping gifts in newspapers,” he said. “In my family, you always knew the gift was from my parents because of the way it was wrapped.”

He recalled recently that in Houston, when the Astros, Rockets or Texas won a championship, the Chronicle would be sold out because so many people wanted the paper as a souvenir.

Four years ago, Matthews interviewed 19 residents of Caroline County, Virginia, about the 2018 closure of Hotel Caroline progresswas a 99-year-old weekly newspaper that ceased publication a few months before its 100th anniversary.

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In “Typographic Imprints: The Link Between Print Newspapers and the Self,” published in the Journal of Communication Inquiry, wistful Virginians recall their high school portraits and photos of their daughters in wedding dresses that appeared in The Progress magazine. Additionally, one told Matthews, “My fingers are so clean right now. I feel bad about not having the ink smudges.”

Various uses

Omahan man who invested years ago with local boys brings in huge amounts of cash Warren BuffettThe Nebraska Wildlife Rehabilitation Center is a fully equipped center for migratory waterfowl, wading birds, reptiles, foxes, bobcats, coyotes, minks and beavers.

“We receive over 8,000 animals a year, and nearly all of them use the newspaper,” said Executive Director Laura Stastny.

Getting old newspapers has never been a problem in this neighboring Midwestern city. Yet Stastny worries about the future of electronics.

“We’re doing really well right now,” she said. “If we lost that source and had to use something else or had to buy something, it would easily cost us over $10,000 a year with the options we have available now.”

Stastny said that would account for nearly 1% of the budget, but “I’ve never been able to live without them, so I might be shocked by a higher dollar number.”

Prior to 1974, the Omaha World-Herald printed morning and afternoon editions, including an afternoon Wall Street edition with closing prices.

“At that time, afternoon Major League Baseball games were still the standard, so I had to get into the facts about baseball and the stock market,” Buffett, 85, who by then had become the world’s most famous investor and newspaper owner, told the World-Herald in 2013.

The World-Herald ended its second afternoon edition in 2016, and Buffett left the newspaper business five years ago. The newspaper is read in fewer than 60,000 households today, down from nearly 190,000 in 2005, or about one per household, according to Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism.

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time is moving forward

Kaun said few places exemplify the shift from print to digital better than Akala, a district of Stockholm where the ST01 data center is located on a site that once housed Sweden’s major newspaper printing plant.

“They have fewer and fewer machines, and instead the building is increasingly occupied by this colocation data center,” she said.

Of course, data centers consume a lot of energy, and the environmental benefits of using less printing paper are offset by the huge popularity of online shopping.

“You’re going to see a decrease in the amount of paper being printed, but a huge increase in the amount of packaging,” said Cecilia Alcoreza, forestry sector transformation manager at WWF.

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution announced in August that it would cease offering a print edition at the end of the year and go entirely digital, making Atlanta the largest metropolitan area in the country without a print daily newspaper.

Anne Kaun, professor of media and communication studies at Nünden University in Stockholm, said that the habit of paying attention to the news (understanding the world) is inseparable from the presence of print.

children Cowen observed that those who grew up in homes with printed newspapers and magazines were exposed to the news randomly and developed a habit of reading it. With a cell phone, this doesn’t happen.

“I do think it’s meaningfully changing our relationship to each other and our relationship to things like news. It’s reshaping attention spans and communication styles,” said Sarah Wasserman, a cultural critic and associate dean at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire who specializes in changing forms of communication.

“These things will always continue to exist in certain areas, certain pockets and certain class niches,” she said. “But I do think they are disappearing.”

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