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END OF AN ERA. In the left photo, a copy of the Montana Standard
is seen on a doorstep in Butte, Montana. In the right photo, a
Montana Standard crossword puzzle is seen on a chair. The gradual
dwindling of the printed paper — the item that so many millions read to
inform themselves and then repurposed into household workflows — has
quietly altered the texture of daily life. Children who grew up in homes
with printed newspapers and magazines randomly came across news and
socialized into a news-reading habit, Anne Kaun, a professor of media
and communication studies at Södertörn University in Stockholm,
observes. With cellphones, though, that doesn’t happen. (Colleen Elliott
via AP)
From The Asian Reporter, V36, #1 (January 5, 2026), page 9.
Sure, the newspaper informed. But as it fades,
those who used it for other things must adjust, too.
By Michael Weissenstein
The Associated Press
The sun would rise over the Rockies, and Robin Gammons would run to
the front porch to grab the morning paper before school.
She wanted the comics and her dad wanted sports, but the Montana
Standard meant more than their daily race to grab "Calvin and
Hobbes" or baseball scores. When one of the three kids made honor roll,
won a basketball game, or dressed a freshly slain bison for the History
Club, appearing in the Standard’s pages made the achievement feel
more real. Robin became an artist with a one-woman show at a downtown
gallery and the front-page article went on the fridge, too. Five years
later, the yellowing article is still there.
The Montana Standard slashed print circulation to three days a
week two years ago, cutting back the expense of printing like 1,200 U.S.
newspapers over the past two decades. About 3,500 papers closed over the
same time. An average of two a week shut down in 2025.
That slow fade, it turns out, means more than changing news habits.
It speaks directly to the newspaper’s presence in our lives — not just
in terms of the information printed upon it, but in its identity as a
physical object with many other uses.
"You can pass it on. You can keep it. And then, of course, there’s
all the fun things," says Diane DeBlois, one of the founders of the
Ephemera Society of America, a group of scholars, researchers, dealers,
and collectors who focus on what they call "precious primary source
information."
"Newspapers wrapped fish. They washed windows. They appeared in
outhouses," she says. "And — free toilet paper."
The downward lurch in the media business has changed American
democracy over the last two decades — some think for better, many for
worse. What’s indisputable: The gradual dwindling of the printed paper —
the item that so many millions read to inform themselves and then
repurposed into household workflows — has quietly altered the texture of
daily life.
American democracy and pet cages
People used to catch up on the world, then save their precious
memories, protect their floors and furniture, wrap gifts, line pet
cages, and light fires. In Butte, in San Antonio, Texas, in much of New
Jersey, and worldwide, lives without the printed paper are just a tiny
bit different.
For newspaper publishers, the expense of printing is just too high in
an industry that’s under strain in an online society. For ordinary
people, the physical paper is joining the pay phone, the cassette tape,
the answering machine, the bank check, the sound of the internal
combustion engine, and the ivory-white pair of women’s gloves as objects
whose disappearance marks the passage of time.
"Very hard to see it while it’s happening, much easier to see things
like that in even modest retrospect," says Marilyn Nissenson, co-author
of Going Going Gone: Vanishing Americana. "Young women were going
to work and they wore them for a while and then one day they looked at
them and thought, ‘This is ludicrous.’ That was a small but telling icon
for a much larger social change."
Nick Mathews thinks a lot about newspapers. Both of his parents
worked at the Pekin (Illinois) Daily Times. He went on to become
sports editor of the Houston Chronicle and, now, an assistant
professor at the University of Missouri’s School of Journalism.
"I have fond memories of my parents using newspapers to wrap
presents," he says. "In my family, you always knew that the gift was
from my parents because of what it was wrapped in."
In Houston, he recently recalled, the Chronicle reliably sold
out when the Astros, Rockets, or Texas won a championship because so
many people wanted the paper as a keepsake.
Four years ago, Mathews interviewed 19 people in Caroline County,
Virginia, about the 2018 shuttering of the Caroline Progress, a
99-year-old weekly paper that closed up shop months before its 100th
anniversary.
In "Print Imprint: The Connection Between the Physical Newspaper and
the Self," published in the Journal of Communication Inquiry,
wistful Virginians remember their senior high school portrait and their
daughter’s picture in a wedding dress appearing in the Progress.
Plus, one told Mathews, "My fingers are too clean now. I feel sad
without ink smudges."
The many and varied uses
Flush with cash from Omahans who invested years ago with local boy
Warren Buffett, Nebraska Wildlife Rehab is a well-equipped center for
migratory waterfowl, wading birds, reptiles, foxes, bobcats, coyotes,
mink, and beaver.
"We get over 8,000 animals every year and we use that newspaper for
almost all of those animals," executive director Laura Stastny says.
Getting old newspapers has never been a problem in this neighborly
Midwestern city. Yet Stastny frets about the electronic future.
"We do pretty well now," she says. "If we lost that source and had to
use something else or had to purchase something, that, with the
available options that we have now, would cost us more than $10,000 a
year easily."
That would be nearly 1% of the budget, Stastny says, but "I’ve never
been in a position to be without them, so I might be shocked with a
higher dollar figure."
Until 1974, the Omaha World-Herald printed a morning edition
and two afternoon ones, including a late-afternoon Wall Street Edition
with closing prices.
"Afternoon major-league baseball was still standard then, so I got to
gorge on both baseball and stock market facts," an 85-year-old Buffett
told the World-Herald in 2013, By then, he had become the world’s
most famous investor and the paper’s owner.
The World-Herald ended its second afternoon edition in 2016
and Buffett left the newspaper business five years ago. Fewer than
60,000 households take the paper today, according to Northwestern
University’s Medill School of Journalism, down from nearly more than
190,000 in 2005, or about one per household.
Time marches on
Few places symbolize the move from print to digital more than Akalla,
a district of Stockholm where the ST01 data center sits at a site once
occupied by the factory that prints Sweden main newspaper, Kaun
says.
"They have less and less machines, and instead the building is taken
over more and more by this co-location data center," she says.
Data centers use huge amounts of energy, of course, and the
environmental benefit of using less printing paper is also offset by the
enormous popularity of online shopping.
"You will see a decline in printed papers, but there is a huge
increase in packaging," says Cecilia Alcoreza, manager, of forest sector
transformation for the World Wildlife Fund.
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution announced in August that it
would stop providing a print edition at year’s end and go completely
digital, making Atlanta the largest U.S. metro area without a printed
daily newspaper.
The habit of following the news — of being informed about the world —
can’t be divorced from the existence of print, says Anne Kaun, professor
of media and communication studies at Södertörn University in Stockholm.
Children who grew up in homes with printed newspapers and magazines
randomly came across news and socialized into a news-reading habit, Kaun
observed. With cellphones, that doesn’t happen.
"I do think it meaningfully changes how we relate to each other, how
we relate to things like the news. It is reshaping attention spans and
communications," says Sarah Wasserman, a cultural critic and assistant
dean at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire who specializes in changing
forms of communication.
"These things will always continue to exist in certain spheres and
certain pockets and certain class niches," she says. "But I do think
they’re fading."
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