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dooley_womack1 said:I find myself agreeing with him. I do think readers won't scroll page after page on the computer, but will unfold the paper and settle into a long read, because large art is more of an attention holder, and makes a long read more palatable.
SoSueMe said:dooley_womack1 said:I find myself agreeing with him. I do think readers won't scroll page after page on the computer, but will unfold the paper and settle into a long read, because large art is more of an attention holder, and makes a long read more palatable.
I said this at work Sunday, when my ME asked how to improve our website. I said, and I quote, "Short and sweet stories should be on the internet. Just the nuts and bolts. Who won, who lost, who scored. And the final line should be: For coaches' reactions and players' thoughts, pick up Monday's paper."
Then, you "upgrade" your print story. Nothing about the who won, who lost, who scored changes. But you add a piece of art (a GOOD piece of art!), great design, a stats box and quotes.
My ME completely pooh-poohed the idea and told me to post my whole story on the net immediately after I was done. So everyone, including those who pay a subscription, get it for free on the net about an hour after the game.
Is Cuban smarter than my ME? I sure think so.
Montezuma's Revenge said:If they'd have channeled their energies into giving people compelling things to read, the industry wouldn't be in the sad shape that it is.
jay_christley said:And he's smart enough that when his ideas don't work to get out before the collapse and move on to the "next big thing."