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WriteThinking said:It is probaby just to cut costs. Anything to do that...
Truthfully, though, I don't know how much the LAT or Chicago Tribune really need, or use AP, other than maybe the ticker, to check game progress from the office, and maybe, for compiling national roundup info, which, yes, can be done in other ways these days.
The AP, itself, is often following the larger papers in news and all but the right-on-deadline, fire-drill game material, anyway. In this respect, this move seems likely to have far more impact on the news departments than in sports.
The LAT and Chicago Tribune sports sections are primarily staff-written, almost in their entirety, and that is even more true now than ever, what with the sections seemingly getting smaller and smaller all the time.
So, it's the smaller papers in the Tribune chain that may really be adversely affected, not the larger ones. Then again, perhaps there is an expectation -- a misguided one, I think -- that the chain's increased content-sharing will take care of that problem.
Yeah, the LAT and the Chicago Tribune serving as the company's in-house AP. I could see that happening...
Armchair_QB said:WriteThinking said:It is probaby just to cut costs. Anything to do that...
Truthfully, though, I don't know how much the LAT or Chicago Tribune really need, or use AP, other than maybe the ticker, to check game progress from the office, and maybe, for compiling national roundup info, which, yes, can be done in other ways these days.
The AP, itself, is often following the larger papers in news and all but the right-on-deadline, fire-drill game material, anyway. In this respect, this move seems likely to have far more impact on the news departments than in sports.
The LAT and Chicago Tribune sports sections are primarily staff-written, almost in their entirety, and that is even more true now than ever, what with the sections seemingly getting smaller and smaller all the time.
So, it's the smaller papers in the Tribune chain that may really be adversely affected, not the larger ones. Then again, perhaps there is an expectation -- a misguided one, I think -- that the chain's increased content-sharing will take care of that problem.
Yeah, the LAT and the Chicago Tribune serving as the company's in-house AP. I could see that happening...
That all makes sense but wouldn't dropping AP be a bigger problem for the rest of the paper?
txsportsscribe said:negotiating tool
MileHigh said:And agate?