Earlier this week, I read that our local newspaper, The Des Moines Register, would be
raising its subscription fees—again.
Yep, again.
The increase, which take effect on September 1, follow
another price increase of 20 to 40 percent which took place last year.
This week’s edition of Cityview Magazine has an excellent
Civic Skinny column which contains some interesting if hard-to-understand
excerpts from a memo to Register (er. Gannett) employees which talks about the
needs for the latest price increase along with a warning that the Register’s
customer service center (or should we say Gannett’s customer service center)
will be receiving lots of phone calls from subscribers requesting that their
subscriptions be cancelled—which wouldn’t be able to handle all of them, noted
Cityview’s column.
I currently read the hard-print copy edition of the Register
on Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays. With that subscription increase
in mind, I might cut it back to only Sundays, depending on whether I can get
the online version for less. Because I enjoy having a print version of a
newspaper and I would miss it.
I imagine the Des Moines area will miss the print version of
the Register if and when its printing
schedule is curtailed (as is the case with the New Orleans Times-Picayune) or if the print version ceases to exist altogether
(as is the case with Newsweek
magazine). After all, if you want to post a newspaper article on the classroom
wall or a photo of your children on the kitchen, you could just get a pair of
scissors and cut those out from the local newspaper. You can do the same with
the online version of your local newspaper, but it might look as if it were a
photo being printed on paper—the ink and halftones which characterize newsprint
or other publishing material would be gone.
The price increase for the newspaper is not the only one being
reported. The company will be replacing its weekly TV supplement, which comes
out on Sundays with a publication called TV Weekly. It will cost $39 per year
to subscribe to this publication, for those who already subscribe to the Register.
The fee for nonsubscribers in the Des Moines area is $51.48 per year.
Frankly I don’t think the TV supplement is worth reading
anyway-even if I watched television on a regular basis, which I no longer do.
It’s just a compilation of schedules of local and cable channels. I imagine it’s
possible to find the same info online, through such papers as USA Today (also
published by Gannett) or the companies which provide us with the hundreds of
cable channels.
The TV supplement should have been overhauled a long time
ago. For all practical purposes it is dead. I recall when the TV section had
listings of programs with info on who was in them, what took place, articles
about various shows, critical analyses and even radio listings! I realize that
information is largely available on the internet, but not everyone has access
to the internet.
The TV listings hail from the day when The Des Moines Register was literally locally-owned. It had its
offices in a building at 8th and Locust in downtown Des Moines, Iowa
(albeit in an unattractive printing plant attached to a tower whose façade was
ripped off and replaced with siding in an order to make the building look “modern”).
The Register published an evening paper, The
Des Moines Tribune, along with a weekly general-interest magazine, Look, in the same league with the
classic Life or Saturday Evening Post. It also was the first home of KRNT Radio,
which later gave birth to KRNT television (later known as KCCI). The Des Moines
Register and Tribune also syndicated such features as The Family Circus cartoon
panel.
When my parents got bills from The Des Moines Register, they would carry a notice on the outside
congratulating the one newspaper which has earned more Pulitzer Prizes than The Des Moines Register— a publication
called The New York Times. That was
classy and designated the high standards of The Des Moines Register. At the
annual Sports & Vacation Show (sponsored by the Des Moines Register), and
at other local events such as the Iowa State Fair, it was possible to pick up a
plastic tote bag which read “Three Out of Five Iowans Read The Des Moines
Register”. And The Des Moines Register
started its cross-state bicycle ride 40 years ago this month. Moreover, Des Moines Register people were civic
leaders involved in the revitalization of downtown, the establishment of the
Des Moines airport (now Des Moines International Airport) and Des Moines' Drake University;
two buildings at Drake—Cowles Library and Harvey Ingham Hall—are named after
people involved with The Des Moines
Register.
But for the past decades, the Register has been on a
decline. I cannot pinpoint when that decline started, but I think it was when
the Register tried to adopt an old-fashioned look and the Des Moines Tribune tried to adopt a hip look during the 1970s. Then
a few years later, there were a variety of omens—two lads on paper routes
disappeared (they have not been found), a columnist committed suicide and Frank
Miller, a long-time cartoonist died of a heart attack. But the big fall during
that time was when the Des Moines Tribune
ceased publication in 1982. Ads said
that as a result the Des Moines Register
would improve.
Not so.
A couple of years later, the Des Moines Register was sold to
Gannett, a Washington DC area company which publishes USA Today (the notorious “McPaper”), the Cincinnati Enquirer, the Springfield (Missouri) News-Leader, Florida Today
and the Arizona Republic among others.
Since then, the newspaper has tried to portray itself as a local publication,
as a voice of the people of the Des Moines area, but I doubt if anyone believes
it. King Features Syndicate, owned by the Hearst Corporation, picked up many of
the features syndicated by the Register & Tribune Syndicate (including The
Family Circus). KCCI-TV was sold to a series of owners; eventually it would be
owned by the Hearst Corporation.
Brian Duffy, the cartoonist who replaced Frank Miller, was
laid off a few years back. (He subsequently got hired by Des Moines Cityview
Magazine!!!)
Many other staff writers have been let go. There are fewer
sections of the newspaper nowadays and fewer advertising supplements and
coupons to cut out. The sections aimed at senior citizens and young mothers
seem to have ceased publication. The newspaper no longer has any bureaus around the state; indeed, contrary to its slogan "The News Iowa Depends Upon", the target audience is mainly the Des Moines area. Translated: if you want news about what's happening in Council Bluffs or Cedar Rapids, read The Daily Nonpareil or The Cedar Rapids Gazette for news in those respective communities. The Register's daily readership is now down to under 90,000 as I understand it—which was
before the announced price increase. Meanwhile, the Register moved out of its
building at 8th and Locust and into downsized-spaces.
I am convinced that a lack of leadership is what has been killing the Register. A publishing that had a nationwide magazine, radio/television stations and other newspapers--based in a town that many East and West Coast people couldn't find (!) is in its death throes. How long will it be until we see The Des Moines Register cease printing altogether?
I hope I’m wrong, but I fear that this price increase will be one of
the last. Hold onto your printed newspaper copies, everyone—they could be
collectors’ items one of these days.

