Newsletter Subject

The New York Times’s old white Democrats problem

From

recode.net

Email Address

dailynews@recode.net

Sent On

Wed, Apr 6, 2022 03:50 PM

Email Preheader Text

The NYT subscriber base isn’t getting any younger. The New York Times is a marvel of journalism

The NYT subscriber base isn’t getting any younger. The New York Times is a marvel of journalism. Not coincidentally, it’s also a rare journalism business success story. Instead of collapsing under the weight of digital competition, the paper transformed its business model, and [now relies on money from its readers instead of advertisers](. That strategy allowed it to thrive for the past decade while the rest of the news industry convulsed. But while the Times has succeeded wildly at getting people to pay for its journalism, it has not succeeded at transforming the kind of people who pay for the Times. They remain older, richer, whiter, and more liberal than the rest of America. This doesn’t seem to bother many of the people who work on the editorial side of the paper. But it’s very top of mind for the Times’s business team — who won’t say that publicly but discuss it often internally, sources tell me. Which is why the Times is trying to build and buy new products to augment its core newspaper subscribers. It doesn’t just want more subscribers. It also wants different kinds of subscribers. So even while the Times is thriving, its managers — led by CEO Meredith Kopit Levien — are busy trying to create a new kind of Times, one that sells news and a lot of other stuff. It’s an inherently risky proposition. There’s the money, for starters: [The Times’s recent acquisition of the Athletic](, the sports news startup that caters to a younger and more centrist subscriber than one who pays for the Times, will cost it more than $600 million — more than half of the cash hoard the Times has built up during its boom times. It is also pouring money into add-on services like games, a cooking section, and an audio arm. The Times strategy also poses a risk to outsiders — like the people who work at local newspapers around the country, and the people who depend on those newspapers to tell them what’s happening in their communities. Those papers have spent the last few years competing with the Athletic for sports fans’ time and money. Now they are competing with the Times — whose editorial leadership has spent years bemoaning the fragile, shrinking state of local news. “I think the biggest crisis in journalism in America is the crisis of local news,” [Times executive editor Dean Baquet told me five years ago](. “I think it’s huge.” It hasn’t gotten better since. Even if you’re fortunate enough not to live in a [news desert](, you understand why local news isn’t just important for people who like news, but for [people who value democracy](. I also don’t think there’s a better strategy available to the Times, which remains an American journalism unicorn — with enormous resources and a wealthy audience that will fund those resources and buffet it from the perils of an advertising market. The Times has just two real national competitors, both of which have similar [problems]( with an [aging subscriber base](, but which also have the luxury of different support structures: The Wall Street Journal depends on an affluent business audience and their employers to pay for subscriptions; the Washington Post depends on owner Jeff Bezos, one of the richest men in the world. And beyond that there’s ... not a lot. Digital startups that at one time seemed to threaten the Times’s dominance have vanished or at least dramatically reined in heady plans over the last few years. Last month, BuzzFeed, whose founder Jonah Peretti has insisted that his company’s [ad-based model]( would allow it to provide free news to many more people than the Times’s subscribers base[,]( announced another round of cuts to its news unit, which will soon have around 70 employees — down two-thirds from its peak. And a new wave of digital publishers focused on subscribers either targets distinct and limited audiences, like the eight-year-old [the Information](, which relies on business subscribers, or Substack’s newsletter model, which isn’t built to support newsrooms at all. The fact that the mighty Times may already be bumping its head against the limits of its audience for paid news should give everyone else real shivers. The Times, for the record, says it’s just fine with its current subscriber roll and its prospects for the future. Its current mantra is that it believes there are 135 million English speakers around the world who want to consume the kind of digital products it creates. Which means that, at 10 million subscribers, there are many years of runway ahead. On the other hand, you don’t need to look hard to find evidence that the Times thinks it needs more stuff to sell. Exhibit A: Its purchase of the Athletic, which is fast-growing but money-incinerating. When Kopit Levien announced the deal in January, she went out of her way to argue that buying the Athletic meant her company would be reaching an entirely new set of customers — there’s only a “modest overlap” between the Athletic’s subscriber base and the Times, [she told investors](. The Times hasn’t spent that kind of money to buy a new audience for a very long time. The last time it tried, in 1993, it was a disaster: The Times bought the Boston Globe for $1.1 billion, and ended up selling it in a fire sale two decades later, for $70 million. And the $550 million in cash the Times is spending on the Athletic understates the Times’s investment: Last year, the Athletic lost $55 million, and Kopit Levien says it will continue to run at a loss — now funded by the Times — for the next three years. Importantly, the deal puts the Times directly in competition with local newspapers throughout the US, which are already struggling to survive. The Athletic was built specifically to compete with local dailies, by hiring their star sports writers to bring their audiences with them — “We will wait every local paper out and let them continuously bleed until we are the last ones standing,” co-founder [Alex Mather famously told the New York Times in 2017](. “We will suck them dry of their best talent at every moment.” Mather sort of walked back his comment but not his strategy, which eventually let him expand in 47 markets around the world. Which means that from Buffalo to Sacramento to Tampa Bay, he has been chipping away at the remaining scaffolding holding up local journalism. A source at the Los Angeles Times, for instance, tells me sports is the third-biggest driver for that paper’s new subscribers (after local news and entertainment coverage). Imagine what it’s like for a paper not owned by a billionaire. The Times doesn’t like this framing at all. Kopit Levien insists that the Times isn’t out to undermine your local daily, pointing out [co-operative reporting projects]( the paper has done with outlets like the New Orleans Times-Picayune, and efforts the paper has undertaken to [promote local papers to its readers](. If you buy a subscription to the Athletic, she argues, you should also be subscribing to your hometown paper. “If you are interested in being civically engaged in your local community, having a subscription to the Athletic is not going to answer to all that civic interest,” she told me. “We did not buy the Athletic to go head-to-head with local papers. That’s not the point.” But the Times’s intentions don’t matter — its actions do. Beyond the Athletic, there is plenty of other evidence hiding in plain sight that the Times is searching for new readers and subscribers beyond its core demo: The paper has been increasing its investment in non-news products, like its cooking and games verticals (see the paper’s recent acquisition of Wordle, the viral puzzle sensation, for a price in the “[low-seven figures](”), both of which are sold as standalone products as well as bundled along with the conventional newspaper. Kopit Levien says she will do the same with the Athletic. And the Times is explicitly trying to reach people who may not think of themselves as Times subscribers with a new [marketing campaign](, which is meant to expand the notion of who a Times subscriber can be. The ads feature testimonials from actual Times subscribers discussing Times stories they like — and while two of them do feature an older white guy and an older white woman, the other [four are people of color](. (One of them, Lianna, noted that she enjoyed reading a story about “Imagining Harry Potter without its creator” — a reference that created troll-y blowback from the [usual]( [suspects]( who accused the paper of threatening J.K. Rowling. Go figure.) One thing the Times explicitly isn’t doing is telling its reporters and editors to reshape their coverage to reach new readers. It has done so in the past: In the wake of the paper’s [Innovation Report]( — a document from 2014 that fretted that the Times was being overtaken by digital upstarts like Huffington Post and BuzzFeed — editors there worried that the paper’s readership was too male. They created a gender “[vertical](” with the hope of creating stories that might [appeal to women](. But there’s no “create a desk to appeal to young people who aren’t rich and liberal” directive at the moment. On the one hand, that seems like a good thing: The Times has 10 million readers who are willing to pay for the stuff it already produces, and tinkering with the product could turn them off — so why not find features that could augment its offerings instead? And for now, Kopit Levien’s strategy does seem to be working: In 2021, the paper brought in more subscribers overall than it did two years earlier, and even brought in more news subscribers than it did in 2019, despite its efforts to sell stuff beyond news. Also promising: While she won’t disclose the average age of a Times subscriber, Kopit Levien says that average has remained steady, in part because new Times subscribers are twice as likely to be under the age of 40 as existing subs. But she will need a lot of new young readers to actually move the needle, and we’ve seen what happens when older audiences fade away and don’t get replaced by younger generations. Ask the guys who run cable TV networks. They spent years asserting that no one would ever replace TV with the internet and are now scrambling to replace their TV networks with internet services. In 2022, it’s impossible to see the Times losing its grip on customers who pay for news. Years from now, it may appear to have been inevitable. —Peter Kafka, senior correspondent   [Photo collage of Senator Elizabeth Warren surrounded by representations of topics that relate to her, like money and the Facebook logo.]( Christina Animashaun/Vox [Elizabeth Warren’s plan to break up Big Everything]( [“Shame on Congress for not sucking it up and doing what needs to be done,” the senator told Recode.](   [The Batman against a hazy sky.]( Warner Bros. [WarnerMedia’s ex-boss says you should be happy you’re getting Batman at theaters and rom-coms at home]( [A chat with Jason Kilar on his two-year tenure, the future of movies, and more.](   [People in matching T-shirts representing their union jump and wave their arms in the air in celebration.]( Joshua Bessex/AP [How a bunch of Starbucks baristas built a labor movement]( [Inside Starbucks’s successful 21st-century union drive.](   [Learn more about RevenueStripe...](   [The exterior of the New York Times building.]( John Nacion/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images [The New York Times’s old white Democrats problem]( [The paper of record’s subscriber base isn’t getting any younger. Maybe a $600 million deal will help.](   [Amazon Labor Union founder Chris Smalls pops the cork on a bottle of champagne to celebrate after workers voted to unionize the Amazon Staten Island warehouse in New York on April 1. The vote establishes the first US union at the e-commerce giant, a milestone for a company that has steadfastly opposed organized labor in its massive workforce.]( Andrea Renault/AFP via Getty Images [America finally gets an Amazon union]( [Amazon wanted to make former employee Chris Smalls the face of labor activism. He just handed Amazon its first US union.](   [This is cool] [Listen to the Recode Daily podcast.]( [Facebook reeling to stay relevant]( Facebook is continuing to lose younger users to TikTok, so they’re going all-in on copying it. Will pushing “Reels” make Facebook more relevant? Recode reporter Shirin Ghaffary explains. [Listen on Apple Podcasts.](   [This is cool] [An invasive ant species is being eradicated by a new parasite]( [Learn more about RevenueStripe...](   [Vox Logo]( [Facebook]( [Twitter]( [YouTube]( This email was sent to {EMAIL}. Manage your [email preferences]( or [unsubscribe](param=recode). View our [Privacy Notice]( and our [Terms of Service](. Vox Media, 1201 Connecticut Ave. NW, Floor 12, Washington, DC 20036. Copyright © 2022. All rights reserved.

EDM Keywords (259)

younger worried world working work wordle women willing went well weight way wave want wake vanished us unionize undertaken understand undermine two twice trying tried transforming topics top told tinkering times tiktok thriving thrive threaten think theaters terms telling tell survive sucking suck succeeded substack subscriptions subscription subscribing subscribers stuff strategy story starters sports spent spending source soon sold sent selling seen seem see searching scrambling say sacramento run risk rich revenuestripe rest resources reshape representations reporters replace remains relies relate reference record readership readers reaching purchase publicly prospects price point plenty plan perils people peak pays pay past part papers paper owned overtaken one notion newspapers needs needle need movies money moment mind milestone meant means may matter matching marvel many manage male luxury lot loss live limits likely like liberal let last kind journalism january investment internet interested intentions insisted information increasing impossible important huge hope home hiring head happy happens happening hand half guys grip going getting future funded fund fretted framing four fine feature fact face exterior expand even eradicated ended employers email efforts editors dry done dominance document discuss disclose disaster desk depend deal cuts customers crisis creator creates created create coverage country cost cork copying cool cooking continuing continue consume congress competition competing compete company communities comment collapsing coincidentally chat champagne celebrate caters cash buying buy bunch bumping built build buffet buffalo bring break bottle blowback billionaire beyond believes batman average augment audiences audience athletic arms argues argue appeal answer america also air age advertisers add actions accused 40 2022 2021 2017 2014 1993

Marketing emails from recode.net

View More
Sent On

08/03/2023

Sent On

01/03/2023

Sent On

22/02/2023

Sent On

15/02/2023

Sent On

08/02/2023

Sent On

02/02/2023

Email Content Statistics

Subscribe Now

Subject Line Length

Data shows that subject lines with 6 to 10 words generated 21 percent higher open rate.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Words

The more words in the content, the more time the user will need to spend reading. Get straight to the point with catchy short phrases and interesting photos and graphics.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Images

More images or large images might cause the email to load slower. Aim for a balance of words and images.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Time to Read

Longer reading time requires more attention and patience from users. Aim for short phrases and catchy keywords.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Predicted open rate

Subscribe Now

Spam Score

Spam score is determined by a large number of checks performed on the content of the email. For the best delivery results, it is advised to lower your spam score as much as possible.

Subscribe Now

Flesch reading score

Flesch reading score measures how complex a text is. The lower the score, the more difficult the text is to read. The Flesch readability score uses the average length of your sentences (measured by the number of words) and the average number of syllables per word in an equation to calculate the reading ease. Text with a very high Flesch reading ease score (about 100) is straightforward and easy to read, with short sentences and no words of more than two syllables. Usually, a reading ease score of 60-70 is considered acceptable/normal for web copy.

Subscribe Now

Technologies

What powers this email? Every email we receive is parsed to determine the sending ESP and any additional email technologies used.

Subscribe Now

Email Size (not include images)

Font Used

No. Font Name
Subscribe Now

Copyright © 2019–2025 SimilarMail.