nino1 wrote: » i need to get the current evening echo. is it a daily edition or weekly? will i still be able to get it tomorrow?
valoren wrote: » Quick question. Does anyone know what day the court cases are published for the Echo and the Examiner?
Patrick 1959 wrote: » Anyone else having a problem reading on line Echo, page closing down half way through the article.
sammyjo90 wrote: » What will your man shout now?! :eek:
AwaitYourReply wrote: » Just the word "ECHO" in short outbursts I guess It'll no longer be appropriate for echo vendors to shout out EVENINGGGGGGGG....EEECHOOOOOO! It's sad because it's the end of an era however; they must change in order to keep it alive as doing nothing would be unwise as newspaper figures have been in continual decline for many years. A similar change already happened with the former "Evening Herald" newspaper in Dublin a few years ago when it became a morning daily newspaper which is now referred to as "The Herald". There has been so much change in the newspaper industry with the advent of free online news. On top of that the sister publication of the Evening Echo: The Cork Examiner was re-branded twice and eventually became the "Irish Examiner" which meant less focus on local news when Cork was dropped from the main newspaper title. Maybe the newspaper publishers see more growth for the Echo by going on sale in the mornings to get local news out earlier in the day. It is still an uphill battle as the younger age demographic are used to free news online but there is still probably an audience who would support an Echo being published and on sale early in the mornings. Time will tell whether these changes can go some way towards arresting a drop in sales figures. I can recall huge reaction when the Evening Echo first went from being a broadsheet to it's current compact format back in the '90's.
thejuggler wrote: » 8559 copies circulation based on July to December 2018 figures. Seems to be doomed. Irish examiner selling approx 25000 copies a day