http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/1201/p01s04-woam.htm
SANTIAGO, CHILE - It was 102 years old, boring, unpopular, and
basically, as economist Marta Lagos puts it, "a middle-of-the-road piece
of nothing."
Now, it's a phenomenon. Las Ultimas Noticias (LUN) - The Latest News -
is Chile's most widely read newspaper today, setting tongues wagging,
talk-show hosts chatting, celebrities and politicians denying, serious
folks wailing, and advertisers calling.
No, it's not a tabloid, insist the employees at the slightly shabby
downtown newsroom. Rather, they say, it's a revolution in journalism, a
reader-driven product that reflects the changing values and interests of
a postdictatorship public that grew up on a diet of establishment news
and now wants more. Or, as some say - because of the often low-brow
content - less.
This revolution has occurred, says the paper's publisher Augustine
Edwards, thanks to his decision to listen to "the people." Three years
ago, under Mr. Edwards's guidance, LUN installed a system whereby all
clicks onto its website (
www.lun.com) were recorded for all in the
newsroom to see. Those clicks - and the changing tastes and desires they
represent - drive the entire print content of LUN. If a certain story
gets a lot of clicks, for example, that is a signal to Edwards and his
team that the story should be followed up, and similar ones should be
sought for the next day. If a story gets only a few clicks, it is
killed. The system offers a direct barometer of public opinion, much
like the TV rating system - but unique to print media.