AmexRuislip
Retired Spy 🕵️♂️
The 90% of the £1.15 pays for paper rounds.Really poor brought a copy today and not even a match report in the paper for last nights game and £1.15 now .
The 90% of the £1.15 pays for paper rounds.Really poor brought a copy today and not even a match report in the paper for last nights game and £1.15 now .
If you think that is bad, try the Liverpool Echo - exactly the same only more and worse (and different councillors).The problem being that first of all they are no longer a local paper - I don't want to know about what's happened in Rye, Crawley or Bognor. They lost their localisation when they started to use national reporters to report stories. Reporters with no local knowledge. Hell, there was even a story published a couple of years ago about a woman that "saved" an old table by rubbing it down and painting it. She was based in ..... Bolton
Most of what they publish is mind numbing rubbish so there's no way I'm going to actually pay for it. Stories about their trips to restaurants ( with the reporter trying to be a new Grace Dent ), summaries of hygiene scores that any of us could look up on the council website, Rightmove screen scrapes etc etc etc. If they want people to pay then they need to publish proper news - not the dumbed down paste and copy stuff their American owners want them to do to save money. Vicious circle really, publish rubbish and people will stop paying, people stop paying so they cut more costs thus producing even worse rubbish.
One benefit if they go under would be Cllr Lyons no longer being able to spew his stupid comments nor would we have to suffer Steve 'hypocrite' Davis' regular column.
Oh yes, I remember that now. I used to wait for it on Saturday night because I would copy out the football scores into an exercise book. My first memory was writing Brighton 1 Halifax 0. I looked back and it was early 1976, so I would have been 6 at the time.My grandad used to always buy the late edition of The Evening Argus on a Saturday. I'd go over the road to the newsagents to buy it for him. Used to look at the clock as the latest always delivered about the same time every Saturday. He'd turn straight to the back page where if you turned to paper at 90° there would be printed last minute news that was too late for main paper. It would also have the Albion football scores which of course was what he was really interested in.
If you think that is bad, try the Liverpool Echo - exactly the same only more and worse (and different councillors).
Oh yes, I remember that now. I used to wait for it on Saturday night because I would copy out the football scores into an exercise book. My first memory was writing Brighton 1 Halifax 0. I looked back and it was early 1976, so I would have been 6 at the time.
I wonder if any NSCers remember the match itself. I suspect it's not overly memorable.
Yes, the Halifax match was played just before that to a crowd of 20,000 less. The Palace match looks like it was an evening affair too. Halifax were bottom and the weather that day (you knew I would look it up...) was mostly dry but rather cold. So no indication, apart from Palace being in the promotion race, as to why the crowd was so different. But our crowds were very fair weather back then. Maybe folk chose one or the other.I’ve a family photo of Vinnicombe’s report & match pics on my childhood bedroom wall. It was the day after Albion 2-0 CP. My second ever game, Feb 76, gate of over 33,000.
Sadly now all news, local or otherwise is available at the click of a button - part of the reason the physical paper is dying out.
I also bought it today ( first time in years) and automatically assumed there would be a match reportReally poor brought a copy today and not even a match report in the paper for last nights game and £1.15 now .
I remember heading off with my Dad to wait outside the Argus office by Worthing station for the Sports Argus with the match report. Was always a full report of the first hour and a brief summary of the last half hour.I used to like to Sports Argus on a Saturday tea-time when most matches were played on a Saturday. You could pick it up about 6.30pm around town and it was great to take into the pub in the evening to analyse results, tables, and get photos and a brief match report from the afternoon's game etc, before the advent of mobile phones.
Sadly now all news, local or otherwise is available at the click of a button - part of the reason the physical paper is dying out.