Another example of an alternative source of indirectly inserting their opinions is the use of a video of a journalist named Meghan Lopez. During President Obama 's speech, she said that the questions raised in the speech were more than answers. On the other hand, in the "New York Times" article, Shelton 2 is provided with more detailed information with reliable quotation. President Obama's support is even more important. They acknowledged the fact that President Obama wanted to attack Syria, but they expressed sympathy to him and expressed deep concern that Americans were shocked by some form of military action in Syria after Iraq and Afghanistan He admitted suspicion.
To answer this question, we need two preliminary estimates. It is the circulation of the New York Times and the size of the newspaper. The answer on Sunday may change. The New York Times is a national newspaper, but the number of users outside the New York metropolitan area may be less than the number of insiders. The population of New York's metropolitan area is about 10 million. Since most households purchase only one at a time, not all households will purchase the New York Times, there is a chance that the daily volume will be about 1 million. (500,000 copies are too small, the size of 2 million copies is too large.) Sunday and peace days versions may be different.
In 1896, Adolph Ochs bought the The New York Times, a newspaper to lose, and the New York Times Company. The Ochs-Sulzberger family is one of the American newspaper dynasties, and since then it is in the New York Times. The publisher was listed on January 14, 1969 and sold at a price of $ 42 per share at the US stock exchanges. Even then, the family will continue to manage through ownership of the vast majority of Class B voting shares. Grant restrictions on voting rights to class A shareholders and allow class B shareholders to hold voting rights
By the 1950's the American newspaper industry came to be dominated by prominent editors such as Horace Greeley in New York Tribune, James Gordon Bennett in New York Herald, Henry J. Raymond in New York Times. Quality newspapers are beginning to be published in major cities and many large cities. By the end of the nineteenth century, after a slow but steady increase, the newspaper industry was suddenly motivated by the strategies of two duel editors Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst. The two men participated in the so-called "yellow news", they joined the circulation war and made the newspaper an important part of American daily life.