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'This is a book which demands attention within the media industry and with all those interested in the development of society in a changing social era.' -- Orange Standard
'For all our academic debates about what journalism should do to survive in the digital age, David Ryfe has done the invaluable research needed to have this discussion in the first place: he looked at what journalists do to make it work, and why.' -- Mark Deuze, Indiana University
'David Ryfe has written an accessible and thoughtful book about US press journalism as it faces the drawn-out challenge of finding new business models in the face of the digital revolution. With its first-person style and lively ethnographic detail, it is written to appeal to a new generation of students facing many professional uncertainties.' -- Philip Schlesinger, University of Glasgow
'"There will always be newspapers," journalists told David Ryfe a half dozen years ago. Now they are not so sure what that could possibly mean, as Ryfe shows in this study of a profession in crisis. A masterful portrait of three different newsrooms close-up, warts and all, this is an original, readable, and important work.' -- Michael Schudson, Columbia University