I prefer Crimson Corner, more inviting, people are friendlier. The inside of Out-Of-Town has narrow aisles where people stumble over each other to get by. I don't get what the appeal of the place is.
I remember the days when Crimson Corner was called Nini's Corner and the cigar chomping people who worked there were decidedly unfriendly. I'm glad that has changed.
In fact, although there was a significant decline through the first decade of the 2000s, overall print magazine readership has actually inched up in the last few years. And print magazine readers still outnumber on-line readers by almost an order of magnitude. Even an online powerhouse like ESPN.com sees only about half as many visits/month as subscribe to _ESPN the Magazine_.
Newspapers are doing much worse, as most people are well aware, but the print/online readership ratio still heavily favors print.
People have been repeating the 'print is dead' meme since the late 80s, but it's not really true.
They have a good selection of international magazines / newspapers. Personally, I like that kind of thing, though I get that you and others may not be into that. There's just something about getting something in print, much like books. I prefer books and bookstores as opposed to buying ebooks on amazon for an ereader. To each his own.
Comments
unpleasant
I prefer Crimson Corner, more inviting, people are friendlier. The inside of Out-Of-Town has narrow aisles where people stumble over each other to get by. I don't get what the appeal of the place is.
Crimson Corner
I remember the days when Crimson Corner was called Nini's Corner and the cigar chomping people who worked there were decidedly unfriendly. I'm glad that has changed.
I believe it was originally
I believe it was originally the entrance to the Red Line, hence the cramped feel.
The Red Line entrance was there...
... -- but so was the news stand (which I remember as smallish inside, but not cramped).
Duplicate...
... post
Becasue....
There are people who still buy magazines? How is this place still in business?
Maybe becasue most people still read print magazines
In fact, although there was a significant decline through the first decade of the 2000s, overall print magazine readership has actually inched up in the last few years. And print magazine readers still outnumber on-line readers by almost an order of magnitude. Even an online powerhouse like ESPN.com sees only about half as many visits/month as subscribe to _ESPN the Magazine_.
Newspapers are doing much worse, as most people are well aware, but the print/online readership ratio still heavily favors print.
People have been repeating the 'print is dead' meme since the late 80s, but it's not really true.
They have a good selection of
They have a good selection of international magazines / newspapers. Personally, I like that kind of thing, though I get that you and others may not be into that. There's just something about getting something in print, much like books. I prefer books and bookstores as opposed to buying ebooks on amazon for an ereader. To each his own.
I read
I still read paper magazines. Sure I can get them on my ipad but, there's nothing like flipping thru a real magazine.
dirty
When I read Vanity Fair or GQ I have to wash my hands afterwards, the print rubs off.
There is joke somewhere
begging for release.
Thoughtful but...
Isn't Out of Town News a private business? Why is the city of Boston "investing" so much money this?