"Chicago Tribune repackaging itself in tabloid size for street sales" is the no-nonsense
headline from Tribune Tower in Chicago.

The Chicago Tribune on Monday will hit the streets—and its rival, the Chicago Sun-Times—with a newly reformatted tabloid-sized version of itself for weekday sales at area commuter stations, newsstands and newspaper boxes, the Tribune announced today. Home delivery subscribers will continue to receive the Tribune’s traditional broadsheet edition, which will have the same editorial content as the single-copy tabloid version with minor differences in headlines, photos and captions because of the new size, the paper said.
If past history holds any predictive power, it is foregone that readers will prefer the small format.
From Kuala Lumpur to London - every broadsheet that offered both sizes to readers eventually stopped offering the broadsheet version within six months. The Times of London, the New Straits Times . . will it be the same for the Chicago Tribune?
We now have a new newspaper war in Chicago - three street tab dailies will be duking it out in a new war for street sales. Can the Trib out Sun-Times the Sun-Times? Will Red Eye continue to run many of the same items as the paid product?
Stay tuned.
Here's the official
memo. Please add links and comments to this thread.
When market leaders go tab - they don't go back.

On 18 April 2005, the The New Straits Times in Kuala Lumpur offered readers a choice of broadsheet or tabloid size. After six months of producing both sizes the newspaper terminated a 160-year-old tradition of being a broadsheet. (Photo by Robb Montgomery)
Tags: chicago, kuala, lumpur, new, newspaper, redesign, straits, tabloid, times, tribune
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