Moneyweb recently reported that Media24 will be closing the print formats of newspapers such as Beeld and Rapport in October. To be sure, other titles such as the Daily Sun and City Press will suffer the same fate.
It is an open secret that all newspapers’ print copies – here and abroad – are struggling and becoming extinct. Some much faster than others. Die Burger in the Western Cape is still going fairly strong, albeit not growing. But Volksblad and Die Burger in the Eastern Cape have already been converted to digital editions on Netwerk24.
The numbers don’t lie. Rapport only sells roughly 60 000 copies on a Sunday. It used to sell some 330 000 copies at the turn of the century. Beeld sold some 100 000 in 2006 and they are hovering around 20 000 now. The bean counters decided it is time to stop the bleeding and it in my view a wise and inevitable move.
Naspers was one of the companies that Afrikaners started with collective volkskapitaal after the devastation of the Second Anglo-Boer War. Die Burger was launched in 1915 and it was revered. Prime ministers were editors of Afrikaans newspapers before entering into politics. Rightly or wrongly, there was a special bond and trust between Afrikaners and their newspapers in the 20th century that is no longer the case.
After 1994, Naspers (and Media24 as its subsidiary) along with many other such companies such as Sanlam and Santam, were gradually divested of their Afrikaans roots. You can whinge about it and say Naspers has a duty to promote Afrikaans – as many people do – but that won’t change economic and political realities. They will only promote it if it makes financial sense, and it increasingly doesn’t. Besides, Media24 is simply closing one format of Afrikaans content and ineluctably moving it online. They still have much to offer in Afrikaans in terms of magazines, as well as regional and local newspapers, on Netwerk24 – for a fraction of the price of buying a daily newspaper.
The decline of the Afrikaans newspapers started in the late 2000s. I know because I worked at Beeld during that time and freelanced as a sub-editor until 2013 after leaving. Experienced journalists were let go or used as underpaid freelancers in favour of cheaper, younger staff. Any company or product, and especially something as reliant on experience as journalism, will eventually start to suffer the consequences.