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Rip, Nssn

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  • Rip, Nssn

    I knew about this two weeks ago, but it is still a kick in the butt. Especially since my subscrioption is paid up through the end of 2012.

    HARRISBURG, N.C. -- All good things come to an end.

    And so is the case for America's Motorsports Authority, National Speed Sport News. After more than 76 years, the publication, which was first published as National Auto Racing News on Aug. 16, 1934, has printed its last issue, dated - March 23, 2011.

    While hundreds of other newspapers came and went during the past three-quarters of a century, NSSN continued to ride the support of its readers and advertisers in producing the most thorough weekly racing publication on the market. But economic times have been tight and the newspaper business has suffered at the hands of high production costs and modern technology, which provides information to readers instantly.

    "This is one of the saddest days of my life," said National Speed Sport News Publisher Corinne Economaki. "The sluggish economy has made it too difficult to continue publication and no matter how I try to make the numbers work - and believe me I have tried - it is just not feasible to keep the business going.

    "For 76 years, since August 1934 when my father Chris sold copies of the first issue at Ho-Ho-Kus Speedway in northern New Jersey, to today, as I oversee the very last copy printed, this paper has been an integral part of my family," Corinne Economaki said.

    Through the years National Speed Sport News was the industry leader in covering motorsports, much of it thanks to Chris Economaki, 90, who sold the first issue of NSSN at Ho-Ho-Kus Speedway in New Jersey, and began writing for the publication soon after that and became editor in 1950.

    Economaki saw the publication through its glory days, launching a career on television and taking his newspaper into thousands of homes across America. In a time when there was no Internet and very little racing was on television or radio, National Speed Sport News thrived.

    When National Speed Sport News began its run, there were no seat belts, drivers wore leather helmets and the flathead Ford V8 was one of the most common racing engines. Today, safety is the utmost concern and HANS and other safety devices are all the rage. Fuel-injected engines are everywhere.

    Not only has technology changed what fans see at the race track, it changed how NSSN gathered the news. In the early years most news arrived at the NSSN office by mail or telephone. Later the telecopier and the fax machine played key roles. Both were replaced by the computer modem and later by e-mail.

    NSSN was printed by linotype, but later changed to phototypesetting and finally went completely digital in 2002.

    But after enduring all these changes, a familiar friend will no longer appear at the mailboxes of its loyal readers.

    NationalSpeedSportNews.com, the online version of the newspaper, will continue to be updated with daily news, giving Internet savvy readers the opportunity to keep up with some of the same news they enjoyed every week.

    But as far as the newspaper goes, it's the end of an era.

  • #2
    Wow, I have subscribed for at least 25 years. I started getting it when I was a college student in Texas. The race scene in south Texas was pretty dead for much of the year and I missed the sport very much. NSSN was my only link for several long winters.

    Even though the race results are available everywhere, NSSN still featured an excellent line-up of columnists like especially Dave Argabright, our own Marty Little, and the always insightful and often hilarious Gary London. They continued to put out lots of good information and outlasted virtually everyone who wrote racing on newsprint.

    Chris's notebook was always a great read too. Gotta admit to a certain thrill when my own name appeared there once or twice!

    Somehow I just don't see a website, any website, filling this void.
    sigpic

    www.Boneman85.com
    www.floridacityspeedway.homestead.com

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    • #3
      I think a web site is very hard to cut out and paced in a scrapbook,wish I could fine my Latemodal scrapbook though,know were most of my mini book are.

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      • #4
        welcome to the internet. soon you will be racing on here with buttons .
        noone will ever leave there house. why would anyone buy a mag or ticket or a tire or interact with a nother person. you might catch something...Im glad im old and dont have to see it.. our sport is internet doomed.
        ok boney did you check the bathrooms a the tracks and ware is our report.

        don62 (yes im a dumb ass i still care)

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        • #5
          I've been an avid reader of NSSN since the 1960s and there has never been another racing publication that could match it .

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          • #6
            They were selling subscriptions in December at the PRI show. I wonder if they will be refunding subscription dues ?

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            • #7
              after 76 years of suport to our sport you want a refund?
              I dont think any one gets it.. the ME ME ME will be the end of the sport.
              soon you will pay for the right to go in a circle at one of the 3 left in the state if you dont quit the ME deal and think what do WE WE WE need!


              old don62

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              • #8
                Don, that is a ridiculous answer, even by your standards. It is Business 101; the subscribers deserve a refund.

                That illustrates a basic lack of understanding on your part of the relationship between customer and supplier. NSSN is owed nothing, regardless of their history in the sport. Likewise, you as a track operator, also thought the rules of supply and demand could be thrown out the window, and that we the racer and fan would put up with anything, just for the privilege of racing. No one is owed anything. Customers have to be won over every day.

                Guess what a small part of winning race track customers is.....soap, towels and a clean bathroom.
                sigpic

                www.Boneman85.com
                www.floridacityspeedway.homestead.com

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by Don Nerone View Post
                  welcome to the internet. soon you will be racing on here with buttons .
                  noone will ever leave there house. why would anyone buy a mag or ticket or a tire or interact with a nother person. you might catch something...Im glad im old and dont have to see it.. our sport is internet doomed.
                  ok boney did you check the bathrooms a the tracks and ware is our report.

                  don62 (yes im a dumb ass i still care)
                  Yes Don he checked them and ran his update, of coarse it was only constructive criticism

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                  • #10
                    "Customers have to be won over every day"

                    Yep, pretty simple isn't it? A good business lives by that motto, a poorly run one dies by it...

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                    • #11
                      Don,

                      I thought you were just a bad speller. Your comment proves you're an idiot.

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                      • #12
                        I heard this morning they were going to keep it alive on line but it was a non racing source that I heard it from. http://www.nationalspeedsportnews.com/

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                        • #13
                          NSSN, being a business promising a product to a customer, has an obligation to provide said product. It is not an agreement between an investor and potential investment. On the other side, I race extensively with SCCA, HSR & SVRA sports car series. We have to pay to play there. I can see if things keep getting more and more expensive, and the crowds keep getting smaller, and the racers fewer, the same thing can happen to short track racing. Know what? I think it could work. There would be way fewer tracks, but they would cater to the rich guys who want their kids to be NASCAR superstars.
                          Joe Jacalone

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                          • #14
                            This was like hearing my best friend in high school had died{class of 61} just so you would know he was an old friend I subscribed every year but one since 1966 and had just renewed in Jan. Enough of my woes. I will miss Marty Littles occasional South Florida Track Facts,his oft mentioned search for old coupe that was sponsored by United Parts and our memories about Eau Gallie and Orlando speedways.If this in any way silences the razor sharp tongue of Gary London I will believe that this was all a plot and NASCRAP bought the paper. As the computer age moves relentlesly on the day is nigh when the only paper neede will be in bathroom.RIP NSSN. You were a part of the family.

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                            • #15
                              Yes, I would expect something in return from NSSN since I had about six months remaining on my subscription. I paid them for a service that they are not fulfilling. My hope is that some of the longtime subscribers are picked up by someone like Area Auto Racing News, because they would most likely come out ahead in the end when people renew.
                              www.FloridaSprintCarFans.com - because Florida sprint car racing needs all the help it can get...

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