Miller-McCune
Media Management Center researchers were surprised when focus group participants reported reading Popular Science as a leisure activity and not an educational tool. “Eighty-two percent of surveyed readers rate Pop Sci as ‘very good/one of my favorites,'” writes Abe Peck. “And the bite-sized information approach leads to four out of five readers picking it up multiple times and spending 50 minutes with it.”
Uncategorized
Study: Popular Science readers consider the magazine ‘a downtime treat’
Tags: MediaWire, Top Stories
More News
Opinion | A columnist made a controversial introduction to Caitlin Clark
IndyStar sports columnist Gregg Doyel has been crushed online and accused of being creepy, sexist and worse. He’s since apologized multiple times
April 19, 2024
‘Satanic rituals’ at Taylor Swift shows? That’s false. And experts say the attack isn’t new.
Experts say musicians have been accused of performing satanic rituals for decades
April 19, 2024
How a longtime film critic’s death represents the great dissolve of local film criticism
Bryan VanCampen of The Ithaca Times was an institution in the central New York college town of 32,000. He might have been the last of his kind.
April 18, 2024
Opinion | An NPR editor is now a former NPR editor after his resignation
Uri Berliner, an NPR business editor who wrote a scathing essay about his organization in another publication, no longer works at NPR.
April 18, 2024
No, Stormy Daniels didn’t ‘exonerate’ Donald Trump
The adult film actor denied she had an affair with Trump in a 2018 statement. She has since recanted that statement.
April 18, 2024