Among the things that the Internet has changed is the newspaper. Fifteen years ago, traditional newspapers could be found on most people's desks. Who knew that the popularity of broadsheets like the New York Times was about to flatline?
Fifteen years ago, those broadsheets did not have to compete with countless free Internet news sources. Even if there were such sources, readers probably wouldn't have used them. They had grown used to getting information from their daily newspapers.
The same cannot be said for those who've entered the workforce in the last fifteen years. They have grown used to getting information from the Internet. Those who do read newspapers rarely read the broadsheets that their parents favor. They are more likely to pick up a free alternative newspaper in a coffee shop than pay for a daily newspaper. A daily newspaper seems practically prehistoric.
However, alternative newspapers have gained and lost popularity for as long as there have been newspapers. Some newspaper publishers see the current popularity of nontraditional news sources as part of the same trend. Others see the popularity of nontraditional news sources as the end of broadsheets. Both sides will discuss their ideas this week in Chicago. There, they will convene at a meeting for newspaper publishers.
Read the following sentence from the passage.
Who knew that the popularity of broadsheets like the New York Times was about to flatline?
What does the word broadsheets mean?