| I've only ever seen it and read it when in a hotel and it's free with breakfast. |
| I was just thinking that- it makes sense that it has a large circulation if it across the entire nation in hotels compared to more localized readership. |
| Hotels and diners. |
| Yep, "circulation" means the hotels buy it. Doesn't mean anybody reads it. |
| Yup. Hotel only. Get Post delivered at home. |
| Hotels. |
| I’ve never been in a hotel that didn’t have this paper. It’s most common followed by NY Times and WSJ. |
| I just read USAToday...in my hotel room. It’s the only place e I ever read it. |
| A friend who is quite skilled at investing swore by USA Today, which he read daily. He said it was more useful than WSJ for choosing his investment portfolio, and I don't think he was thinking only of the financial page. |
| The reason it has a higher circulation is because it is in hotels everywhere AND it includes local stories for the areas it is in, so if you are in Chicago you get national stories and Chicago stories, people in Boise will get Boise stories and so on. The WSJ and NYT aren't doing that. |
| It's the only paper you can get when you're taking the Amtrak cross country. |
| Probably for the best. USA Today has no discernible political bias. WSJ is conservative and NYT is liberal. Sometimes I just want my news straight up, neat. |
There’s no such thing as no bias. Even what gets reported is the result of political bias. |
| Are they including all of their local affiliated papers in their circulation numbers? |
| I only read it in hotels. I never seen a hotel without a subscription. |