The death of newspapers by a thousand cuts continues.
CVS Pharmacy has "significantly" reduced its spending on circulars, company spokesperson Erin Pensa told CNNMoney.
Pensa said CVS (CVS) isn't completely doing away with circulars, but the company plans to focus more on digital advertising.
"[We're] moving to where our customers are and also shifting our spend to personalized [deals] through Extracare" -- which is the CVS rewards program that allows shoppers to access coupons from their smartphones and tracks members' buying habits.
The Sunday circulars, as they're called, used to be a staple of the weekend. They were largely credited with helping to keep newspapers' beefed up Sunday editions popular during the recession -- even as online news continued to draw readers away from print subscriptions.
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CVS, which has about 9,700 retail locations, spent $216 million on advertising in 2016, according to a public filing from February.
And, of course, the retailer is only the latest advertiser to shift money from print to digital media.
The change has strangled a primary revenue source for traditionally print-focused news outlets. That's led to hard times for local papers and tabloids across the country, which have shut down or trimmed staffing in droves over the past few years.
According to a 2016 Pew Research study, the newspaper workforce "shrunk by about 20,000 positions, or 39%, in the last 20 years." And Editor & Publisher says there were about 126 fewer daily papers in 2014 than in 2004.
Even the country's leading news outlets aren't immune. The Wall Street Journal has trimmed down and ceased production of its Greater New York section. And the New York Times has suffered a run of revenue declines.