Also, I find it impossible to read the broadsheets in the original format. I have to get the smaller version otherwise the living room ends up looking like a puppies conviniance area.
And they're impossible to open on the train if you've someone sitting next to you. I always envied people that could read big broadsheets sitting on a train.
We have coped without staples in our Daily Newspapers for more than 300 years. I suggest anyone who has not mastered the required technique should practice.
AOG, I was being ironic towards eyeshade: the fact is, most newspapers have already done exactly that. The Telegraph and Financial Times are the only full-size broadsheet national newspapers left during the week. The Times and Independent are tabloids; the Guardian is in-between size. Don't any of these meet your requirements?
I must be lucky, because i can read any size paper and keep it in order and crease-free.
My lovely wife on the other hand, can have a copy of the Daily mail, and within five minutes it looks like a small bomb has gone off in the middle pages.
I like reading broadsheets on trains (but that's probably because I can). You just have to fold it in various ways. It's also an excellently fun way to irritate the person next to you (after all, they can't turn around and ask you to stop reading the paper, can they?). This is particularly fun in 'silly season' when there's nothing that interesting the paper.
What irritates me about newspapers is the way that I always finish it with ink all over my fingers. Particularly in aforementioned train setting. Still, I don't take trains much anymore so I get most of my news off the web.