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The papers do serve a useful purpose. They are hard copies of the scripts you and/or the writers have typed up to scroll live for you on the teleprompter.
You typically look at these copies before prompter rolls during every commercial break so you can (re)familiarize yourself with it and practice any hard to pronounce words that could mangle you live on air.
You might also read through it and find last minute changes you want or need to make to the script for accuracy or ease of reading, adding notes for yourself and asking writers via IFB to make the additions for you on the electronic prompter copy you'll read from.
You don't want to be stumbling around when you are live -- what's on the prompter should never be new to you. A good review, even if you originally wrote it, is key befre you go live.
Also, you use these papers so you can follow long during the course of a live broadcast.
If the prompter freezes or goes wiggy -- and that happens ALL the time -- you have a hard copy you can switch to without losing a beat, or much of one.
There is also usually a prompter screen built down into the desk, which you have to look directly down at. That also serves as a monitor -- and a hair mirror for many a anchor : ) The papers cover the glare from that up.
Mostly, though, the paper copies of the script you refer to are just plain old props.
They help you to look kind of busy after the final outro and when credits roll, when the cameras have you and your coanchor in the wide shot. That's when you typically stack them up, act like you are taking notes on them, smile knowingly at the other anchor, toss it behind you merrily, whatever.