Looks like the OP left the building some time ago. I wonder whether it was anything to do with the last 5 pages? You never know. He may come back for a look.
Last year I shot 70 thousand shots on my M9's. This year will be the same. It's an extrordinary number of photos, 90% of which will hit the virtual trash bin. But that's the way it is now for the majority of full time shooters. When I shot my first wedding I took 10 rolls of film in total. Now we average about 1500 shots, culled to 500 per wedding. I take the same number of frames for my commercial work, but only because we don't shoot polaroids anymore it's all done live and tethered. If you talk to most working journalists they have the motor drive set to 10FPS all the time. It's amazing we can hear our politicians over the sound of the shutters. Maybe we need to make those shutters louder when dealing with politicians?
Simply put digital dominates the working shooters market. Deadlines are shorter every year and costs are getting squeezed more and more. I simply couldn't afford to buy film in the quantities I'm asked to shoot today, let alone polaroids and the developing/scanning costs. Digital has devalued commercial photography and at the same time increased the demands on the photographer. That isn't going to change.
I still make a good living from my photography. But it's a lot different to a decade ago. But now I have more/cheaper competition than ever before. Even from guests at a wedding who'll have a set up on facebook before the reception is over. If you want wedding referrals, you get some images up on facebook within a few days. If I miss a few weeks my "fans" assume I've died and move on. Now there are a few who have made a success with a different business model. Great. But they're in the minority. Turn around is king. Quality is second. You should see some of the gushing comments over crap, out of focus wedding iphone shots on facebook.
Sure there are a few places where film can work. Fine Art is probably the main one, where a limited edition, really is one. Digital doesn't generally get the same respect, which could be a good thing. But overall you need to be able to email a proof to an art director in hours, not days. Photo essays, maybe. National Geographic wants digital nowadays. A newspaper editor wants it within minutes. In fact they'd prefer a live stream from a journalists iPhone. If the papers and magazines could develop film, which they no longer can, it'd be too late. When that plane landed in the Hudson river, I was looking at photos, in Australia, before they'd even got all the people off it. Wedding can be done on film by a select few. There's a small market for film weddings and a few players already in it. Most wedding photographers I know only shoot a small proportion of the day on film. The majority is shot on digital and film is for the special shots. Some of them have a second shooter with a DSLR while they shoot their 6x6. It's not for me though. I've worked as a commercial printer with both fibre based b&w and colour (mostly Cibachrome) materials. Film hold absolutely no romantic attraction to me. If I never have to make another contrast neg again, it'll be too soon.
I don't shoot only M9's. But they're a major part of my kit. I have a small AF system for things that the M9's won't do. Long lenses, macro and occasional zoom usage. The files aren't as nice but my clients don't care. The AF cameras are "good enough' for every application I need. Especially when the vast majority of my work is displayed 900 pixels wide.
The one and only reason I shoot the M9 is that i like them. I shot Caanon for 20 years. It would probably be easier to still be shooting Canon. But I enjoy the Leica so much that I happily deal with the inconveniences it has. The sensor in the D800/D4/1Dx may be "better". But the sensor in the M9 has soul. I like cameas with a personality. I think a Leica is the wrong camera for 90% of photographers. But if you love llllleicas and you think it's shortcomings are "features" why not? I do. And I've booked three weddings this year specifically because I shoot with Leicas.
The downside is that you're going to need two of them. There's no support like a CPS or NPS for Leica. Both my cameras have needed repairs that required a trip to Germany. 12 weeks. You will probably need an AF system as well. I do. I don't "need" my Leicas. I do need a macro, something longer than 135mm and occasionally, a zoom. But I shoot with them anyway. It's possible to shoot exclusively with a pair of Leicas. But it's difficult. As a journalist you'll almost certainly have to be able to do some video. So maybe a Panasonic GH m4/3 camera might be a good 2nd system.
When I started I shot my first wedding on a pair of beat up Canon AE-1's. It took me a couple of years to be able to afford a 'blad 501 and an 80mm. I wanted a new F1 and some lenses for the Hassleblad so badly. But my mentor wouldn't let me buy them until I could pay for them in cash I'd made from shooting. Best advice ever. It taught me not to dig a financial hole with gear that only looses value and that i could do quite well with modest gear and a good attitude.
My advice is to go after your goal with everything you've got. just do it in smaller steps. Save up and get a Fuji EX-1 and a few lenses. Noit a Leica but small and fun to shot with great image quality. Make some money. Sort out what you really need to make it work versus what you want. Get that. later when you have some time/experience/cash go out and buy your digital Leica. Get a brand new one, in chrome. That's your reward for doing the hard yards. The end goal. Enjoy the journey. It isn't going to be easy.
Good luck.
Gordon