Rebuilding Place in the Urban Space

"A community’s physical form, rather than its land uses, is its most intrinsic and enduring characteristic." [Katz, EPA] This blog focuses on place and placemaking and all that makes it work--historic preservation, urban design, transportation, asset-based community development, arts & cultural development, commercial district revitalization, tourism & destination development, and quality of life advocacy--along with doses of civic engagement and good governance watchdogging.

Thursday, April 09, 2026

(Every Day Should Be) Local News Day

Local News Day is today.  

It's sponsored by various modes of community-serving media.  

There should be scads of participants--metropolitan newspapers, community newspapers, public radio and public television programs, I guess local television station news, although it tends to not be in depth, and digital only news sources.

There aren't that many member newsrooms so far.

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-- "Inside the crisis facing local TV news" (2026)
-- "Davis Kennedy, a one time force in local community newspapers, dies at 87" (2026)
-- "Washington City Paper community media project" (2026)
-- "Another media tragedy: The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette is shutting down" (2026)
-- "New Jersey loses largest published newspaper: Newark Star-Ledger" (2025)
-- "Newspaper acquisition as an element of a conservative agenda" (2024)
-- "The impact of local radio news in England" (2022)
-- "Newspapers as public media: WBEZ, radio, an NPR affiliate, to merge with the Chicago Sun-Times" (2022)
-- "Louisville Courier-Journal mobile newsroom initiative and Salt Lake Tribune Innovations Lab" (2022)
-- "Orange County Register coronavirus tracker graphic is a great model" (2021)
-- "Local music used to define communities: today with radio chains and national music distribution systems, not so much" (2021)
-- "Newspapers, community media, and knowledge about and engagement in civic affairs" (2020)
-- "Revisiting community radio" (2020)
-- "Thinking anew about supporting community radio" (2019)
-- "Culture planning and radio: local music, local content vs. delivery nodes for a national network" (2019)
-- "One more blow against community media: Washington Post drops Thursday "county" news special sections" (2017)
-- "The ongoing tragedy of dying print media, the latest being community newspapers in Montgomery and Prince George's Counties, Maryland" (2015)
-- "Grassroots communications capability in the city" (2015)
-- "Protest as Civic Engagement and the role of the media" (2007)

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Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Inside the crisis facing local TV news

At one point, local television news was a major money maker and one of the reasons behind the decline of newspapers.  Mostly local tv news was what I called "murders, fires, accidents, sports, and weather" with a sprinkling of news and feature stories on events in the metropolitan area.

But as television news supplanted local newspapers, cable specialization--channels dedicated to sports and weather--took away some of the key content, and later the Internet and streaming.  

It took a couple decades for Internet technology to be robust enough to deliver streaming video with as good or better production values, and depending on the investment in the product, competitive news with more depth, but it's happened.  Ratings (audience viewership) have dropped in response.

The finances of television news are tough too.  Great during election years in competitive states so lots of political ads.  But the main source of local advertising, car dealerships, has declined some too, as individual car dealerships get rolled up into massive car dealership firms.  

(Two of the largest dealership groups are based in Utah.  One, Larry H. Miller, was subsumed into the Asbury Auto Group, which after some sell offs, still has 150+ dealerships.)

One response has been industry consolidation.  The US Government has continually relaxed antitrust and competition concerns, so that a single firm can control multiple stations in one market.  And the station chains have consolidated, as restrictions on how much national audience they could cover have been relaxed.- 

The Los Angeles Times reports on this story, "Inside the crisis facing local TV news: Layoffs, consolidation and shrinking ratings."

  • Longtime local TV anchors, including KTLA’s Mark Kriski and others, are being laid off as parent company Nexstar Media Group cuts staff across its stations nationwide. 
  • Streaming now accounts for half of all viewing, pulling ad dollars and audiences away from traditional TV and forcing stations to cut costs. 
  • TV station owners are pushing to consolidate and investing in cheaper streaming news formats to adapt to changing viewer habits.
And:
Broadcast TV stations have long had the highest profit margins in the media business. But the financial model that sustained that growth has steadily eroded in recent years. Streaming — which now accounts for more than 40% of all viewing — has pulled consumers away from traditional TV, putting pressure on outlets to control costs so they can remain financially viable.

More than 2,000 TV stations nationwide still provide a vital role in communities, delivering as much as 12 hours a day in programming, live sports and local news to every household in the U.S. But they are now faced with an aging audience that isn’t being replaced by younger viewers who prefer streaming platforms and social media.

“It used to be that people would grow into the news habits of their parents, and now they’re not,” said Andrew Heyward, a former president of CBS News who now advises local TV stations. “The next generation of consumers are never going to run home to watch the newscast at 5, 6, 10 or 11.”

 As an advocate, you used to be able to get historic preservation (Uline Arena) and bike matters (planning sessions when I ran a bike and ped plan process in Baltimore County) on television and in community newspapers.  Now, in most places, community newspapers are gone, the "big" Metropolitan paper is a ghost, and television news broadcasts are being trimmed back.

It's a bad time for mass communication.

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Friday, March 13, 2026

Davis Kennedy, a one time force in local community newspapers, dies at 87

-- "Davis Kennedy, former publisher who pioneered growth of Gazette papers, dies at 87," Baltimore Banner

Most recently, Davis ran the Current newspapers, which published a number of free weekly newspapers, with neighborhood-focused editions in Northwest DC, with Georgetown Current as the flagship, and for awhile a Capitol Hill Current.

I had a bunch of op eds in some of the papers.  Community newspapers at this scale were great at covering the kind of "minutiae" that would never make the big paper unless there was a scandal.  Community council meetings, more detailed coverage of City Council and Executive Branch dealings related to the neighborhood, real estate matters, business openings, and lots of ads. 

Sub-city newspapers rely on independent businesses as primary advertisers, car dealers, and at one time had a strong revenue base in classified ads.

With the shift of print media to online, and the decline of local businesses, sub-city newspaper revenues dried up, and the Current Newspapers shut down in 2019 ("DC's community newspaper weekly, the Northwest Current, goes out of business").

From the Post article:

Former managing editor Chris Kain recalls the early 2000s as boom times for the Current, with page counts reaching as high as 56 for standard issues and 84 for special editions.

Until the coverage of that, I didn't know he was responsible for the expansion of the Gazette Newspapers, which covered a good swath of Maryland with sub-county editions for Frederick, Carroll, Montgomery and Prince George's Counties--and the Fairfax County Times.

But it began with his purchase of the Gaithersburg Gazette in 1981.

When I lived briefly in PG County, I read it, and they had a newspaper box at Takoma Station--in DC but on the border with Montgomery County--so I read that edition too.  I tried to read multiple editions.

They also published an official paper intended for legal notices for Maryland State Government, distributed and giving them presence in Annapolis.  

There was a vending box outside Tastee Diner in Silver Spring, and I happened to pick up a copy in 2003 when they published a masterful investigative impact on Prince George's County crime and housing, "Shouldering the Burden," a response to the downsizing of DC's public housing complexes through the HOPEVI federal housing reconstruction program, which added market rate units at the expense of subsidized units.

The Washington Post acquired them, and as advertising dried up--the papers were distributed for free also--they figured they'd save money to use elsewhere by shutting them down in 2015.  But there was no new money available, the papers ran based on the revenue collected for advertising.  

These shut down in 2015, before Current Newspapers. These free weeklies marketed as a group to get advertising inserts from big box stores.  Kennedy said when the Gazette Newspapers shut down, advertisers stopped their insert program, because they wanted the multi-county coverage, not just DC.  He said this was the final financial blow to the Current, leading to the shutdown four years later.

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Friday, January 09, 2026

Washington City Paper community media project

The Washington City Paper, the area's alternative weekly, stopped publishing in print in 2022 ("Staff And Locals React To End Of Washington City Paper Print Edition," DCist), but is still active online.  

(Many alternative papers across the country have shut down post covid, because during covid they weren't able to get entertainment-related advertising because people couldn't go out, and the financial impact was too much.)

Working with Humanities DC, the WCP sponsors a Community Journalism Program, "a 14-week course that teaches D.C. residents journalistic knowledge and skills as they report a local story."  Finished stories are often run by the "paper" albeit online. Applications are due Sunday, Jan. 11.

I think this is a great program that more newspapers, "regular ones" and alternative weeklies, should do.

I never had an article run in the WCP, but I did get a few letters to the editor published, and was mentioned from time to time in articles about historic preservation and transportation.

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I consider the Washington City Paper one of my key teachers about urbanism and city governance.  When I first moved to the city in 1987, they ran a column by Mark Jenkins and Bill Rice called "Cityscapes," about urban architecture and urbanism.  I read it avidly (along with the "Shaping the City" column in the Washington Post, "Death of former Washington Post columnist Roger Lewis").

A Jenkins cover story in December 1987 was the first time I read about the concept of the "Purple Line" circumferential transit line--at the time it was proposed it was to be heavy rail--connecting all the end points of the various legs of the Metrorail lines--running through suburban Maryland and Virginia.

The current Purple Line under construction is light rail, not heavy rail, and will serve a small part of the proposed full line, from Bethesda in Montgomery County to New Carrollton in Prince George's County.

The paper ran so many cover stories that taught me so much about local politics.  I can think of stories on the schools, maintenance versus capital funding for key systems in DC buildings like heating and cooling systems, how the "Growth Machine" manipulated the zoning process, crony capitalism and using nonprofits as personal piggybanks by John Ray, a former Councilmember and his cronies, etc.

Plus the Loose Lips weekly column about the ins and outs of DC Government.

Note that much of the City Paper has been digitized and is available within the Washingtonia Collection on local history at the MLK Library in Downtown CD.

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The paper was bought a few years ago by local private equity maven Mark Ein as a community spirited venture ("Mark Ein Talks About Buying Washington City Paper," ) without a focus on profits.  

Ein, who will not have a daily role at the paper, is the paper’s fifth owner in the last decade and has taken steps to make his stewardship of the long-troubled weekly* as benevolent as possible.

... In fact, Ein counts City Paper as one of what he calls his “community investments,” not his “day job, for-profit” investments. That said, he plans to assemble a team that can help the paper solve the revenue shortfalls caused by collapses in classified and display advertising. Untethered optimism, I note to him, has been a problem with some of City Paper‘s recent owners. “We’re all going into this with our eyes wide open,” he says. All his advisers “have a lot of ideas about alternative revenue sources. We’re not expecting it to be profitable in the short term.”

The dude is rich.  So to me, rather than get all the messages on articles about donations, I wonder why he can't put a little more money in.  Although I'm glad the media outlet still exists.

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Another media tragedy: The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette is shutting down

 So reports the Philadelphia Inquirer.

I wrote to the Heinz Endowment, and the PBS and NPR affiliates in Pittsburgh, suggesting that the work together to acquire and continue to operate the paper.

Comparable to how WBEZ-FM/NPR took over the Chicago Sun-Times ("Chicago Public Media Announces Its Acquisition of the Chicago Sun-Times,").

And when the Kresge Foundation led a funding round during the City of Detroit's bankruptcy, to keep the collections of the city museum, the Detroit Institute of Arts, intact ("Charities commit $330m to help save Detroit's art from being sold in bailout," Guardian).

The Kresge initiative was necessary because the DIA had never been incorporated as an organization separate from the City of Detroit.  

Instead, the Museum was a department/agency of the city, like the police department.  So its assets were at play during the bankruptcy.

Also a couple weeks ago, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution stopped printing a paper (the Newark Star-Ledger did this a year ago or so), going to online only.

The book “News Hole: The Demise of Local Journalism and Political Engagement, discusses how enhancing local news media strengthens public involvement.

Newspapers are key to awareness about local happenings and are a key element in whether or not people participate in local civic affairs.  

In my opinion, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette is a very good local paper, with strong coverage on land use issues, the arts, public health, etc. I try to go through the back file of local news articles at least once/month.

And I frequently write entries in response to PPG articles such as:

-- "Wednesday, October 19, 2022 It's not the age of the housing stock, but the ability of property owners to maintain it: Disinvestment in Pittsburgh," 2022
-- "Big Ideas for a Better Pittsburgh | and a point about world class cities," 2025
-- "Pittsburgh developer backs down on opposition to ticket fee for concerts, to be used for area improvements," 2023
-- "NBA All Star Game in Salt Lake, economic development hype | Pittsburgh Post-Gazette on the Pirates baseball team economics," 2023

Newspapers and community engagement

-- "How Local Newspapers Support Public Awareness and Community Engagement," Hornet Newspaper
-- Civic Engagement Strongly Tied to Local News Habits, Pew Research Center
-- "Rebuilding local news fosters civic engagement," American Journalism Project

According to the Hornet, newspapers:

  • Provide access to information
  • Hold public officials and corporations accountable
  • Provide a voice for the local community
  • Strengthen community identity
  • Improve community life by fostering participation
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The recent history of the paper is interesting.  It's owned by a small company, Block Communications, with papers in Toledo and Pittsburgh.  I think the original Block used to be an agent for the Hearst Newspapers Group back in the day, buying newspapers.

Pittsburgh used to have two papers, the Press owned by E.W. Scripps, and the PPG.  They ran together on a joint operating group basis, where the Press ran the business operations and printing, with two separate editorial staffs.  But then there was a strike in 1992.

Scripps decided to scrap their paper.   And Block Communications took over the business operations and kept the paper running.

The paper was seen as liberal, but then John Block took over as publisher and he is conservative.  This created problems and the newspaper has been under a strike by journalists for more than a year ("A newsroom tirade and a controversial hire: tension rises at Pittsburgh newspaper," CNN, 2019, "The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette says it will close. Race and politics have been tearing it apart for years," MediaNation).

Despite its recent turmoil, they've been putting out a quality, informative product.

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Tuesday, February 04, 2025

New Jersey loses largest published newspaper: Newark Star-Ledger

The last edition ("A tribute to The Star-Ledger’s legacy in print").

Advance Publications, a national chain of newspapers that likely was the first to reduce the number of issues published per week--in New Orleans at the Times-Picayune, which led to new competition from the Baton Rouge Advocate--yesterday stopped publication of the Newark Star-Ledger--once one of the largest circulation newspapers in the US and other publications elsewhere in New Jersey, and ceased publication of the Jersey (City) Journal entirely.

First newspapers lost critical advertising dollars as more businesses chained up and independent business declined.  Online sites like Craigslist took the classified advertising market.  And people started switching their news consumption to online sources, and stopped subscribing to local newspapers.  It didn't help that with declines in revenue came cutbacks in personnel and reduction in news coverage ("Here's why newspapers are reducing print days," Cardinal News, "Internet Crushes Traditional Media: From Print to Digital," Census).

The decision was announced at the end of October, and took effect February 2nd.

They will further the shift to digital, at NJ.com.  They claim they have more digital subscribers than print subscribers at the end, and they do publish quite a bit.

A couple of Gannett's New Jersey papers, including the Bergen Record, will still be publishing in print.  I wonder if they intend to expand their area of news coverage to more parts of the state? ("The Star-Ledger to cease publication of print newspapers in February").

NJ.com will still produce a facsimile of a printed Star-Ledger that digital subscribers can download or read online.  I don't know if this will extend to some of the others.

While digital publication is way better than nothing, it doesn't fully substitute for print.  Civic participation drops in places without newspapers ("How the disappearance of local news hurts civic engagement," PBS, "Local news has long provided a vital civic bond. Can we afford to let it disappear?," Harvard).

Newspaper issues of The Star-Ledger, The Times of Trenton, the South Jersey Times and The Express-Times of Easton, from 2014.  Mel Evans/AP Photo. "A Digital Future for New Jersey News"," Newsweek.

I know for me personally, it means that I find out less about local events like talks, those by community organizations, etc.  Digital sources do not substitute.

And when I travel, I like to read the local newspaper to find out what to do.  Increasingly, that's impossible.

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Wednesday, January 17, 2024

Newspaper acquisition as an element of a conservative agenda

 Nothing new here, really.  It's been an issue since the beginning of newspapers.  And sometimes there are progressives involved (like New York City's PM newspaper in the 1940s).

The Baltimore Sun has just been acquired by the Chairman of the Sinclair Media Group ("Baltimore Sun Media sold to Maryland business leader," Sun), which is a national chain of conservative oriented television changes where they "force" individual stations to carry particularly slanted conservative stories, and a conservative media show, Sheryl Atkisson ("Local television station news: Scripps WCPO in Cincinnati vs. Sinclair Broadcasting Corp." 2018).

He's already criticized the current paper ("New Baltimore Sun owner insults staff, says paper should mimic Fox45," Baltimore Banner).  The Baltimore Banner is an online media source, owned by Stewart Bainum, who created Choice Hotels and an assisted living group, and was an elected official.  He attempted to buy the paper a few years ago but was unsuccessful.

Like people before him who crashed and burned, he says that more local coverage will spur more subscriptions and interest.  The fact is with the Internet, printed newspaper subscriptions have dropped by 75%.  Combined with the decline in local and national advertising, printed newspapers are a shadow of what they once were.

The sale includes the Capital Gazette of Annapolis, as well as local weekly newspapers in Greater Baltimore.

2.  In Alabama, to shape discourse on utility regulation, Alabama Power has created a news service ("How an Alabama utility wields influence by financing news," Guardian).  As newspapers reduce staff, such articles are increasingly run as is, despite the potential slant.

Plus the company bought the Birmingham Times, a newspaper focused on the black community.  From the article:

What’s happening in Alabama is an example of how special interests have taken advantage of the diminishing reach and influence of shrinking mainstream newsrooms in the US. In their place have sprung up fake “pink slime” news sites operated by political interests; a utility that secretly created news outlets to attack its critics; and a Florida publisher who accepts payments for positive coverage. 

This investigation into power companies infiltrating local media follows Floodlight’s revelation earlier this month about how utilities wield influence among civil rights groups. 

In the last decade, nearly a dozen local reporters and editors were hired to staff the two Alabama news outlets. A Floodlight review of the content since the utility founded the Alabama News Center in 2015 shows it publishes overwhelmingly positive stories about the power company. 

Coverage of the utility by the Birmingham Times, which was funded with money from Alabama Power’s charitable arm the Alabama Power Foundation, consists of reprinted stories from the News Center and the utility’s own press releases.

When I worked at Center for Science in the Public Interest decades ago, it published two reports, Marketing Booze to Blacks and Marketing Disease to Hispanics, focused on how corporate advertising especially by tobacco and alcohol products companies in minority media was used to push an anti-health agenda.

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Separately, the Washington Post is cutting staff which disproportionately is affecting coverage of local news ("Introducing Out of Ink," Washington City Paper).  In the past few years, the paper eliminated the special zoned weekly local news sections ("One more blow against community media: Washington Post drops Thursday "county" news special sections," 2017) and shut down the independent from the paper suburban weekly chain it owned ("The ongoing tragedy of dying print media, the latest being community newspapers in Montgomery and Prince George's Counties, Maryland," 2015).

The paper continues to focus on online subscriptions, which is fine, but a national and international audience doesn't care much about regionally-relevant local news. Since online subscribers have shrunk during the Biden presidency, the paper is short of money.

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Thursday, February 16, 2023

Volunteer Expo, Asheville, North Carolina

With the decline in public media--newspapers and alternative weeklies especially, it's increasingly difficult for organizations to get the word out about volunteer opportunities.  

In Asheville ("Volunteer expo seeks to recruit help for over 65 local nonprofit organizations," WLOS-TV) the Junior League of Asheville just sponsored the fifth edition of its Annual Volunteer Expo.

The Hill Center on Capitol Hill in DC sponsors something similar, focused on the Capitol Hill neighborhood, but the room they hold it in is too small.  I suggested they move it to Eastern Market's North Hall, but they evinced zero interest.

In "Outline for a proposed Ward-focused (DC) Councilmember campaign platform and agenda" (2015), I suggested each city political district should sponsor a volunteer expo, based on the Hill Center effort, but of course, a city-wide event can be just as good.

More opportunities need to be provided to seed community involvement.

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Sunday, January 01, 2023

New Years Day Post #1: Solutions versus cruelty | Immigration

Border wall of containers ordered by Republican Governor of Arizona Dan Ducey.  Photo: Ivan Pierre Aguirre for the New York Times.

These days I'm pretty depressed about the state of the US, given the virulence of the divide between Republicans and Democrats and a failure to focus on improving the quality of life of US residents versus cruelty and performance.

There is no question that things are far different from the time when states were considered opportunities for innovation--laboratories of democracy.

The quality of life outcomes for states under Republican rule are decidedly negative (2022 Scorecard on State Health System Performance: How did states do during the COVID-19 pandemic?, Commonwealth Fund, "SUMMARY OF 23 QUALITY OF LIFE INDICATORS — ARE RED OR BLUE STATES BETTER?," Applied Sentience, "Blue states rank better than red in livability: What does that mean?," San Jose Mercury News).

Perhaps the easiest indicator to track is life expectancy.

And long tax revenue capture.  Generally red states get a lot more back in government spending than they pay out.  While blue states pay more and get less.  Red states are the "takers" ("Blue high-tax states fund red low-tax states," Associated Press).

Immigration.  I think one of the most important entries I've written in the past couple years is on "the border crisis" -- immigration -- which Republicans call an absolute crisis. 

 It's a policy issue where Republicans get to show their cruelty ("GOP governors with presidential ambitions court Trump's base with cruelty to migrants," NBC News).

But sadly to reduce the power of the opposition, federal government practices even under Democrats can be pretty cruel.  

It amazes me because the states on the southern border with Mexico--Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and California--drive a significant part of their economies through trade with Mexico.  California, being a Democrat run state, acts opposite of the other states.  

For example, Texas' biggest trading partner is Mexico and when they do things like tamper with border crossings it has significant negative effect ("Texas Ends Rule That Left Trucks Waiting For Hours To Cross Mexico Border," Forbes Magazine).  It's like Brexit leading to a significant drop in the UK's economic output, something every reputable economist said would happen.

But the Republican position on immigration makes it hard for Democrats, and makes it almost impossible for policy creativity.  Obama wasn't the greatest--he thought that being tough would get Republicans to work with him, but they didn't.  And Biden has some of the same issues.

The fact is that immigrants are an important source of labor, are motivated, increase the country's diversity, and add population in the face of lower birth rates.  Immigrants can be an important source of revitalization in otherwise shrinking cities etc.

End of Policing by Alex Vitale is pretty bracing.  Eight chapters discuss how we've criminalized certain social matters, and how police response to those problems mostly makes the outcomes worse.  

One chapter is on immigration (US Border Patrol, Immigration and Customs Enforcement), and in it he suggests that the US consider dealing with immigration comparable to the European Union, which has free movement within the EU's 27 countries.

I think it's brilliant.  

Creating an American Union of the US and Central and South American countries.  What it would require is creating a kind of "American Union" with Central and South American countries.  Where citizens of participating countries could register and could immigrate/work in other participating countries, and it wouldn't require citizenship in the "receiving" country.  I think it would also allow for temporary rather than permanent emigration.  People could come to the US, make some money, go back home.

At the same time, like the EU, the US should invest in creating "cohesion" programs of investment in Central and South American countries, so that conditions of poverty, political unrest, and negative public safety could be reversed, reducing the demand to emigrate.  

-- "A solution to the immigration crisis on the Southern border, but it's too politically fraught," 2021

And a Caribbean Union.  When I wrote the piece I was focused on the border with Mexico, but the same goes for the Caribbean.  It's unjust that Cuba emigrants have special privileges in coming to the US, and proximity to the US creates the same kinds of tensions for countries like Haiti, Dominican Republic, etc.

Puerto Rico.  And we really should give statehood to Puerto Rico, and create new programs of investment and energy independence for that colony.

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The Salt Lake Tribune, now a nonprofit, has an initiative called the "Innovation Lab," where they focus on longer term issues with an aim of producing articles offering "solutions."

I don't think the issue is the need for solutions so much as a willingness to be focused on solutions and action.

And big time innovation is outside of the mindset of most public officials and community stakeholders.

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Thursday, September 29, 2022

The impact of local radio news in England

 I have written a bunch about the chaining up of local radio and how the stations have been standardized with little in the way of local music or personalities.  I haven't mentioned this in terms of "local news" or "local content" in commercial radio, because it's been so long since the average station has offered any, with the exception of the usually one station in each market that maintains an exclusive focus on news, like WTOP in the Washington DC area.

Of course, public radio is an exception.

-- "Culture planning and radio: local music, local content vs. delivery nodes for a national network," 2019
-- "Thinking anew about supporting community radio," 2019
-- "Revisiting community radio," 2020
-- "Local music used to define communities: today with radio chains and national music distribution systems, not so much,"  2021
-- "Newspapers, community media, and knowledge about and engagement in civic affairs," 2020
-- "Newspapers as public media: WBEZ, radio, an NPR affiliate, to merge with the Chicago Sun-Times," 2022

The founder of Clear Channel Communications died recently ("L. Lowry Mays, builder of radio empire, dies at 87," Washington Post).  His entry into the radio business led to the massive consolidation in the industry that we see today.

This was complemented by massive deregulation of the industry and the elimination of much in the way of local content and news requirements. 

The UK is in financial meltdown because of bad fiscal decision making, and there, the BBC's local news radio outlets very occasionally get time with the UK Prime Minister.  This week there was one of those go-arounds, and apparently the local journalists got in some good questions that weren't mediated by deference ("Disastrous Liz Truss interviews show BBC local radio still packs a punch," Guardian).

From the article:

When it was announced that Liz Truss would break her silence on the collapse of the pound by appearing on local radio stations, there was mockery from some London-based journalists who felt she should have given an interview to a national news outlet.

Instead, it was BBC Leeds’s breakfast show that helped shift the price of UK government debt, as traders tuned in and realised the prime minister was sticking to her economic plan. As presenter Rima Ahmed put it to the prime minister: “Where’ve you been?”

Radio Kent put it in more stark terms, with one listener asking Truss: “Are you ashamed of what you have done? ...

The prime minister’s rapid-fire set of eight short interviews with BBC radio stations in an hour produced more news than often emerges from a single slot on Radio 4’s Today programme.

One benefit that local radio journalists have over reporters who deal with Downing Street on a daily basis is that they have no incentive to hold back. They are unlikely to have the prime minister on their programme as a regular guest and there is no need to have the complicated ongoing relationships with Downing Street communications staff. Instead they have the chance to ask a handful of questions and try to make their name – and represent the views of their listeners.

It's a pretty rare practice.  I can't imagine top elected officials in the US deigning to spend much time, even five minutes, with a local NPR affiliate, unscripted--leaving themselves vulnerable to real questioning.

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Professor Robert McChesney's writings focus on how to insert democracy into American media.

-- Telecommunications, Mass Media, & Democracy: The Battle for Control of U.S. Broadcasting, 1928-1935

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Monday, September 12, 2022

Louisville Courier-Journal mobile newsroom initiative and Salt Lake Tribune Innovations Lab

 I was reading an article about a failed shopping mall, and caught this at the end of the article:

MEET THE EDITORS NIGHT IN OKOLONA 

Courier Journal reporters are working from the South Central Regional Library weekdays in September as part of its mobile newsroom. We'd love to meet with you, and we invite you to meet the editors of The Courier Journal at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at Meet the Editors Night at the library, 7300 Jefferson Blvd.

As part of this program, they're spending three weeks basing their "mobile newsroom" in a library in the Okolona district in the outlying county section of Louisville-Jefferson County (the city and county merged in 2003).

From "Why The Courier Journal is bringing its newsroom to your neighborhood":

Here’s the truth.

Everyone doesn’t have the same access to The Courier Journal.

There are people who are more connected and more comfortable reaching out to a reporter or an editor. People who know someone on staff or share something in common with them or just know how to get our attention.

There also are certain communities that get a lot of news coverage, particularly those that are booming with development — new stores, restaurants or subdivisions. Other neighborhoods get little media attention. Residents there are less likely to contact The Courier Journal or feel a connection to our staff.

We want to change that. So we are bringing our newsroom to you.

Interesting.

A different kind of concept is by the Salt Lake Tribune, which has created the "Innovation Lab" to communicate about best practice ideas and approaches to problems in the community. 

I wouldn't argue that it's absolutely scintillating, but the SLT, which is now a nonprofit, does focus on serious issues that the Mormon Church owned paper, the Deseret News, does not, from police killings, to misuse of police information by Brigham Young University, to development issues, the Great Salt Lake, the water crisis and drought, etc.

The effect is hindered by the fact that they now only publish two print editions per week, but it is still great coverage.

... it's still very important.  I was reading an article about a Ponzi scheme in San Diego involving a woman named Gina Champion-Cain, and the story ("The Charismatic Developer and the Ponzi Scheme That Suckered San Diego") suggested that part of the reason that she got away with it for so long was that her rise was simultaneous to a severe downsizing of the local newspaper, the San Diego Union-Tribune, which included a reduction in investigative reporting.

Newspapers and similar media matter.

-- "One more blow against community media: Washington Post drops Thursday "county" news special sections," 2017
-- "DC's community newspaper weekly, the Northwest Current, goes out of business," 2019
-- "Staff And Locals React To End Of Washington City Paper Print Edition," DCist, 2022
-- "Newspapers as public media: WBEZ, radio, an NPR affiliate, to merge with the Chicago Sun-Times," 2022
-- "Newspapers, community media, and knowledge about and engagement in civic affairs," 2020

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Saturday, January 22, 2022

Newspapers as public media: WBEZ, radio, an NPR affiliate, to merge with the Chicago Sun-Times

Newspapers have been crushed by the Internet, the migration of classified advertising to Craigslist, the migration of display advertising to other venues, decline in subscriptions with the migration to online news gathering, reading, and social media, the rise of new digital advertising networks, etc.

The decline in newspaper readership has had a significant negative impact on civic life.

-- "Newspapers, community media, and knowledge about and engagement in civic affairs," 2020

In response, private equity has bought many newspapers, split off assets from newspapers like buildings and other property, television stations, etc., that once had helped support newspapers financially.  

Over the past 20 years, many newspapers, especially community newspapers, have shuttered or severely reduced their staffs and the number of articles they run, especially when it comes to local coverage.

The decline of newspaper media groups even hurt the ability of the Newseum news museum in DC to build its endowment, leading to (hopefully a somewhat temporary) demise ("What the Fall of the Newseum Says About News, and Museums," Bloomberg).

A number of metropolitan newspapers have reduced their publishing schedule to less than seven days.  A number of Advance Newspapers only publish three days/week.  In Salt Lake, the Deseret News and Tribune each moved to a weekend only edition, although the Tribune recently added a Wednesday edition, complemented by daily digital newspaper publication and expanded digital operations.  In New Orleans, such a reduction led to the eventual demise of the Times-Picayune in favor of a 7 day/week New Orleans edition of the Baton Rouge Advocate.

A number of digital only news reporting entities have been created in response to this decline.  Some are for profit, some are nonprofit.

Nonprofit options 

1.  For decades, the Tampa Bay Times (previously the St. Petersburg Times) has been owned by a nonprofit institute.  

2.  A few years ago, the Philadelphia Inquirer was acquired by a local group and then donated to the Lenfest Institute for Journalism.

3.  Recently, the Salt Lake Tribune converted from a for profit to a nonprofit.   

4.  A group of NPR stations acquired online for profit digital operations, such as DCist in DC, acquired by WAMU-FM, and Gothamist in NYC by WNYC-FM, adding them to their radio newsrooms.

5.  And now WBEZ-FM in Chicago is merging with the tabloid newspaper, the Chicago Sun-Times ("In Chicago, a public radio station comes to the rescue of the Sun-Times newspaper," Washington Post).

Many public television and public radio groups have redefined as "public media" or "community media" organizations, and in many communities like San Francisco or Salt Lake, the main public radio and PBS stations are often merged into one unified group.

Adding newspapers and digital newsrooms to the mix might be the next step, although running a newspaper, especially one that publishes every day is a lot more expensive and not so profitable, especially with massive declines in circulation.

The Sun-Times has struggled over the past decades and went through some hedge fund ownership debacles.  One thing that kept it going was the development of a suburban network of weekly and six daily newspapers, like the Southtown Economist.  But they were sold off to the Chicago Tribune a few years ago, making the enterprise financially weaker ("Sun-Times’ parent company sells suburban newspapers to Tribune," Sun-Times).

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Saturday, April 10, 2021

Orange County Register coronavirus tracker graphic is a great model

Showing the value of local media in communicating locally important information, the newspaper is focused on only the one county, but it's a big county in population, more than 3 million residents.

It's also a decent example, in the vein of the work on graphical illustration of information by Edward Tufte, showing the power of multimedia to communicate.



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Sunday, July 19, 2020

Newspapers, community media, and knowledge about and engagement in civic affairs

Newspaper image ad about the value of newspapers, Montana Standard, 7/22/1969
Newspaper image ad about the value of newspapers, Montana Standard, 7/22/1969.

A friend's mother died, and she spent a couple weeks cleaning out her house.  Among her finds were some newspaper sections and clippings relating to Apollo 11's landing on the moon, on July 20th, 1969--tomorrow will be the 51st anniversary.

When I look at old newspapers, usually I am equally interested in the ads as much, if not more than the articles.  Because back then, ads were often local (stores, opening of new real estate developments, etc.) and the ads provide a different way of accessing history.

(Although you can always usually find at least one particularly interesting article in any newspaper.)

The above ad was what was called an "image ad," in this case about the value of newspapers and a free press.  (Back in the day of mass media magazines like Time, Life, and the Saturday Evening Post, companies and trade associations frequently ran such ads.)

I thought it was particularly poignant given all the press coverage about Ghosting the News: Local Journalism and the Crisis of American Democracy, the new book by Margaret Sullivan, the media columnist for the Washington Post.

Most of her career was spent at the Buffalo News, a once large metropolitan newspaper that boasted a circulation of over 300,000.  She was the editor in chief of the paper for almost two decades.

I have a bunch of entries about the value of media and civic engagement and knowledge about civic affairs.

-- "One more blow against community media: Washington Post drops Thursday "county" news special sections," 2017
-- "The ongoing tragedy of dying print media, the latest being community newspapers in Montgomery and Prince George's Counties, Maryland," 2015
-- "Voting vs. civic participation | elections vs. governance," 2016
-- "Revisiting community radio," 2020
-- "End of the year articles: decline of local newspapers," 2019
-- "A brief comment on the connection between newspapers and civic affairs with the offer by a vulture hedge fund to purchase Gannett Newspapers," 2017
-- "Grassroots communications capability in the city," 2005
-- "Protest as Civic Engagement and the role of the media," 2007
-- "DC's community newspaper weekly, the Northwest Current, goes out of business," 2019

Within media, there is a big difference between television news, which is how a majority of people now get "their local news", and news from a newspaper -- although either is more likely to be via computer or phone.

Most communities used to have metropolitan newspapers serving the entire area, newspapers like the Chicago Tribune or Detroit Free Press, but they were complemented by smaller daily newspapers in outer areas of the region, like the Oakland Press and Royal Oak Tribune in Oakland County, Michigan and the Macomb Daily in Macomb County.

Of course, at one time these regions were usually served by at least two major metropolitan newspapers--the Buffalo News competed with the Buffalo Courier-Express, the Philadelphia Inquirer with the Philadelphia Bulletin, etc. and some bigger cities had more than two.

Often, the way this was done was that there was a morning paper, like the Washington Post or the Detroit Free Press, and another delivered in the afternoon, called the evening newspaper, like the Washington Star or the Detroit News.

The rise of two car households--before people took transit to and from work and often read the "evening newspaper" on the commute trip home, and television evening news broadcasts killed the afternoon newspaper.

(In the earlier part of the 20th century these areas typically had even more newspapers, but they consolidated consolidated over time.  E.g., Detroit had three newspapers, but the Detroit News bought the Detroit Times, Washington had four newspapers but the Post bought the Times-Herald, and this led the Star to purchase the Daily News.)

In turn even smaller community newspapers, published once or twice each week, such as the Troy Eccentric serving Troy, Michigan or the Redford Record, serving Redford Township and the nearby neighborhoods in Detroit, in Wayne County, served even smaller slices of a metropolitan area.

Community newspapers have even more problems than the big newspapers.  In many areas the big paper acquired these networks, although many remained independent.  But they are rapidly going out of business too.

Local television doesn't focus on the day-in, day-out coverage of local and state government actions, as much as it does on murders, gruesome car accidents, fires, and the weather.  It is said that one page of a newspaper provides more news than a 30 minute local tv broadcast.

One exception that I wrote about is WCPO-TV in Cincinnati, which has a digital news site that is superb.  But the company had its roots in newspapers, which influenced the development of this operation, which is more of a one-off flagship effort, rather than being ported to other television stations in the Scripps group.

-- "Local television station news: Scripps WCPO in Cincinnati vs. Sinclair Broadcasting Corp.," 2018

Note that some PBS stations in a couple big markets like Chicago and New York City do daily newscasts that are locally focused, and many PBS stations have weekly programs on area civic affairs as well as other area-focused informational programming (Outdoor Maryland, Direct Connection, This is Utah, etc.).

Public radio too is an increasing source of local news, complementing national radio programs like "Morning Edition."  And both PBS and NPR stations often have more extensive online news websites.

But especially in the last 10 years, but steadily since the invention of the web browser and as importantly, the development of digital advertising networks, first Craigslist, which decimated classified advertising revenues, and then the capture of the equivalent of display advertising by Google and Facebook, newspapers have crashed economically.  Advertising provided most of the revenue, and it has dried up.

There are other reasons for this too, in particular the chaining up of consumer facing businesses--not just retailers, but also banks, etc.--and the consolidation of these businesses within sectors.  For example, Macy's is the primary and only department store in many areas today, whereas before places had multiple firms all advertising in the local paper.  Most places don't have local banks, and they sure aren't giving away toasters to get your account, necessitating a newspaper ad.  Etc.

Newspapers haven't quite gone out of business, but they have significantly shed staff, become much smaller, and cover a lot less news, and in many smaller regions, the main newspaper no longer publishes a print edition every day, going down to maybe 3 days/week.  Many papers no longer have bureaus across a region or state, an office covering the state government, located in the state capital, etc.  (And many have shed foreign bureaus and Washington bureaus.)

Not only has the movement to the Internet changed media economics, at the same time, the explosion of online content, especially more entertainment-related, has led to a bifurcated environment, where many people no longer consume much in the way of local news, or because the Internet allows for easy consumption of media content from all over--the Guardian or Financial Times from the UK or the Toronto Globe and Mail from Canada, and the New York Times, Washington Post, and the Wall Street Journal in the US--"local" newspapers are losing out to national or international newspapers, for national and international news, and people just aren't consuming local news at all.

Besides the national- and international-ization of news sources, there is also the rise of digital native media, many of the nationally-oriented sources with a decidedly left or right bent, and many of these "sources" have limited fealty to facts, instead leading with ideology.

There has been an explosion of local news websites too, like Public Source in Greater Pittsburgh or DC Line in the DC area, often with philanthropic support.   Others that are supported by local advertising.  But it's hard to scale as well.

Oh, alternative weeklies have been crushed as well--a big source of revenue had been personal ads, which shifted to the web as well.  And many have gone out of business.

One of the pieces about Sullivan's book made a fascinating point as an example about the decline of local newspapers--in circulation and reach, relevance, and coverage--using the story of Representative Chris Collins, a Republican Congressman from the Buffalo area.  He was the first elected official in Congress to endorse Trump.

-- "Goodbye to the Hometown Paper," Washington Post

Later he was indicted for insider trading, and at first was going to resign, but then he decided to still run for reelection.  (He won, but after he was found guilty, he resigned.)  It turns out that most of the people in the congressional district didn't even know that Collins was indicted, and because of the lack of reach by local media, especially newspapers, Collins was successful in labeling it as "fake news."

The Washington Post subscription slogan for a long time was "if you don't get it, you don't get it" meaning you don't know what's going on.

While there an explosion in how much there is to know and what you can know, there is a simultaneous inward explosion in the reduction of people who care to know.

It's amazing that an elected official could get reelected because people don't even know he is indicted.

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Sunday, February 09, 2020

Revisiting "community radio"

-- "Culture planning and radio: local music, local content vs. delivery nodes for a national network," 2019

This piece outlined in England what has been happening in the US for the last few decades.

Consolidation of radio ownership. Over the past 35 years radio as an industry has shifted from a system of local ownership linked through radio affiliation agreements to an industry where a few station groups control the bulk of the stations across the country, especially in terms of listenership. (Latino-oriented radio is still an exception.

De-localization of radio. Radio, because it is a function of physics and the distance that waves can be propagated, typically was a local phenomenon, local stations with DJs familiar with the local community, with followings, etc.

But the creation of satellite radio (Sirius and XM which later merged), people could subscribe to music channels independent of a local connection.  Later, the ability to stream stations on the Internet as well as the ability to listen to music via YouTube and other applications like Pandora and Spotify furthered this trend.

This allowed for two different things:

(1) a focus on music as the formats and range of music played on traditional radio stations narrowed and homogenized, while satellite and Internet channels can offer narrow formats but marketed to the entire country as they are not limited the distance a normal radio wave can travel (+ big data allows for music recommendations based on what you've listened too, with the opportunity to be exposed to music you wouldn't have otherwise come across);

(2) delivery of top DJs/personalities nationally, independent of radio stations. This wasn't too different from before, where such personalities like Don Imus or Howard Stern were syndicated to stations across the country. But it did allow the personalities to take a greater proportion of the revenue stream they generated.

De-localization is even worse today, because a couple weeks ago, the massive radio station chain, iHeartRadio, fired large numbers of locally-situated station hosts (DJs) in favor of creating more automated formats and reducing the amount and availability of locally-focused content on seemingly locally-based radio stations ("iHeartMedia laid off hundreds of radio DJs. Is AI to blame," Washington Post).

What it comes down to is the classic labor vs. capital argument.  When music broadcasting can pretty much be automated, labor becomes comparatively expensive.

Community radio. The second piece discussed creating mechanisms for continued support of local or micro-radio.

I suggested that statewide public radio networks could open themselves up beyond being National Public Radio affiliates to support more grassroots radio efforts across a state, integrating such stations into a community radio network that is a mix of NPR and non-NPR stations.

-- "Thinking anew about supporting community radio," 2019

But I glossed over the difficulty of successfully maintaining "community radio" stations that are based in "the grassroots" as opposed to locally produced radio stations that are "much more professional," specifically National Public Radio stations, which tend to be affiliated with universities and similar kinds of institutions.

For example, a progressive oriented group of stations run by the Pacifica Foundation has had problems over the decades with tension between local supporters and the national organization in both DC (WPFW) and New York City (WBAI).

A couple of stories I've come across in the past few weeks illustrate this continued tension within local community-embedded radio stations, even without the presence of a national coordinating organization .

KOOP-FM, Austin, Texas.  A few weeks ago in the Austin America-Statesman ("Forged by fights and fires, KOOP Radio at 25 is stronger than ever") there was a story about the 25th anniversary of KOOP-FM, a thriving station that has had ups and downs, including surviving not just one fire, but a later arson touched off by a disgruntled volunteer who resented music he wanted to hear on the station wasn't broadcast.

WBGO-FM, Newark, New Jersey. The New York Times just wrote about WBGO in Newark ("Behind the Racial Uproar at One of the World's Best Jazz Sattions"), a "local" station intricately intertwined with the local Black community (comparable to the position of WPFW-FM in DC), and the intra-station tensions there.

It's a station that has been revived because of its ability to stream music via the Internet, but this has led to a perception of disconnection from the local community.  At the same time, more than 90% of the station's donations now come from outside the Newark area, where the station's terrestrial signal is broadcast.

Can satisfaction of the needs and preferences of both communities be satisfied? Should they?  But if the station was left to be completely reliant on the financial support of the local community, likely it would go under.

From the standpoint of social organization theory, it's an interesting example of the changes organizations go through as they mature, and professionalize (Katz and Kahn, Social Psychology of Organizations).

From the standpoint of the argument laid out in Strategic Marketing for Not for Profit Organizations (Lauffer), it's a dispute within the "throughput public" -- the input public provides resources, the throughput public does the work, the output public is to whom the organization's work and efforts are directed.

This tension between input, throughput, and output publics is something that I see especially in the political campaign process.

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Saturday, December 28, 2019

End of the year articles: decline of local newspapers


The Washington Post has an article about this, "Ghost papers and news deserts: Will America ever get its local news back?." The article features discussions with the CEOs of Gannett, now the nation's largest chain after a recent merger, McClatchy Newspapers, which goes in and out of bankruptcy, and Tribune Newspapers, which has gone through a lot of turmoil over the past 5 years.

From the article:
America lost a quarter of its journalists from 2008 to 2018, the vast majority of them covering local issues, according to University of North Carolina professor Penny Muse Abernathy. Newsrooms lost at least 3,800 jobs in 2019 alone.

She estimates the country has lost 2,100 newspapers since 2004, 70 of them dailies. She has begun referring to about 1,000 surviving titles as “ghost papers” because of their painfully thin staffs and reporting. She has dubbed places with few or no reporters as “news deserts.” “There is a dearth of local news at all levels,” she said. ...Tri bu

Although people still trust local media sources more than national ones, only 14 percent of the public is paying for local news, according to the Pew Research Center. If that number doesn’t rise, many newspapers and digital publishers will be unable to maintain the reporting they are doing now.

The answer sadly is "no."

As newspapers have been closing in response to a variety of economic conditions, academic researchers find negative impact on communities, as indicated in this journal article, "Dead Newspapers and Citizens’ Civic Engagement," published in Political Communication:
Using data from the 2008 and 2009 Current Population Survey (CPS) conducted by the United States Census Bureau, this article assesses the year-over-year change in the civic engagement of citizens in America’s largest metropolitan areas. Of special interest are Denver and Seattle, where the Rocky Mountain News and Seattle Post-Intelligencer closed during the intervening year. The data from the CPS indicate that civic engagement in Seattle and Denver dropped significantly from 2008 to 2009—a decline that is not consistently replicated over the same time period in other major American cities that did not lose a newspaper. The analysis suggests that this decline may plausibly be attributed to the newspaper closures in Seattle and Denver. This short-term negative effect is concerning, and whether it lasts warrants future attention.
Also see, "These Reporters Lost Their Jobs. Here Are the Stories They Couldn’t Tell.," New York Times.

PBS and NPR.  In some communities, local PBS and NPR stations have a pretty good online presence, and some locally-focused programming. For example, in Richmond, the local PBS station produces a program covering events in Virginia called "Currents." PBS SoCal has an array of excellent programs. Maryland Public Television runs series on farming and the outdoors. Many stations have current events shows. Some stations, often organized at the scale of a state, produce very good documentaries on local/state matters.

WCPO-TV's online news site.  The Scripps owned WCPO television station in Cincinnati has a superb online news presence, which I've written about ("Local television station news: Scripps WCPO in Cincinnati vs. Sinclair Broadcasting Corp.").

Weeklies and community newspapers.  And smaller newspapers, weeklies in some communities, and the community newspapers that report at the multi-neighborhood scale in cities, are succumbing too.

Alternative papers.  And alternative newspapers, like the Orange County Weekly (a spinoff of the LA Weekly). OC has over 3 million residents. Not having such a voice is a loss.  Two of my favorite papers, which covered revitalization matters in innovative ways, have been gone for awhile--Philadelphia City Paper and Baltimore City Paper.

Newspapers publishing fewer days.  And less frequent publication. I didn't realize that the Pittburgh Post-Gazette is now printing papers only three days/week ("Pittsburgh's storied newspaper has become a chaotic circus," Post).

The Miami Herald has announced it will stop publishing a Saturday edition.  That day is typically the smallest paper and the least read.  When I was high school aged, we used to vacation in Ontario, and at that time, most Canadian newspapers didn't publish on Sundays (there was a law forbidding it, but it changed), so that the Saturday paper was the big paper equivalent to the US Sunday paper, and people probably read it over both Saturday and Sunday.

I always thought that'd be a workable way to reduce costs.  The Washington Post only distributes its regular Saturday paper to subscribers.  On the newsstands, an early Sunday edition is distributed on Saturday, priced at the cost of the Sunday paper.

Nonprofit newspapers and reporting. This year, the Salt Lake Tribune has shifted to nonprofit status, the nation's first such example.

Online news websites.  Over the past 15 years, there have been many for profit and nonprofit online news websites created.  The locally focused sites tend to be created in part by journalists who've been laid off from traditional media -- not just newspapers, but magazines, radio and tv too.

But without an advertising base, it's hard for such sites to survive.  And in the online arena, it's ended up that the big amalgamators, in particular Google and Facebook, have captured much of the advertising revenue, as they operate at the scale of the nation, and in many respects you need such large numbers to generate the number of "impressions" necessary to make advertising worthwhile.

Business newspapers as a counter trend.  One interesting counter trend is the relative success of locally focused business weeklies. Advance Newspapers owns the biggest group, including publications in Baltimore, DC, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Seattle, Minneapolis, etc. Crain's, a magazine publisher, owns successful business weeklies in Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, and New York City and a fascinating weekly publication on state and local politics, City and State, in New York.

But it's in the interest of business to know what's going on, and to pay for information.

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Tuesday, August 06, 2019

Not necessarily a good thing: GateHouse Media Acquires Gannett In $1.4 Billion Merger Deal

Say what you will about Gannett Newspapers, which like other newspaper companies, has cut back on staff severely, reducing the number of stories published, reducing local news coverage, etc., the reality is that most of their newspapers are still allowed to do some investigative reporting, and over the past few years I've noticed many important stories published by papers throughout the chain.

This extends to USA Today, which has published many important articles on a variety of topics, from treatment of workers at the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach to cheating on school assessment tests in Washington, DC -- where they scooped the local newspaper, the Washington Post.

OTOH, Gatehouse Media isn't known for investing in enterprise and investigative journalism.  They are known for monetizing assets and reducing staff.

Given how important newspapers have been historically to civic involvement and engagement, this is a worrisome development.

Not that newspapers aren't on the decline anyway.

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Friday, July 12, 2019

It'd be nice if tv stations had "transportation beats" rather than "traffic beats"

Granted outside of major cities, and even within most metropolitan areas, most trips are made by car (complemented by walking), city mobility involves more than just cars, and includes pedestrians, bicyclists, transit users, freight transportation by truck and rail, delivery, taxi and ride hailing services, etc.

Although, since advertising for automobiles comprises a major share of the ad revenue for tv station (except during election years if the station is located in an area of political competition), it's not a surprise that television stations tend to favor automobility when it comes to stories about transportation.


KIVI-TV anchor Frankie Katafias uses the Waze app from Google Inc. to show viewers of traffic issues during a recent broadcast.

BoiseDev reports ("With Valley traffic increasing, TV station puts more resources into reporting") that Boise, Idaho television station KIVI has added a traffic beat.

But I know (although it seems somewhat ridiculous) that there is planning or at least talk underway in the metropolitan area concerning light rail and biking, walking, transit, and urban design matters are big issues in the city proper especially in relation to the large university campus of Boise State.

But most tv reporting on transportation tends to be auto-centric.

There ought to be a way for the industry to put resources into changing this.
Yarn bombing a bicycle rack in Boise, Idaho
Yarn bombing of a bicycle rack in Boise.

Robert Thomson, the now retired "Dr. Gridlock" columnist for the Washington Post said in a presentation that some of the highest read articles on the Post website are transit and transportation related, especially about the area Metrorail subway system, so he believed that the paper would continue to pour resources into that coverage, even as the paper cuts "local issue" coverage as it shifts resources to the online newspaper, which tends to draw more visits from outside the region.

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Similarly, I've argued that transit systems should create "transit reporter" positions, similar to the traffic reporting on radio stations, about transit, delays, etc.

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Thursday, July 11, 2019

The Untold Story Behind Southern California’s Aerospace Industry; BLUE SKY METROPOLIS Premieres July 14 on KCET

In the vein of writing about how regional history needs to be explained and documented in part through "film," and how a number of PBS stations produce such programming ("Columbia's Promise documentary on WMPT as another example of the importance of public television"), KCET-TV/Public Media Group of Southern California has produced such a series on the history of the aerospace industry in Southern California.

Broadcast of the four-part series starts this Sunday.

From the press release:
BLUE SKY METROPOLIS is the untold story of how aerospace was central to the growth of California and its emergence as an economic power. The documentary miniseries focuses on the people behind the aerospace movement and will feature many of the current major players in the aerospace industry in California, which is the hub of modern day aerospace engineering.  
The aerospace century will unfold through the lives and words of the men and women who created it: John Northrop, Glenn Martin, Donald Douglas, Amelia Earhart, Howard Hughes, Walt Disney and Wernher Von Braun.

The Aerospace Century begins in 1910 with the Los Angeles International Air Meet - only the second public showcase of powered flight in the world. The series chronicles the epic mobilization during World War II - when two million workers assembled 300,000 aircraft. It traces the Cold War emergence of the “military-industrial complex” as a nation grappled with the threat of nuclear annihilation. Stories play out via radio recordings, newsreels, industrial films, and oral history excerpts.  
More than 60 people were interviewed for the series including writers, historians, corporate executives, members of the armed forces, astronauts, scientists, engineers and even the current Mayor of Los Angeles, Eric Garcetti. The series visits iconic locations representing the industry’s past, present and future - from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and Griffith Observatory to Virgin Orbit, SpaceX and Relativity, a recent start-up founded by twenty-somethings who build rockets with 3-D printers.

Episodes of BLUE SKY METROPOLIS will be telecast as follows on KCET (subject to change*):

“WINGS: Aviation Takes Flight in Early Los Angeles” – Sun., July 14 at 8 p.m.

Aviation takes flight in early Los Angeles, becoming an industry of dreamers, risk takers and entrepreneurs. The region is America’s “arsenal of democracy” during World War II, as two million workers build 300,000 aircraft. Critics see an unhealthy alliance developing between the federal government and aircraft manufacturers.

“THE BIG CHILL: The Cold War Fuels Business and Anxiety” – Sun., July 21 at 8 p.m.

The Cold War and Pentagon dollars fuels the explosive growth of modern Los Angeles and creates the military-industrial-complex. Entire suburbs are built in record time to house defense industry workers, but covenants restrict non-white races from living there. Fear of nuclear annihilation spawns a new genre for Hollywood as ‘science fiction’ movies become a box office goldmine.

“A SPACE ODYSSEY: Southern California Spearheads Mankind’s Greatest Achievement” – Sun., July 28 at 8 p.m.

The triumphant and tragic Space Race unfolds in first-hand accounts of those who pioneered the technology and built the hardware that made possible mankind’s greatest achievement. Meanwhile, the military-industrial-complex expands unchecked.

“BACK TO THE FUTURE: A New Space Age Dawns in Southern California” – Sun., Aug. 4 at 8 p.m.

The end of the Cold War brings massive layoffs but tech billionaires choose Southern California to launch their space companies. Though committed to the “democratization” of space, SpaceX and Virgin Orbit include the Pentagon as a major customer.
Viewable outside of Southern California.  Following over-the-air broadcast, each episode will stream on the free KCET app (available on Roku and Apple TV), the PBS Video app (available on Roku, Apple TV, Amazon Fire TV, the App Store and Google Play), as well as on the PBS SoCal YouTube channel, and on the KCET-TV and PBS SoCal websites.


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