Greg Little has been a journalist since his first efforts at a small newspaper while he attended junior high school. His career has spanned five decades, winning a number of awards for reporting that helped an Indian reservation in Montana stop violent crime to stopping illegal dumping of sewage sludge in Tennessee. He has worked for large companies and family owners and spent time teaching journalism. Today he currently lives in Mariposa, California, with his wife, Nicole where they own the Mariposa Gazette, the oldest continually published weekly newspaper in the state of California.
Greg recently published a book called “-30- Why Small-Town American Print Journalism is Anything But Dead,” a book he describes as an “outline on how the road of journalism can sometimes be bumpy. But along the way, the business of small-town journalism can also be rewarding.” The book also speaks to why local journalism is so important in America and why it must survive. Little gives real-world advice to up and coming journalists on how they can pursue a rewarding career that can make a big difference in the communities they serve.
In this episode of “E&P Reports,” Publisher Mike Blinder speaks with Greg Little about why he wrote the book, his opinions on the future of community journalism, and what advice he would give any budding journalist who wishes to enter the industry.
Related Links:
“-30- Why Small-Town American Print Journalism is Anything But Dead” on Amazon.com: https://amzn.to/3xv5CG6
Mariposa (CA) Gazette: https://www.mariposagazette.com
140 Meet Francesca Chambers, USA Today’s new White House Correspondent
139 Exploring two centuries of “Clash” between presidents and the press
138 The trilingual La Gaceta: News, politics and opinion, all rolled into one.
137 Merger of News Media Alliance (NMA) and The Association of Magazine Media (MPA) is a go!
136 Stewart Bainum’s journey to launch the Baltimore Banner
135 Deep-fake videos make people doubt what they see with their own eyes
134 Latest Borrell study shows OTT on the rise surpassing search in 3-years.
133 ARPA Funding gives 150 Businesses Access to Advertise with the R-J
132 Meet Ben August, the new owner of NYC’s voice of labor, The Chief.
131 This 108-year-old Alaskan newspaper is free for the taking.
130 News vets exit the daily to start a growing nonprofit
129 Florida's public notice reversal. A panel discussion
128 Florida reverses recently approved legislation requiring public notices on local newspapers
127 One-on-one with columnist Rex Huppke, as war breaks out during his 1st week at USA Today
126 Getting to know the Military Veterans in Journalism
125 100-percent sponsored content. Jed Williams & Dave Arkin’s Check Out DFW
124 Why we need and how to achieve diversity, equity and inclusion
123 When a Texas daily folds, a weekly tabloid explodes.
122 News industry advocates appeal to Congress to pass safe-harbor bill
121 A frank chat with news publishing technology veteran Kurt Jackson
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Jim & Bill (It‘s Another Day)
HauntingLive
Dr. Paul’s Worldviews
The Ben Shapiro Show
Morning Wire