In much of the country local news has collapsed, threatening civic pride and a sense of community for countless towns and cities. This dramatic change has also deepened America's divides.
As our guest, journalist and public policy researcher Anna Brugmann explains in this episode, "the internet disrupted the local journalism model". Newspaper advertising revenue fell 80% since 2000. Thousands of local and regional publications closed. Most surviving newsrooms faced drastic cutbacks. Coverage of all kinds of local events— from city hall, school board meetings and football games to local businesses and zoning decisions — disappeared.
First, Craigslist displaced print-based classified ads. Then Google, Facebook and other online firms became the main source of consumer advertising. We discuss the impact on local journalism. In recent decades, the news we read and listen to has largely shifted from local reporting to often highly polarizing national opinion journalism.
In the first of two episodes on the changing face of the news media, we look at the retreat of local journalism and discuss solutions. These include non-profit media and changes in for-profit business models. Today, many newspapers get more revenue from subscriptions and fundraising drives than from advertising. We ask: how sustainable are these initiatives?
Anna Brugmann is policy director for the advocacy organization, Rebuild Local News. According to her group, since 2004, as the U.S. population has grown, the number of newsroom employees has dropped by 57%.
"By almost every metric by which you measure a healthy community and a healthy democracy, the trends are in the wrong direction when local news leaves," says Anna. "In the past twenty years more than two thousands newspapers have closed in The United States."
Recommendation: Jim is listening to a lot of podcasts since he unplugged his TV and stopped watching broadcast and cable news. Among his current favorite podcasts is "The Reeducation With Eli Lake". The show "challenges the common narratives the mainstream media and others push".
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Better Policing — Not Posturing: Nekima Levy Armstrong
Stopping the Next Pandemic. Alina Chan (Part Two)
Did COVID-19 Come From a Lab? Alina Chan (Part One)
Understanding Autism: "We're Not Broken." Eric Garcia
Social Media: Menace or Blessing? Robby Soave
Climate: Changing the Conversation. Katharine Hayhoe
Together Again. Cultivating Collaboration: Deb Mashek
The Furore Over Critical Race Theory: "Banished" Podcast
The Way Out. Overcoming Polarization. Peter Coleman
Scary Smart. The Future of Artificial Intelligence. Mo Gawdat
Taming Big Tech. How We Can Reboot. Jeremy Weinstein and Mehran Sahami
Wildlife! When Nature Hits Back: Mary Roach
9/11 Attacks: Myths, Memories, Conspiracy Theories
Hey, Journalists. Does the Public Trust You? Joy Mayer
American Isolationism and the Fall of Afghanistan. Charles Kupchan
Identity Politics: Dignity and Resentment. Francis Fukuyama
#315 Living Better With COVID: 6 Fixes. Hosts Jim and Richard
Reading is Vital for Democracy: Joseph Luzzi
Fix More, Waste Less. Right to Repair. Sandra Goldmark
Defending The Constitution of Knowledge: Jonathan Rauch
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