It's been three-and-a-half years since the Guelph Mercury last published, but for many people in our community, the loss feels as fresh today as it did on January 30, 2016. What a community looks like without a daily paper, and how it gets its news without that baseline has been a frequent topic of discussion, and it was again last week at the Guelph Civic Museum.
The Museum has two exhibits on now called “B&W and Read All Over" and “The Dailies: Front Pages & Frontispieces.” The former is about the Mercury itself, and the later reveals how the Mercury contextualized national and global events for local readers. For decades newspapers have provided this important context for our lives, but what do we do in a world with fewer and fewer newspapers?
This question, and many, many more, was put to a panel of local experts last Wednesday at the Guelph Civic Museum, and Guelph Politico's Adam A. Donaldson was one of them. Along with former Mercury and GuelphToday.com reporter Rob O’Flanagan, senior research associate at the Centre for International Governance Innovation and former Mercury journalist Stephanie MacLellan, Waterloo Region Record photojournalist Mathew McCarthy, graphic novelist and cartoonist Seth, there was a conversation about "Newspapers Past, Present and Future?” Former Guelph Mercury managing editor Phil Andrews moderated.
This week's podcast is the some 90-minute discussion that flowed from that question. The panel covered a wide variety of topics including what we lose with the closure of newspaper offices, the effect of losing community newspapers on our discourse and on our democracy, and what the future of local journalism might look like and how we’re going to pay for it.
So let's talk about the past, present and future of local media on this week's edition of the Guelph Politicast!
“B&W and Read All Over“ and “The Dailies: Front Pages & Frontispieces” can be found at the Guelph Civic Museum during business hours - Tuesday to Sunday from 10 am to 5 pm - from now until September.
The host for the Guelph Politicast is Podbean. Find more episodes of the Politicast here, or download them on your favourite podcast app at iTunes, Stitcher, Google Play, and Spotify.
Also, when you subscribe to the Guelph Politicast channel and you will also get an episode of Open Sources Guelph every Monday, and an episode of End Credits every Friday.
End Credits #281 - January 25, 2023 (The Menu)
GUELPH POLITICAST #358 - The State of the City, A Year Ago
Open Sources Guelph #410 - January 19, 2023
End Credits #280 - January 18, 2023 (White Noise)
GUELPH POLITICAST #357 – The New Kids on the Block Part 2
Open Sources Guelph #409 - January 12, 2023
End Credits #279 - January 11, 2023 (Hollywood Stories)
GUELPH POLITICAST #356 – The New Kids on the Block Part 1
Open Sources Guelph #408 - January 5, 2023
End Credits #278 - January 4, 2023 (Animation Domination)
GUELPH POLITICAST #355 - ...The Rest of the Year at City Council
Open Sources Guelph. #407 - December 29, 2022
End Credits #277 - December 28, 2021 (Top 5 of 2022)
GUELPH POLITICAST #354 – 2022 Year in Review
Open Sources Guelph #406 - December 22, 2022
End Credits Holiday Special - December 21, 2022
GUELPH POLITICAST #353 – Christmas With Lloyd
Open Sources Guelph #405 - December 15, 2022
End Credits #276 - December 14, 2022 (Bros)
GUELPH POLITICAST #352 - The Long Arms of the Roe Decision
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