Archive for the ‘Newspapers’ Category

Breaking news

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

This morning Arlen Specter, Pennsylvania’s Republican-turned-Democrat Senator, hosted a town hall meeting on healthcare at the campus where I work. I read about it in the local newspaper over my morning coffee. Later in the morning, I wondered how many people showed up for the meeting and whether the discourse was civil. The meeting was barely over and yet the newspaper already had a story about it – and I can expect a more thorough story in the morning. This kind of coverage was not readily available anywhere else.

The U.S. Newspaper Industry in Transition, a Congressional Research Service report, outlines the rise and fall of the newspaper industry and its future prospects, and investigates the effects of government assistance to the industry. [via Docuticker]

It is clear that the news industry is in a state of change, and that the current model is not the future model. I don’t know whether the government should intervene to help – having government help its own watchdog is problematic – but I do hope that citizens take notice. If the newspapers disappear, where will you get your local news from?

A new life for newspaper boxes

Monday, June 1st, 2009

I really hope the printed newspaper sticks around. But if it doesn’t, here’s a new use for the empty newspaper boxes that may soon line our city streets.

Your local newspaper: A dying institution?

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

You think books and libraries have it bad? Take a look at the state of our nation’s local newspapers.

Newspapers have always been a big part of my life. Wherever my family lived, we always got a local paper, and I still do. My father and husband were both newspaper reporters for a time, and I do some freelancing for my local paper now. I am an anomaly in my generation, and a complete weirdo to younger generations. (I know young people are getting their news from the internet, but I still don’t know what they line their birdcages and compost bins with, or how they pack fragile items, or quickly dry out their wet sneakers.)

Some would say we don’t need newspapers. We can get a lot of news from other sources. Citizen journalists, bloggers, and even libraries can fill some traditional newspaper roles.

I think there is a reason the founding fathers insisted on a free press, and it wasn’t just because blogging hadn’t been invented yet. We don’t just need newspapers for our daily Sudoku fix or to line our birdcages with – we need strong, independent, and diverse media.

Who else, besides a free press, is going to do investigative journalism? (as Leonard Pitts, Jr. asks in his column).

What else will force us to look outside our own worldview? (as Nicholas Kristof asks in his column).

It’s only preliminary, but a study conducted by scholars at Princeton showed that newspapers promote political and civic engagement.

Clearly, newspapers–like libraries–need to make some changes. They need to be where their readers are (I’m following my local paper on Facebook and Twitter). They need to become more interactive (my local paper has started publishing comments received via Twitter on the opinion page). They need to focus on their specialty (usually, their local community). They need to find new ways of supporting themselves. I just hope it’s not too late.