‘Give journalism a fighting chance’
>> Thursday, August 6, 2020
BEHIND THE SCENES
Alfred P. Dizon
The
“old school” newspaper industry not only in the country but worldwide maybe
fighting for its life, but the entry of the internet has created interesting times
for newspapers.
The internet has
resulted to decline in newspaper advertising revenues as people can now find
any kind of information online.
In the Philippines, a
lot of newspapers have already ceased operations. But there are still areas
like the Cordillera and Northern Luzon which have a demand for it.
Constituents, particularly the Baby Boomer generation find comfort in holding
and reading rewspapers they buy from their favorite newsstands.
In this age of fake
news, they find reading the hard copy more credible.
Be that as it may, bullish
newspaper owners are now turning to the internet as a “brave new world.”
The entry of the
internet, for newspapers -- is actually a promising arena as online publishing
enables them to reach a wider worldwide audience.
Advertisers can actually
benefit more from newspapers as they offer wider readership – aside from the
hard copy, their ads get read in online newspaper editions.
The game nowadays is
what advertising gurus say leveraging. Newspaper are learning how to adapt to
this, so don’t expect the newspaper industry to give in and cease operations.
People demand
information. They want governments accountable to the people. Newspapers and
other forms of media provide needed information for check and balance. That is
why the press or the media is called the Fourth Estate.
When workers and
officials of government – the executive, legislative and judiciary are perceived as not doing
their desired role in governance, the Fourth Estate (wherein newspapers are
part) comes in. Governments worldwide have collapsed because of the Fourth
Estate.
Because of this, as
political analysts say, don’t expect the media to simply give in to challenging
times.
***
Anyhow,
I would like to share an article by Alan C. Miller, founder and CEO of
the News
Literacy Project, a national nonpartisan education nonprofit in the U.S. He
won the Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting in 2003 as a reporter at the Los
Angeles Times. His observations are eerily similar to the Philippine situation.
Hereunder is Miller’s
article entitled, “Give local journalism a fighting
chance
by creating a demand for it:”
We need new models and
must educate the next generation about how journalists do their work to set
their work apart from other sources of information.
Local newspaper
reporters who doggedly attend school board, planning commission and city
council meetings and who scan police blotters and pore over budgets and
contracts are essential cogs in our communities. They serve as the eyes and
ears of the public and play a critical role as watchdogs for waste, fraud and
abuse and holding officials accountable.
I know this firsthand: I
began what became a nearly three-decade journalism career playing this role in
Colonie, New York, and later in Bergen County, New Jersey.
Strong local news
outlets also help to strengthen civic life, encouraging people
to become involved in their communities and serving as virtual town squares. In
fact, as the Covid-19 crisis continues, a new Pew Research survey found
Americans believe local news outlets are more credible sources of information
about the pandemic than the news media in general.
Yet, these vital
institutions are being lost in one community after another as financial losses
force local newspapers to close their doors or thin their ranks.
Amid the collapse of the
advertising-driven business model for newspapers, at least 1,800 communities
across the U.S. that had a local news outlet in 2004 no longer did so by the
start of this year, according to a new report by Penelope Muse Abernathy,
the Knight Chair in Journalism and Digital Media Economics at the University of
North Carolina, and her research team. The report — “News Deserts and Ghost
Newspapers: Will Local News Survive?” — found that 2,100 newspapers have failed
over the past 15 years, including 70 dailies and more than 2,000 weeklies or
non-dailies. Many of the communities without any news outlet are isolated or
struggling economically.
The growth of these news
deserts is a grave threat to democracy. When the public has little or no access
to credible news sources, falsehoods, hoaxes and conspiracy theories can spread
unchecked. Harmful content exploits our values, sows discord and undermines
trust in our institutions and the quality of our public life.
The closure of a local
newspaper can have other negative effects on a community, resulting in
lower voter turnout and fewer citizens willing to run for office. Across the
country, government borrowing costs have
increased in counties that lost a newspaper and had less watchdog coverage of
local public officials.
Even in communities
where newspapers remain, fewer reporters are left on the beat. Between 2008 and
2019, newspapers lost half their newsroom employees.
Over the past two decades, newspaper jobs have fallen more dramatically than
employment in declining industries like coal mining and fishing.
The economic crisis
triggered by COVID-19 is another body blow to journalism. An estimated 36,000 news media employees have
been let go, furloughed or suffered pay cutbacks since the start of the
pandemic. This is happening even as local news is more essential than ever.
Journalists are risking their lives to cover the pandemic’s impact in their
communities and to provide reliable information so the
public can find the help it needs and stay safe.
How do we stem this
tide? One solution is new nonprofit models for local and watchdog journalism,
such as ProPublica and The Texas
Tribune, which are highly successful pioneers. Organizations like
the Institute for Nonprofit News and the for-profit Local Independent Online
News Publishers provide guidance on how journalists can support or start their
own local news sites. Foundations, as well as Google, are experimenting with
ways to provide revenue for start-ups and local publishers.
Another essential step
is educating the next generation about how journalists do their work and how
the standards, transparency and accountability of quality journalism set it
apart from so many other sources of information — and misinformation.
In 2008, I ended my
journalism career to found the News Literacy Project with the goal
of giving middle school and high school students the tools to know what news
and other information to trust, as well as an appreciation of the vital role of
the First Amendment and a free press in a democracy. My hope was that this
would build an appreciation and demand for quality journalism that would help
sustain it in the face of an increasingly complex information landscape.
In the past decade,
we’ve been encouraged to see that this is working in classrooms across the
country. When the newsgathering process is demystified, and young people
understand the value of content that seeks to inform them in an accurate,
independent and contextual way, they are more likely to recognize it and seek
it out. Moreover, they are not only more inclined to consume news, but also to
interact with their communities and the wider world in a more informed and
engaged manner.
As news deserts and
hollowed out newsrooms proliferate, the stakes for our communities and our
country are high.
The late John Carroll,
one of the most revered newspaper editors of his generation and a founding
member of the News Literacy Project’s board, told the PBS program “Frontline” in
2007: “Reporting is absolutely an essential thing for democratic
self-government. Who’s going to do it? Who’s going to pay for the news? If
newspapers fall by the wayside, what will we know?”
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