The US has lost a quarter of its local newsrooms, and without those, communities suffer. But experts have ways we can stem the flow. David Lumb is a senior reporter covering mobile and gaming spaces.
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The way Americans get local news is changing, both in terms of which devices they’re using and who is delivering the news. Television is still the most common way people prefer to get their local news ...
Our commentary is from former New York Times columnist Charles Blow, on a disappearing staple of communities everywhere: Local news is in crisis. By some estimates, more than 3,200 print newspapers ...
Despite declining public attention to local news, many Americans express positive feelings about their local news media. For instance, most U.S. adults (85%) believe local news outlets are at least ...
“There’s your face, mom,” my daughter said, pointing to the ground where an old section of The Daily Herald with my Local News Impact column lay spread out. “And there you are again,” she said, ...
As a retired newspaper editor, I have heard plenty of longing in the last few years about a return to the glory days of local news. I saw some irony in it: I never felt like readers considered us a ...