‘Big Ideas’ forum: News leaders tout new journalism model
Published 12:07 pm Friday, January 10, 2025
- The panel and audience watch a trailer for a documentary, “Stripped For Parts,” that details the state of the news industry and the emergence of venture capital companies who are buying newspapers.
Local residents discussed a new paradigm for local news at the Ashland Public Library Tuesday in an age when journalism has withered in the face of social media and the rise of the internet.
A full room of about 90 people showed up for “The Current State of Local/Regional Journalism,” part of the “Big Ideas” series presented by the Association of University Women and Jackson County Library Services.
The three featured speakers were Bert Etling, Ashland.news executive editor; Bob Wise, KOBI-TV NBC5 vice president and general manager; and Heidi Wright, president of FORJournalism, a nonprofit.
Etling said that about 1,800 newspapers in the country have folded since 2004, creating news deserts. The Medford Mail Tribune and the Ashland Daily Tidings, of which Etling was editor from 2014 to 2019, have both been shuttered.
The effect of the closures nationwide has been to gravitate people more toward national news, leading to increased polarization and partisanship, Etling said. Google, Facebook and other internet companies have sucked up articles written by newspapers while also failing to verify the validity of many information sources, helping to fuel misinformation.
“Facebook has stopped fact-checking,” said Etling, citing a recent news report. “Who knew they were fact-checking?”
For years, newspapers relied on advertising revenues for profits, but now those advertising dollars are going to internet-based companies.
“The economic model is broken,” Etling said. Ashland.news is a nonprofit, sustained by fund-raising and donations, similar to Jefferson Public Radio.
“The nonprofit model is rapidly growing around the country,” said Etling. “This is a booming model.”
Instead of a for-profit model, a nonprofit puts the readers and community first, he said.