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We need The Mill but it’s not going to solve the local news problem on its own

“The global decline of local news is one of journalism’s greatest challenges and it’s not going to be solved by a single idea, but by many entrepreneurial visions”

 

Former Reach executive and recent podcast guest Jacqui Merrington has been writing in her newsletter about local news. To be exact, she’s writing about the decline of local news. Citing problems from the area where she lives – from school playing-field sell offs to seweage – she writes: “None of these issues are regularly and consistently scrutinised which means landowners, developers, councils and water companies can, to a greater or lesser extent, get away with it.”

She retells a tale we know too well; local newsrooms that don’t have the reporting teams they once had because the revenue once provided by print circulation, classifieds and advertising has ‘migrated to the big tech platforms.’ We can quibble about the big-tech narrative, but not about the lack of money to fund proper local news coverage.

What is most interesting about Jacqui’s take is her call for local news organisations, big and small, to work together. “What if, instead of treating each other as rivals, local journalists and media organisations collaborated in pursuit of brilliant, sustainable journalism to serve their communities?” I’m genuinely looking forward to the responses from both ends of the spectrum.

Do you think independent publications and journalists can work with larger regional media organisations to improve the quality of local news? What might that collaboration look like? Tell us in our community forum.


 

Reuters journalist among 12 killed in first week of fighting

The conflict is the deadliest for journalists since the Russian invasion of Ukraine

It’s not the job of this newsletter to comment on the rights and wrongs of the fighting in Israel and Gaza. It is important, however, to highlight the sacrifice made by journalists reporting on the conflict, the most deadly for journalists since the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Using information primarily from the Committee to Protect Journalists, Press Gazette is reporting the casualty count since Saturday October 7th. Sadly, there are likely to be updates.


 

The whole of the ‘Whole Earth Catalog’ is now online

The seminal DIY catalogs, journals, and magazines printed by the techno-hippie Whole Earth publishing house are finally available online in digital form, all for free.

Wired is reporting that print-proto-blog The Whole Earth Catalog is available online in its entirety for the first time. Wired says that when it was first printed in the late 1960s, the periodical had a profound impact on Silicon Valley’s ethos, and is credited with seeding the ideas that helped fuel today’s startup culture. And now you can read it all online for free.


 

Four big themes from the Magazine Street conference

Four of the big themes from the presentations and workshops held throughout the day at the Magazine Street conference in Edinburgh.

The Grub Street Gang was at The International Magazine Centre’s Magazine Street conference in Edinburgh earlier this month. Editorial director Joanna Cummings was there to put together the conference magazine, ‘Word on the Street’ and here she’s sharing the big themes she identified from the interviews she did for the publication and the day’s presentations and workshops.


More from Media Voices

 

The New Statesman’s Chris Stone on podcast and platform experiments

Chris takes us through some of his boldest experiments with podcasts at the New Statesman, from consolidating them into one feed to publishing audio and video versions to YouTube.

 

Report: Practical AI for Local Media

Find out how AI can help publishers take care of work that humans can’t so they can use the time saved to creating valuable commentary and analysis.

 

Content is king? ‘Complete b*ll*cks;’ says media veteran Neil Thackray

If content was truly king, Neil believes the starting point would be a content-focused publishing strategy, but he doesn’t see that.

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