This is how journalism died. One person by one person. Drip
by drip. Until you wake up and your local paper either doesn’t exist, went
strictly digital or in our case is so thin and devoid of news as to be not much
more than a leaflet filled with canned news from wire services or Westchester
County, miles away from where we live and work. There was once a time when the
Poughkeepsie Journal was a vibrant and proud and award-winning local newspaper.
I worked there for more than 20 years and my weekly running column still
appears in there most weeks. But the paper has become a shell of its former
self. Where once there were hundreds of people working in a regal old building
in downtown Poughkeepsie, now the “Poughkeepsie Journal Building” – still regal
and still downtown -- houses multiple other businesses and organizations. The
actual “newspaper” part of the building is now confined to a small segment of
the third floor. Most of the employees have been shuttered. There are only a
handful remaining.
Which leads me to the local hardware store. I went in there
this morning to get some bathroom lightbulb fixtures, about as mundane a task
as you can imagine. After a fruitless trip to the Big Box Store across from
Marist – endless, confusing options, no one to help – instead I traveled to the
smaller, locally owned store. Immediately, I was greeted by an old Journal
colleague, a proud old journalist who did the necessary, granular, important
work of community journalism. He covered local town government – zoning board
meetings, planning board meetings, town council meetings. And he was EXCITED to
do it. His enthusiasm showed in his work, and his work was extremely important.
Until it was deemed not to be so important and he was let go about five years
ago, just like most of the rest of us. Instead of asking piercing questions
about town government – the whole concept of checks and balances on which a big
part of the First Amendment is based – the only question I got from him on
Tuesday morning was this: “Do you have an Ace rewards card?” At that moment, my
mind was flooded with sadness. Not so much for this older guy, who remains as enthusiastic
at the counter of the hardware store as he was at the endless meetings. But for
small, community journalism, the casualty of the 21st century. Our
world is a lesser place without it. My old colleague told me he feels that way.
He said that many local political positions are filled with unopposed
candidates, because the community is far less informed about what’s going on.
Why? Because no one is covering it, no one is writing about it.
Hey. Scream all you want about the biased media. You might
be accurate, when it comes to cable networks and some large newspaper editorial
pages. But among all that screaming and hollering, among all the “enemy of the
state” talk, and how the “media is biased” and “you can’t find the truth
anywhere,” and “fake news” and “deep state” and all of it … somewhere in that
cacophony of anti-journalism rhetoric, somewhere in there, community journalism
died a slow – but also in a way sudden – death. Go ahead. Go on Twitter and find
out the scores of local basketball game. Go on Facebook and see updates from “groups”
about this and that. You can still find the information out there. But my old
colleague, the one who was asking for my Ace rewards card, he was among the
legions of smart, incisive men and women with whom I worked, folks who carried
on a centuries-old tradition upon which our country was founded. Not having him
challenge public officials – even low-level ones on a local level – has had a
negative impact on our society. Yes, I’ve written about this before and yes,
you might be weary of seeing these occasional (perhaps whiny?) posts. But this
was my life, this was our life. And as I purchased my lightbulbs from a guy who
used to proudly carry his reporter’s notebook in his back pocket and wear his press
pass lanyard, I couldn’t help but feel melancholy about the once-bedrock industry of community journalism that is mostly gone.
2 comments:
That damn internet
Thanks for posting this commentary on "life". Another issue is that the pocketbook has become more important than the principle. This applies to "free content" journalism versus "paywall journalism", or a big-box nationwide retailer versus local consumer outlets.
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