Anyone familiar with Facebook, or any other social networking Web site, is no doubt familiar with the regularity of invitations to join "causes."
There are causes dedicated to fighting childhood illnesses, causes dedicated to political campaigns and even causes dedicated to changing the way Facebook works. I've pretty much ignored most of these causes — not that I don't believe in them; but rather that when you sign up for every cause under the sun, it just starts to seem trivial that you ever even enlisted your "support."
But I got a cause invitation the other day that I couldn't just ignore. It struck close to home — most specifically, to my profession. The cause is "Tell Five Friends How Important Newspapers are," and I am the 12,164th person to join. As of this writing, I've even recruited three additional people to the cause, with a handful of other invitations still pending.
The idea, of course, is that by signing up, I am to tell five other people why newspapers are important. Well, I thought I'd do just a little better by telling a few thousand, via this weekly newspaper column.
It's not hard these days to find stories about the impending death of the newspaper industry. I’ve attended conferences of editors where the gloom-and-doom was positively thick. And Web sites and blogs across the globe have been writing the obituaries for newspapers for the past several years.
Well, I may be consumed in a haze of self-preserving wishful thinking, but if you ask me, this "death of the newspaper" stuff is a bunch of hogwash. Newspapers are a pillar of the communities they serve and a vital source of communication. They've served this role for a long time, and will continue to do so in the future.
The fact is, the information in a newspaper can't be found anywhere else. In small, community newspapers, like the Blytheville Courier News, this is even more true.
Where else are you going to find stories about the most recent City Council Planning and Development meeting, or an account of what happened at the Quorum Court's Efficiency Committee meeting?
Where else are you going to find a write-up on last night's high-school basketball game, complete with photographs?
Where else are you going to go to learn who was named a Citizen of the Month at a local elementary school, or to the President's List at the local community college?
Where else are you going to read comprehensive news — including analysis and citizen's views — about an upcoming tax election? Where else are you going to find complete results and reactions to that election?
Where else are you going to go to find out which of your neighbors got married, who had a birthday, who had a baby, or who passed away?
Where else are you going to find complete listings of upcoming meetings and events for local clubs and organizations?
Where else are you going to find reports of local homes and businesses that were burglarized?
Where else are you going to go to find comics, crosswords, advice columns and horoscopes, all in one convenient location?
Imagine if the newspaper didn't exist. Where would citizens go for this kind of information? The loss of a newspaper would leave a gaping hole in any community, a hole that no Web site, blog or Internet message board could ever fill. When was the last time you saw an out-of-town TV crew at a local school board meeting? When was the last time anyone blogged about high school honor rolls?
It was evident how much a local newspaper could be missed a few weeks ago when, due an afternoon power outage, the Courier News was several hours late in reaching homes. The phones rang off the hook that afternoon. I heard the ladies up front repeat, “I’m sorry, we had a power outage so we’re a few hours late today,” over and over and over again, to the endless stream of readers who were waiting for their paper. There had to have been more than a hundred calls in just a couple of hours.
This isn’t to say newspapers are perfect. From the Blytheville Courier News to the New York Times, there is room for improvement. And as more and more Americans get comfortable living in the digital age, changes will have to come. Without a doubt, newspapers have challenges ahead.
But newspapers have always adapted to the changing world. Whether it has been radio, or the telephone, or TV, or cable, there have always been changes to the ways Americans communicate. But newspapers have always been there. And there is no reason to think they can’t continue to adapt.
So it’s my hope that communities across America embrace their newspapers, and I’m not just looking out for my own long-term job security. Newspapers make better communities. They inform, they entertain, they educate, they enlighten. They bring people together. They serve a purpose that no other medium has ever, or will ever, match.
Newspapers are a cause worth fighting for.
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7 comments:
Amen! Well said, this is written in print too right?? One other point to make about newspapers is the historical record they provide. I have the paper printed on the days I was born, married, and the births of each of my children. They are a priceless look into that day in history.
Thanks! Yes, this is on the print edition, too. (Almost all of my blog entries are simply a duplicate of my weekly column.)
And you're right about the historical perspective newspapers offer. On the day Obama was elected, people didn't save Web sites or TV broadcasts ... they saved the newspapers. Or, look at some of the dramatic presentations the Cedar Rapids Gazette produced for its flood coverage (I'm thinking of the "Epic Surge" wrap-around cover) No TV broadcast or Web site can match that kind of impact.
I think to be honest your arguement is kind of rediculous, surely if you wanted to find out about local planning, committees etc you would just go on the local news website? The digital age is here, and newspapers need to get used to the idea that they are no longer the number one source of media consumption
Anonymous:
In many smaller communities, such as ours, there is no local news Web site. And even in larger communities, news Web sites are less likely to cover the minutiae of the happenings of low-level governmental meetings. Local newspapers are the only way to get this information.
I just read about a huge survey done by newspaper folks re how to build readership that sounds promising. I agree that they have been supposedly doomed for years, but don't see them going anywhere for at least another 20yrs.
The reason, aside from the already mentioned local news which my 86yr old mother reads avidly every day? I am of a generation that grew up with a uniquely American custom; The one day it is acceptable to wander out your front door in ratty bathrobe and fuzzy slippers is Sunday, when you go out to find your Sunday paper. Even getting caught out there rummaging about in the shrubbery looking for your paper is smilingly accepted and understood by anyone going by. It's what we do. And I'm sorry, but with all the ways technology allows people to be alone, reading the Sunday paper means who gets what part of the paper first... sharing and trading and discussing...what fine things. And you cannot get that immediacy with the internet somehow. Yes, you can both be looking at your laptops across the table from each other, I suppose. But it just isn't the same w/o that paper rustling. So until the 45-50 somethings are all gone, I, for one, hope that newspapers will be around awhile. The only downside is whether we will have enough trees for both newspapers AND the needs of nature/mankind.
Well said, Anonymous. Thanks for commenting!
Really i found it was quite informative. Thanks for sharing it.A nowadays person is very curious to know about latest news .Newspaper is the best medium and tell us what is happening in India and around the world. Newspaper reading is the best way to support learning and develop critical thinking skills.
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