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Ghosting the News

Local Journalism and the Crisis of American Democracy

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
"An excellent introduction to the essential problem of our republic. With a wake-up call like this one, we still have a chance."—Timothy Snyder, author of On Tyranny
An Epidemic of News Deserts and Ghost Papers
Ghosting the News tells the most troubling media story of our time: How democracy suffers when local news dies. From 2004 to 2015, 1,800 print newspaper outlets closed in the U.S. One in five news organizations in Canada has closed since 2008. One in three Brazilians lives in news deserts. The absence of accountability journalism has created an atmosphere in which indicted politicians were elected, school superintendents were mismanaging districts, and police chiefs were getting mysterious payouts. This is not the much-discussed fake-news problem—it's the separate problem of a critical shortage of real news.
America's premier media critic, Margaret Sullivan, charts the contours of the damage and surveys a range of new efforts to keep local news alive—from non-profit digital sites to an effort modeled on the Peace Corps. No nostalgic paean to the roar of rumbling presses, Ghosting the News instead sounds a loud alarm, alerting citizens to a growing crisis in local news that has already done serious damage.
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    • Kirkus

      May 15, 2020
      A dire warning on the decline of daily newspapers and the danger that their disappearance poses for democracy. Anybody who follows the media business is familiar with the broad outline of the problem the author lays out in this unapologetically dour book: Newspapers have shuttered with distressing speed in recent years--more than 2,000 since 2004, she reports--and many of the ones that remain are shadows of their former selves. Sullivan, a media columnist at the Washington Post, used to be the top editor at one of those, the Buffalo Evening News, and she shares her own glimpses of the decline. However, the author's goal isn't to lament the good old days of once-mighty businesses. Instead, she trains her eyes on the "news deserts" that now litter the landscape and voices concern about how corruption will consume communities that no longer have media watchdogs. For instance, the Vindicator in Youngstown, Ohio, used to send reporters to all area school-board meetings, a manager told her, and "people knew that...and they behaved." But now TV news and online outlets aren't picking up the slack, and though nonprofit news sources have emerged, they don't have the reach or stability that newspapers once claimed. Combine that with social media platforms that allow misinformation to spread, and it's no wonder local civic discourse has degraded into meme-vs.-meme slap fights. (Sullivan is careful to note that this is hardly just an American problem.) What to do? The author chronicles her discussions with the leaders of some promising startups and considers more radical ideas, such as federal subsidies for media. But her glass is resolutely half-empty: She predicts that "American politics will become even more polarized; government and business corruption will flourish, the glue that holds communities together will weaken." A no-nonsense retort to the notion that we live in a time of abundant information.

      COPYRIGHT(2020) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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