By Al Cross
Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues
CHARLESTON, S.C. – A former
network correspondent who wrote an admiring book about small-town newspapers,
told their main national meeting this weekend that she has faith in the future
of community journalism and had experienced its fundamental challenge – in writing
about a Colorado community where she has a home.
Judy Muller spoke to the annual
convention of the National Newspaper Association because she is the author of Emus Loose in Egnar: Big Stories from Small
Towns. She started her career at a weekly paper in New Jersey, but writing
the book after leaving ABC News and joining the journalism faculty at the University of Southern California gave her a much greater appreciation of “that too-close-for-comfort
feeling” that her audience knows well.
But not as great as the appreciation
she gained when she wrote about how local media in and around Norwood, Colo.,
where she has a home, handled a sensational bullying case at a high school
where “the average graduating class is about 12,” and which had “torn the town
apart,” she told the editors and publishers, who mainly run weeklies.
"I have been aware the whole
time of how concerned I am about how the local editor there will react -- the
article is somewhat critical of her coverage -- but she is a friend,” Muller
said. "And the piece is not a
flattering picture of the local school, and yet I hope more young families will
move to the community -- after all, I have a home there, and property values
are important."
But in reporting the story, which
she has sold to The Atlantic magazine, being local worked to Muller’s
advantage. Parents of two boys charged in
the case gave her exclusive interviews because, as they said, “You live up
there on Deer Mesa and you gave the commencement address last year.”
And, for first time in her
career, Muller sent interviewees their quotes in context, to show them how they
would appear in the story. Asked what she would have done if the people decided
they didn't want to be quoted at all, Muller simply said she would have talked
them into it.
The trust required in such
situations takes time to develop, and that’s why Patch.com, the national
network of online local news sites, “won’t get much cooperation,” Muller said.
Some weeklies are reluctant to
embrace the digital world, but some noted for their good journalism are using
social media to make sure they maintain the local-news franchise that is the
secret to their status as the healthiest part of the newspaper business.
Muller said her friend Laurie
Ezzell Brown of The Canadian Record in the Texas Panhandle is using all sorts
of social media, which appeals to younger people. She quoted Brown: "Those
who may have viewed the paper as too staid or serious are finding that it is
much more friendly and approachable."
Meanwhile, though, the paper has also
expanded its efforts in a more traditional way, cultivating two non-staff columnists
whom Laurie says have developed their own followings.
Muller sees a good future for printed
community papers, because they provide local news, often of deep personal
interest worth clipping, that is unavailable anywhere else. "They have a
captive audience,” she said. “As long as there are refrigerator magnets there
will be weekly newspapers."
But Muller concluded with
exhortations about the most important reason for community newspapers: covering
local officials and holding them accountable. "Try to remember why you got
into it in the first place,” she said. “It's more important now than ever."
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