The Sentinel café and The Big Bend Sentinel weekly operate out of the same building. (NYT photo by Jessica Lutz) |
New York transplants Maisie Crow and Max Kabat bought the paper last year after being approached by Robert and Rosario Halpern, who had published the paper for 25 years. The paper was sustaining itself on ad sales and subscriptions, but just barely. The new owners "hoped to bring locals closer, physically, to the institution covering their hometown," von Oldershausen reports. So they bought an older building, renovated it, and turned it into a café/bar with a small newspaper office attached in the back. They rent the kitchen space to local cooks, rent the space out for events, and otherwise make their money selling drinks.
Marfa, in Presidio County, Texas (Wikipedia ma |
The Sentinel's two full-time reporters sometimes work out of the café, which functions as a local watering hole. Managing editor Abbie Perrault told von Oldershausen: "It’s a great way to keep my finger on the pulse and get new leads and find stories."
Kabat and Crow have made changes to the paper too. They've expanded the Sentinel's digital platform, driving a 7 percent bump in online traffic, and increased its photographic coverage. "At the newspaper’s sister publication, The International, which the couple also owns and which serves the largely Spanish-speaking neighboring border town of Presidio, every article is now translated into Spanish. They added a crossword puzzle and Sudoku to both papers, too," von Oldershausen reports. "The newspapers still sell ads, which account for the majority of revenue. But with additional income from private events and day-to-day drink sales, the publishers have been able to keep yearly subscription costs steady: $50 for area residents and $60 for anyone outside."
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