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I learned my hometown paper died from Facebook. That's the future we're facing

7 点作者 giuliomagnifico大约 2 个月前

1 comment

PaulHoule大约 2 个月前
Cortland is about 30 minutes from Ithaca. The situation in Ithaca is mentioned in the article, but I think his version is incomplete.<p>Ithaca still has a daily paper, the <i>Ithaca Journal</i> but it&#x27;s a joke. Sometimes the front page has a &quot;local interest&quot; story which is not of interest at all, like how some chain of stores that isn&#x27;t in Ithaca is closing stores in other upstate towns a few hours away. I used to always buy the Journal the day after an election to see the local election results but now the Journal doesn&#x27;t even update their web site until about 2pm the next day. The Journal used to send one of two reporters to every public meeting, now they send nobody.<p>The slack has been picked up by four civic-minded publications that are either weekly or online only: <i>The Ithaca Times</i>, <i>The Ithaca Voice</i>, <i>14850.com</i> and <i>Tompkins Weekly</i>. All of them are free but advertising supported.<p>I&#x27;d say that the daily cadence makes no sense for a paper in a small town. Most days nothing really happens, but if something does happen, why wait? I think Ithaca is well-served in the new environment, but it is an unusual case since it has Cornell University and Ithaca College which bring in a large population of idealistic and underemployed people who can work on things like that.