The Columbia Journalism Review relays the news that two newspapers—The Fitchburg Star, near Madison, Wisconsin; and the Winston-Salem Chronicle—have recently taken money from their respective city halls in order to stay in print.
In Fitchburg, the city is paying $30,000 to revive and mail out free copies of a print edition that had been online-only since 2009. In Winston-Salem, the city council approved a $100,000 low-interest loan to an existing weekly that covers the black community, after rejecting the newspaper's application for a straight-up grant.
As the CJR's Corey Hutchins notes,
with many local media outlets around the country still struggling in the wake of major disruptions to their business models, it's worth asking: Is this going to be a thing now?
I sure as hell hope not. Governments are not banks; they should not be in the business of lending money to businesses. Why? Because the loan decisions are definitionally politicized, lead to cronyism and favoritism, and have a miserable track record of both reimbursement and delivering the perennially over-hyped promises of jobs and social goods. If taxpayers wanted to capitalize a community bank, they could freely make that decision on their own, with the expectation that the investment would have a decent shot of paying personal dividends. Money extracted from their wallets by threat of force and then loaned out to politically favored businesses will never, ever, ever be repaid to the people from which it came. That's morally wrong.
Bad as government lending is, government grant-writing to businesses is even worse. Who is your biggest customer, when your very existence depends on the cash and good graces of City Hall? It certainly isn't the consumer of your product. Businesses for whom ostensible customers are second-class citizens will by definition not be run efficiently; markets in which government so bastardizes incentives will by definition be distorted. And to state the obvious, the journalistic ethics of such deals smell worse than a dog park after the snow melts.
Watch the utterly unconvincing protests to the contrary in Fitchburg:
David Enstad, general manager of Unified Newspaper Group, said such worries are misplaced.
"It was understood from the get-go that we would require complete editorial independence,"he said. […]
In a draft memo of understanding set to be discussed Feb. 25 by the City Council, the two parties would agree to meet quarterly and "review content, costs and supporting sales." Enstad said he sought the language simply as a way to make sure both parties remain on the same page.
Uh-huh.
CJR provides some depressing context about government-journalism conmingling:
Not long after the Star ceased print publication, the USC Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism noted in a report that public support for print media has a long history, including postal subsidies, paid public notices, and federal and state tax breaks related to newspapers and magazines that totaled nearly $1 billion in 2008. The Newspaper Preservation Act of 1970 also made joint operating agreements possible by exempting papers from antitrust rules. In 2009, the state of Washington even passed a new $1.3 million tax break to help its struggling newspapers.
The report's authors urged policymakers to consider new ideas in that tradition, in response to the declining value of traditional subsidies and the crisis in the newspaper industry.
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If your city is funding its own propaganda arm, at least you can take pride in the apparent fact that their finances are in order. I mean, they can't do this in lieu of funding their employee pensions, right?
I've been pleased with CNN's MH370 coverage, so far. (except for that dummy Richard Quest. He was creaming himself over these Chinese satellite images, when it was obvious, based on the objects' dimensions, that they weren't pieces of 777.)
When it comes to actual breaking news, I think they do just fine.
Yeah, I can't copy and paste text from a jpg. And I wouldn't be so ignorant as to force my beloved fellow if lesser commenters to click a link. How gauche.
You are actually wrong about that (as right as you are about fashion). The NYT, before and after the election, have hammered De Bla over and over. Not like the Post or anything, but with some in-depth reportage.
Recent articles are indeed a surprisingly varied mix:
De Blasio Cites Drop in Crime Since Taking Office
De Blasio Seeks to Halt 3 Charter Schools From Moving Into Public ...
Tense Moments in de Blasio's TV Interview
De Blasio Picks More Liberal Activists Than Managers for City Posts ...
Library Renovation Plan Awaits Word From de Blasio
De Blasio Outlines Steps to Eliminate Traffic Deaths
Lesson for de Blasio as His S.U.V. Breaks Rules of the Road ...
This Time, de Blasio Confronts S.U.V. Issue Head-On
Cuomo Offers de Blasio Support, With Barbs
No, since the ruling class has reasonable expectations of privacy that we peasants lack. I know this because Dianne Feinstein and various police officers tell me so.
Not long after the Star ceased print publication, the USC Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism noted in a report that public support for print media has a long history, including postal subsidies, paid public notices, and federal and state tax breaks related to newspapers and magazines that totaled nearly $1 billion in 2008.
It was understood from the get-go that we would require complete editorial independence,"he said. [...]
In a draft memo of understanding set to be discussed Feb. 25 by the City Council, the two parties would agree to meet quarterly and "review content, costs and supporting sales." Enstad said he sought the language simply as a way to make sure both parties remain on the same page.
"review content" and "remain on the same page" are the EXACT OPPOSITE of "editorial independence". Even a few Democrats can see right through that.
Money extracted from their wallets by threat of force and then loaned out to politically favored businesses will never, ever, ever be repaid to the people from which it came. That's morally wrong.
You're just a brief edit away from being an an-cap, Matt.
Are we still supposed to believe the archetype of the gumshoe reporter who will sleuth around city hall to ferret out secret corruption and graft now that his bosses are coming in to pay homage and grovel for sustenance?
Duck Amuck!!
Quite possibly the best cartoon I've ever seen.
I don't know about best, but I bet it's not as good as this one:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt00.....n_tt_tt_20
Ugh, no. Just no.
If your city is funding its own propaganda arm, at least you can take pride in the apparent fact that their finances are in order. I mean, they can't do this in lieu of funding their employee pensions, right?
Aren't they 'investing' those employee pensions in sure-fire, guaranteed to pay off, investments, like local newspapers?
"City Council approves awesome budget, awards contracts to well-qualified, exemplary citizens"
"Drug Dealer dies in police-related shooting, his shyster lawyer blabs something about warrantless no-knock blah blah"
"Koch-funded Tea Partiers whine about public-health measure banning vaping"
"Heroic firefighters get well-deserved raise" ACCOMPANYING PHOTO: Firemen courageously rescue kitten from tree
"Citizens get day off work as beautiful snow covers the city like a nice warm blanket"
"Chocolate ration increased"
Cleveland has always been at war with Cincinnati
Well, that one is actually true....right?
Loser gets Toledo.
Indeed.
Well, they're both in Ohio, so they're both already losers?
*looks around for an enraged sloopy*
I never thought I'd live to see Pravda in the US. I was mistaken.
You've never read The New York Times?
Go to CNN.
"This.Is.CNN"
/James Earl Jones voice
"Go to CNN."
Dunno.
MSNBC sure gives 'em a run for their money.
HuffPo blows them all out of the water.
I've been pleased with CNN's MH370 coverage, so far. (except for that dummy Richard Quest. He was creaming himself over these Chinese satellite images, when it was obvious, based on the objects' dimensions, that they weren't pieces of 777.)
When it comes to actual breaking news, I think they do just fine.
Excuse me for not RTFA, but couldn't the local governments just buy advertising?
What would they advertise? Everyone knows about their exemplary services.
but couldn't the local governments just buy advertising?
What do you think they just did? I mean, why would you buy advertising when you can buy the journalists?
Why buy advertising when you can buy influence?
Also, if I could ever find the Ron Swanson bailout quote, it would be posted here.
This one?
BP's link was better.
Yeah, I can't copy and paste text from a jpg. And I wouldn't be so ignorant as to force my beloved fellow if lesser commenters to click a link. How gauche.
here
Srsly?
I didn't realize I hadn't refreshed in a while, KK. I should have known you'd be on the case.
I don't think it will make much a difference since the newspapers were obviously foundering before due to lack of readership.
But I do wonder if this is actionable under the First Amendment. Could a non-subsidized newspaper sue the city council?
I'm thinking of subscribing so I can cancel.
Drink?
Aren't they already funding local newspapers with the whole public notice thingy?
"review content, costs and supporting sales."
Uh huh.
most media has been for the progs anyway so they may as well be paid by them.
its hard to be critical of the person who pays your way.
TOO BIG TO FAIL
"It was understood from the get-go that we would require complete editorial independence,"he said. [...]
You know who else had editorial independence?
Mark Twain?
Izvestia!
/NKVD Commissar
It seems a shame, since governments has been getting free blowjobs from the local papers for years... and now they have to *pay*?
This marriage is going south.
Challenge = who can find any real criticism of De Blasio in the NYT? You have 1 hour.
You are actually wrong about that (as right as you are about fashion). The NYT, before and after the election, have hammered De Bla over and over. Not like the Post or anything, but with some in-depth reportage.
Like they hammer Obama?
De Bla is pissing off Da Base?
"(as right as you are about fashion)"
Jeeze, Matt, did he compliment your pocket square?
No, he just trashes me every day, which makes my wife very happy! (Because she mostly agrees...)
I guess it depends on whether you dress like Buddy Holly on purpose or by accident.
Gilmore gets upset about the size of Matt's earrings.
Recent articles are indeed a surprisingly varied mix:
De Blasio Cites Drop in Crime Since Taking Office
De Blasio Seeks to Halt 3 Charter Schools From Moving Into Public ...
Tense Moments in de Blasio's TV Interview
De Blasio Picks More Liberal Activists Than Managers for City Posts ...
Library Renovation Plan Awaits Word From de Blasio
De Blasio Outlines Steps to Eliminate Traffic Deaths
Lesson for de Blasio as His S.U.V. Breaks Rules of the Road ...
This Time, de Blasio Confronts S.U.V. Issue Head-On
Cuomo Offers de Blasio Support, With Barbs
When you've (sort of) lost the NY Times...
It was pre-election coverage, too. The in-depth profiles of he & his family & his team were pretty brutal.
NYT -- ignored by New Yorkers AND the World.
Enstad said he sought the language simply as a way to make sure both parties remain on the same page.
Because having the city council and the newspaper on the same page is exactly what I want out of my journalism.
Oh wait, we already have that. Enstad may be right, this may not make things any worse.
"In Fitchburg, the city is paying $30,000 to revive and mail out free copies of a print edition that had been online-only since 2009"
"Print is dead."
Egon Spangler-1984
Youll be missed Harold Ramis.
Should we be insisting on some kind of labeling for journalistic enterprises? Like "Contains 22% government".
No, since the ruling class has reasonable expectations of privacy that we peasants lack. I know this because Dianne Feinstein and various police officers tell me so.
Do you know what else has a long history?
Propaganda?
Gibbons?
+1 SPQR
The Galactic Empire?
/Hari Seldon
Feudalism?
It was understood from the get-go that we would require complete editorial independence,"he said. [...]
In a draft memo of understanding set to be discussed Feb. 25 by the City Council, the two parties would agree to meet quarterly and "review content, costs and supporting sales." Enstad said he sought the language simply as a way to make sure both parties remain on the same page.
"review content" and "remain on the same page" are the EXACT OPPOSITE of "editorial independence". Even a few Democrats can see right through that.
No wonder that bullshit newspaper is failing.
Never mind the platypus-by-committee, what was the money daisy chain repurposed from? What was it originally illustrating?
"Complete editorial independence." Ha ha ha. The King's schilling and all that.
Money extracted from their wallets by threat of force and then loaned out to politically favored businesses will never, ever, ever be repaid to the people from which it came. That's morally wrong.
You're just a brief edit away from being an an-cap, Matt.
Are we still supposed to believe the archetype of the gumshoe reporter who will sleuth around city hall to ferret out secret corruption and graft now that his bosses are coming in to pay homage and grovel for sustenance?
We have to come up with a catchy name for this that sounds like or at least connotes "Amtrak".
Amrag?
Amwrap?
AmMoveon.org?