It's Friday night lights, but for Instagram Email not displaying correctly?
View it in your browser ([link removed]) .
[link removed]
[link removed]
Courtesy Delaware County Daily Times (Screenshot, Instagram)
When a team from Delaware County, Pennsylvania, made it to the Little League World Series, they had shirts made. They read āDelco against the world.ā
They werenāt just being cute.
This is a place, in the Philadelphia suburbs, with āsuch a unique sense of its own history,ā said Matthew De George, assistant sports editor at the Delaware County Daily Times.
Itās the kind of place people stay, where three- and four-generation families arenāt uncommon.
āSo from a local sports perspective, obviously, that plays pretty well,ā De George said.
There are legacies on the high school football teams, in basketball, track, soccer and lacrosse.
āIt makes us as the sports department kind of an interesting proxy for local history.ā
And that makes this next bit both a problem and an opportunity. The Delaware County Daily Times is part of MediaNews Group, which is owned by Alden Global Capital. If youāve been following the years of coverage, you know of the investment firm thatās āgutting newsrooms.ā ([link removed])
The paper has a sports team of five people, it covers five professional teams, more than 25 high schools and 10 colleges. Coverage is nothing like it used to be. Thereās no more year-end banquet hosted by the paper. But the Delaware County Daily Times hasnāt given up on covering high school sports, either.
āWe try and do as much as we can,ā De George said.
That means knowing which teams look promising so reporters can follow their seasons. It means trying to cover the county equitably. (Delaware County includes the full range of socioeconomics and ideologies, De George said: top-ranked public schools, a municipality thatās in bankruptcy and private schools that have been around since the 1800s.)
And it means meeting high school athletes and their families where they are ā on Instagram.
De George started the sportsā departments Instagram account ([link removed]) in 2017 after seeing decades of photo negatives get dumped when the newsroom moved. (Thereās now no longer a newsroom at all.)
After covering a game, only a few images get published in the paper and online, and so De George started working with the paperās photographers to get everything on Instagram.
The Instagram account also took up another role the paper used to play ā as community convener. In place of the in-person banquet, where athletes could vote for their peers in a player of the year contest, thereās now an Instagram version. It happens during the summer months when high school sports are on pause.
The Instagram account has around 12,500 followers, and is the biggest and most active Instagram account for the paper.
The coverage, which is only focused on scholastic sports, not club, also serves as an equalizer, De George said, making sure reporters are covering talent, not just resources.
āIf we were in a world where we had a little bit more assurance of the future of local journalism, this would look like seeding a future generation of readers and being important in their lives in the way that the newspaper was important in a lot of peopleās lives,ā De George said.
Ten or 15 years ago, a high school athlete might have heard from an older relative or friend, āHey, youāre in the Daily Timesā after a game. Now, the Daily Times is where the teens are.
āWeāre trying to get out to as many of the schools as we possibly can because there are stories to be told, really entertaining, interesting and important stories to be told just about everywhere.ā
Here are a few more tips from De George:
Image courtesy Delaware County Daily Times
For more:
* Read Steve Waldman on āHow high school sports coverage can save democracy.ā ([link removed])
* Check out this project ([link removed]) from former Poynter-Koch fellow Justin Mitchell, who worked on increasing engagement with high school athletes, parents, coaches and school leaders.
* Read this 2022 piece from Poynter on How One Student Newsroom Integrated Sports and News. ([link removed])
Also:
* Last week ([link removed]) we heard from the community editor at the Los Angeles Timesā De Los on building community. Hereās a look ([link removed]) from API at how The Fresno Bee is engaging with Latino audiences.
* You have until Oct. 16 to apply for a Neal Peirce Foundation Journalism Travel Grant ([link removed]) , which awards up to $1,500.
* Check out this new report from the Agora Journalism Center on Redefining News: A Manifesto for Community-Centered Journalism ([link removed]) .
* And read this beautiful remembrance ([link removed]) of the dean and queen of Florida journalism, Lucy Morgan.
Thatās it for me. I spent Saturday at a middle school club volleyball tournament and have a booked calendar with more of the same until the end of time. To quote a sweatshirt I saw, āIām in my volleyball mom era.ā If you have recs on good portable seat cushions, Iām looking. š¬
Kristen
Kristen Hare
Faculty
The Poynter Institute
@kristenhare ([link removed])
ADVERTISE ([link removed]) // DONATE ([link removed]) // LEARN ([link removed]) // JOBS ([link removed])
Did someone forward you this email? Sign up here. ([link removed])
[link removed] [link removed] [link removed] [link removed] mailto:
[email protected]?subject=Feedback%20for%20Poynter
[link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]
Ā© All rights reserved Poynter Institute 2023
801 Third Street South, St. Petersburg, FL 33701
If you don't want to receive email updates from Poynter, we understand.
You can change your subscription preferences ([link removed]) or unsubscribe from all Poynter emails ([link removed]) .