For-profit newsrooms and philanthropy are now a thing Email not displaying correctly?
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The first five years of my career were maybe the last easy five years in newspapers. From 2003 to 2008, the Missouri paper I worked for toyed with innovative design, let me spend a year reporting a single story, had a committee to attract young readers and treated the internet as an afterthought.
I spent the second five years of my career, which began with the Great Recession, at a nonprofit digital newsroom in St. Louis. There, we listened to the community through something called the Public Insight Network; partnered with other media and community institutions to cover big issues including race, immigration, aging and the census; and every year we held a gala for supporters.
Iâd never seen so many fur coats.
Now, in whatâs almost my eighth year at Poynter, thereâs more and more blurring between those two worlds as for-profit newsrooms start making philanthropy part of how they make money. I donât see any fur coats, thank goodness, but I do see newsrooms that only ever asked for subscriptions or advertisements starting to ask for donations.
I wrote about that today ([link removed]) and appreciate what The Pivot Fund's Tracie Powell said about the opportunity philanthropy now has to shake up journalism. She said:
âWe cannot invest in organizations that do not believe in hiring staffs that reflect their communities. We cannot do that again. We can not invest in news outlets that only consider serving a segment of the population, and thatâs always white, affluent communities. We cannot repeat that mistake. It cannot be journalism as usual and it cannot be philanthropy as usual.â
Want more? Check out this piece over at Better News on how The Post and Courier in Charleston brought in $1 million through philanthropy ([link removed]) .
Another very recent example of for-profits working with philanthropy â Earlier this month, Advance Publicationsâ Alabama Media Group launched Education Lab ([link removed]) , âan ambitious move into community-funded journalism, with coverage of Alabama schools and children supported by philanthropic funding.â
Welcome to the club. Itâs a growing one.
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âThe biggest surprise has been that our audience really, really wants to go deep.â Take a peek behind the L.A. Timesâ successful virtual event strategy to learn how they generated revenue, built trust, and attracted 100K views from a book club talk with Barack Obama. ([link removed])
While youâre here:
* Read this follow-up ([link removed]) by my colleague Angela Fu on the NewsGuildâs report on harassment at the Pittsburgh Guild.
* Learn more about LMAâs 2021 Local News Fund ([link removed]) . Thereâs an informational webinar later this week.
* Sign up to attend Lenfest News Philanthropy Networkâs November summit ([link removed]) .
* Follow the work of Tracie Powellâs Pivot Fund by signing up for the newsletter ([link removed]) .
* Learn more about foundation and donor support at Better News ([link removed]) .
* Hey newsrooms, Report for Americaâs deadline is Sept. 30 ([link removed]) !
* Congrats to the recipients of APIâs Local News Ideas-to-Action Fund ([link removed]) .
* Congrats to the 24 news organizations that are part of LIONâs second Google News Initiative Startup Boot Camp ([link removed]) .
* Read Elahe Izadi over at The Washington Post on how âThe Indianapolis Star showed Simone Biles the âmagnitudeâ of gymnastics abuse.â ([link removed])
* Learn about the GroundTruth Projectâs grant from a cryptocurrency-backed community fund ([link removed]) .
* Speaking of cryptocurrency, which my 14-year-old understands much better than I do, a former newsprint mill in Washington will apparently become the home of a massive mining operation ([link removed]) .
* Check out the Tampa Bay Timesâ Community Reader Panel ([link removed]) .
* This week in the Tampa Bay Times, I wrote an obit about a woman who was breaking glass ceilings decades ago ([link removed]) .
* And finally, I was a judge for Currentâs Local That Works contest ([link removed]) , and here are our five finalists. They stood out not just for stellar journalism, but for work that is working really hard to be part of, listen to, learn from and serve their communities.
Thatâs it for me. Last week I pooh-poohed September Halloween decorators. Now, Iâm falling under their spell but trying to hold firm.
Think of me,
Kristen
Kristen Hare
Editor, Locally
The Poynter Institute
@kristenhare ([link removed])
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