The Mississippi Press Association, celebrating its 160th anniversary, held a forum highlighting local journalism last week at History Is Lunch in the Two Museums. MPA vice president Peter Imes, publisher of the Commercial Dispatch in Columbus, spoke of the vital role local journalism “plays at the grassroots level in our democracy” as he welcomed the panel.
Charles Overby, chair of the Overby Center for Southern Journalism at Ole Miss moderated. Panelists included professional journalists Natalie Perkins from the Deer Creek Pilot in Rolling Fork, Jamie Patterson from the Yazoo Herald in Yazoo City, and Anita Lee from the Sun Herald in Biloxi.
Discussion focused on local journalism’s importance as a community storyteller, watchdog, and public-information source.
All three speakers agreed local journalists provide essential benefits other media sources do not: preserving and documenting community stories with context and history; serving as watchdogs over local elected officials and government operations; covering routine civic life (city councils, school boards, etc.), and producing community-focused features that resonate locally.
Perkins noted the critical role her small newspaper played in communicating with local people after an E4 tornado struck. “We continue to tell the story,” she said, and “we’re the only ones that give a rip about Sharkey County.”
“Being a person that they go to church with or see in the grocery store or at the Little League field,” Patterson said lets local people “know that I have just as much stake in the community as they do.”
The panelists also agreed on the persistent threats to local journalism from social media misinformation, ad revenue losses to online media, and audience shifts, particularly among young people, to free online platforms.
“I’ve been very concerned about that for a while now,” said Lee, “and I try to do my little part, which is like spitting in the ocean, to assure people that I’m a real journalist. This is what I do and this is how I do it….So I just hope people are discerning and careful about what media they consume.”
Panelists expressed concern that local journalism is "in trouble" as staffing shrinks and dailies become bi-weeklies. But they remain optimistic if dedicated professional journalism persists and communities support local news outlets. Lee stressed the latter, lamenting that people don’t realize their local news source is going to go away one day if local support dries up. They will have to depend upon social media alternatives that lack professional standards and commitments to fairness and transparency.
“I feel so horrible for those communities that are kind of in news deserts that don’t have those newspapers and don’t have those watchdogs. That's scary,” concluded Patterson.
“My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge”– Hosea 4:6.
Crawford is an author and syndicated columnist from North Jackson.


11 comments:
What is a 'professional journalist'?
Not someone who publishes under an alias.
So why are you here?
I would love to have local journalism that actually reports the news that is happening in the community. I am very exhausted w/ "media" constantly providing "op-eds" disguised as news
So-called journalism killed itself by not being that. Good riddance.
I bet bacon-wrapped shrimp was served.
Local journalism is human interest stories heavy on drama and emotion. I’m tired of hearing the same old worn out garbage disguised as news…single woman with 7 kids receives diploma, boys got free haircuts today and free school supplies yesterday, somebody on Lampton Ave got brown water coming out of their faucet. WLBT 5,6,10pm is human interest to the point of fatigue.
Were the Pulitzer Prizes on display?
Republic.
Bill Crawford said: “Discussion focused on local journalism’s importance as a community storyteller, watchdog, and public-information source.” Hahaha.
I literally laughed out loud since this is really code for: we so-called journalists can no longer produce our propaganda lies and use selective outrage without being corrected by those within the electorate…..willing to expose these undeniable biases.
When RINO Bill Crawford, Yellow Dog Sid Salter and Mississippi Today (backed by Billionaire Barksdale that presumably lives safely behind gates and makes sure his none in his family ever have to be a part of the Democrat Purposeful Crime Party’s public school system) stand up for the rights of innocent children in Democrat controlled cities like Jackson, maybe we can then consider taking their so-called journalism seriously.
Until then, it is nothing more than greed for advertising $$$’s propaganda, and should go the way of the buggy whip.
Beloved, do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits to see whether they are from God, for many false prophets have gone out into the world. 1 John 4:1
I stopped at 'local journalism'. Is that like a unicorn?
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