What A Day - Live, Laugh, Local News
Episode Date: July 5, 2023Over the past year, newsrooms across the country have experienced significant staff cuts, even leading to the shuttering of BuzzFeed News and bankruptcy of VICE Media. We’re joined by S. Mitra Kalit...a, veteran journalist and co-founder of URL media, to learn more about why these layoffs are happening and its impact on local journalism.Show notes:URL Media - https://url-media.com/TIME: Looking Back on Three Years of Performative Diversity Efforts - https://time.com/charter/6290473/undoing-workplace-diversity-gains/What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastCrooked Coffee is officially here. Our first blend, What A Morning, is available in medium and dark roasts. Wake up with your own bag at crooked.com/coffeeFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
it's wednesday july 5th i'm treyville anderson and i'm priyanka arabindi and this is what a day
on today's show we're bringing you a conversation about an issue that has been top of mind for us
here on what a day just this year several news outlets across the country have laid off
significant amounts of their staff i'm talking talking about the Washington Post, the LA Times, Insider, NBC News, and ABC News. The list is truly endless.
That's only naming a few. Absolutely. And it's not just the big mainstream outlets that have
been laying off, you know, these important players in the newsroom. We're also seeing this happen in
smaller local newsrooms. And that all has an
impact on our democracy, on the ability to hold officials accountable, and on encouraging civic
engagement, things that we as journalists and the folks here at Crooked really, really,
really, really care about. Yeah, I mean, it's been really disheartening to see this decline
in local news since, as you mentioned, it's a vital resource for people across the country just to know what's going on in their own communities.
Especially as we get ready for another presidential election.
Right.
We need local communities to like be getting the necessary information so that they can make the right decision when they go to the
polls, for example. This has only become more and more important as there have become less and less
resources, it seems, for these journalists to do their job. So it's really a huge problem.
Yeah. And so I wanted to learn more about the nature of these layoffs and where local news
is headed. So I spoke with Esmitra Kalida.
She's a veteran journalist and newsroom manager, one of my former newsroom managers.
She's also co-founder and CEO of URL Media,
a multi-platform network of Black and brown community news outlets that share content and revenue.
So she knows a thing or two about the media industry.
I started by asking her why
newsrooms across the country have been cutting their staff. 2023 has been a pretty awful year
for media companies. The first quarter of this year, you have a number of events. You have a lot
of those benefits dried up, right? So COVID funding dried up. Federal SNAP benefits, March 1st, the extension
of those dry up. And so for those of you who live in neighborhoods where you can judge how well we're
doing by your food lines, I'll tell you here in Queens, the food lines are once again, just as
they were immediately after the pandemic, running many times around the block, right? So those are
some economic indicators that just give you a sense of the pain. I just right away start to see this behavior of,
we got to cancel this advertising contract. If you're a freelancer, maybe you had a deal before
and they're calling you and saying, listen, we can't do it. What you started to see were media
companies retrench in the short term. That's the short term.
There's two games in town, basically, right, for national media. You have the BuzzFeeds of the world. Those were venture-backed outlets. The same for Vice, right? And so basically, you had a lot
of promise in digital media on the back of, eh, you don't really need to make money right now.
You just need to grow your audience. Just grow, grow, grow, right? And so what are the factors over the last five,
10 years of the internet you and I have been a part of to help you gain audience? You look at
what's trending on Google News. What are the Twitter moments today? What is Facebook telling
you people want to consume content on? And basically,
we were able to show a lot of growth of these outlets on the backs of what's trending.
The other funding piece that I think you and I have a lot of more familiarity with is the
publicly traded media company that's like the LA Times or the Chicago Tribune or Gannett's of the world. Again, like
all of these models have changed over the last few years, but we're a part of media conglomerates
that run a lot of small and local news outlets are basically achieving efficiency at scale.
What does that mean? You know, you're covering LA, but your tech folks might be out of Chicago.
Then you start to see these layoffs and the discovery that content is actually really expensive, right?
That reporting is expensive, that the advertising dollars that we used to use for a print product to come to your home every day, suddenly the LA Times of the world and others are in
competition with, guess who, BuzzFeed and Vice and Vox Media and other outlets that are free
on the internet. When your audience is everybody, your audience is nobody.
Absolutely. And as a result, as you just mentioned, we've seen now a lot of newsrooms, you know, shrinking, many newsrooms disappearing.
I've particularly been thinking of this. There was this Medill study from last year that said that two local newspapers were shutting down every week in the United States. Obviously, we live in these big cities,
right? Your New York's, your LA's, your Atlanta's of the world, your Chicago's. But if you live in,
you know, Dubuque, your local newspaper shutting down will have an outsized impact on your local
community. So I wonder if you could speak to a bit how this like broader system that
is at play as it relates to our news is like impacting local communities on like a smaller
level. I often think about media literacy already being in the shit can and how if you don't have
a newspaper now, you know, to hold your leaders accountable or to tell you, you know, what's going on,
how that just like deteriorates a society. So could you speak to that a little bit?
Yeah, sure. I think two things can be true and they're both connected. One is democracy is
crumbling as a result of the scenario you lay out, right? If you don't have news outlets in
rural areas or smaller cities, suddenly the watchdog and the accountability
on government is non-existent. But also people's participation with civic institutions starts to
feel like, eh, I could just be on my couch. You can read some of the aforementioned outlets and
feel outraged and tweet about it and feel like you participated,
but you're really not participating in your local government or community or activities, right?
That's one area that I think is really fraught in terms of the lack of information then affecting behaviors to participate, right? The second piece, which is also true, but connected to what I just
said, is people are consuming more information
than ever. Notice I use the word information. And so I think one thing we don't talk about
enough in the media is we looked at each other as competition. You're at the LA Times, you know,
maybe you're looking at KPCC and LAist and the LA Business Journal, Daily News, like those types of
outlets are the ecosystem by which media is judging
effectiveness. Were we first on the story? Were we competitive on the story? What we've missed over
the last few years is just massive consumption across different places, not just Twitter, Facebook
and some of the social media outlets, but you know, your neighborhood listserv might be where
you're getting this information. There's a Reuters report out, and this is really depressing,
which also explains, I think, some of the layoffs in the climate that we're in.
It asked news consumers around the world, how likely are you to subscribe to a news outlet?
Most people, not likely, right? What would it take for you to subscribe? And by and large, the answer
was nothing, meaning we're disengaged and we don't want to engage. That hurdle, it's not
insurmountable, but it requires us to change the very nature of our product in order to survive.
We'll get back to that conversation momentarily, but first let's pay the bills. We'll get back to that conversation momentarily. But first,
let's pay the bills. We'll be back after some ads. Now back to my conversation with Mitra Kalita. You recently wrote an op-ed for Time about how the diversity efforts in newsrooms that we particularly saw in 2020 have, you know, disappeared by now in a lot of ways. I think of specifically how a lot of folks
of color were hired in various positions in various news outlets as a result of 2020. And now
as we see a lot of these layoffs happening, it's a lot of folks of color, right, who are impacted as a result. Could you talk a bit about that circumstance
and like what it says about one,
these alleged commitments that these outlets have made,
but also kind of this broader issue
that we're talking about around how individuals
and audiences are like interacting with the media at large.
I think the LA Times in your own
backyard is a good example of some trends that are happening across the industry. Over the last
few years, not only did you have a billionaire buy it, you had the newsroom unionize. You had a big
diversity push in the wake of George Floyd that pervaded the entire organization, including at
the top of the organization. The editor-in-chief is African-American, Kevin Merida. He's the second black editor-in-chief of the LA Times.
I think that's really significant because you and I both fight not just for the first,
but so that there is a second and a third and a so forth, right?
What we've just seen with the LA Times and layoffs is a confluence of all of these things. The billionaire owner,
how deep is the commitment when times are tough, right? Times are tough right now. The advertising
market has shrank. You have a union. The newsroom voted to unionize. What happens when you're
unionized? Yes, there are many, many benefits of that. But for the most part, the firing practices to be in compliance with unions,
and this has been a trend across digital media, so this is another thing you're seeing,
is last in, first out. What does that mean? The last people who got hired are the first who are
going to be shed. And what happens when your commitment to diversity is always as recent as,
I'm sure you have some Southern phrase, like,
as like the wind is blowing, right? It's like, it's not entrenched in your organization. It's a
fad. But across our industry over the last few years, it was like, where are the people of color,
you know, and URL, we run a recruitment arm, and we've worked with a number of organizations,
and we have benefited from that desire to get
people of color in the door as fast as possible. But what happens when times are tough? Because
many of the other chains that I mentioned were also union shops. And as long as diversity is a
fad versus fundamental to the running of these organizations, We are going to shed talent every time there's a downturn.
And what is that called? It's systemic racism, right? It is an example of institutions that have
not changed themselves to meet the moment, but are kind of doing the cosmetic perfunctory effort to
just have some photos with some people of color on their website.
And that to me is probably one of the most hurtful parts of 2023, because I believe you cannot
disconnect that from the financial failure of these models. You cannot connect the lack of
imaginative thinking and the real desire to reinvent yourself with the failure of these
institutions, just full stop, right? These organizations are failing. And yet, I would
argue that they need diversity and connection to community more than ever for their survival,
because that strategy of serving everybody, i.e. the majority of a country being white,
has clearly not worked.
That was my conversation with Mitra Khalida, veteran journalist and co-founder of URL Media.
One more thing before we go.
Are you a trans person living in a red state that has recently passed a ban on gender
affirming care? Have you or someone you love been personally affected by Republican-backed attacks
on LGBTQ plus rights? Do you want to make your voice heard right here on this very podcast about
the real harm that these laws have on people's lives? We want to hear from you. Send us a voice
note or written response at wad at crooked.com
with your name, where you're from, and how you've been impacted. If you'd prefer to remain anonymous,
that's just fine too. Just let us know. That's all for today. If you like the show,
make sure you subscribe, leave a review, read a newspaper, and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just how to keep local news alive like me,
What A Day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
I'm Trevelle Anderson.
And support local journalism.
Something we can be excited about.
I love that for us.
An end line we're happy about.
Absolutely.
Go subscribe to your local newspaper, please and thanks.
Do it.
I mean, my local newspaper published a police blotter every week,
and you always got to see who was in trouble for drinking underage.
It was really fun.
I liked it, personally.
Well, today's a production of Crooked Media. It's recorded and mixed by Bill lance our show's producers itsy kink dania raven yamamoto and natalie bettendorf are our associate producers
our intern is ryan cochran and our senior producer is lita martinez
our theme music is by colin gilliard and kashaka and Kashaka.