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Small-town newspapers shutting down due to the lack of a succession plan is a growing problem in nearly a dozen states, according to a tally by CJR and a number of statewide press associations.
Americans are losing trust in journalism and turning away from legacy media and local newspapers are closing at an alarming rate. There is a great way to address these challenges: School newspapers.
When Local Newspapers Die, Corruption Festers Our study also found that digital media sites didn’t make much of a difference.
President Donald Trump lobbed another attack against the nation's two leading newspapers over their polling.The president started off Friday morning with a fresh complaint about his approval ...
Urbanism June 5, 2025 5 Min Read Landscape architecture is broken – this is how to fix our parks and gardens Californian landscape architecture firm Terremoto is, as its name suggests, shaking things ...
Align Capital Partners (“ACP”) is pleased to announce that it completed a growth investment in Strata Landscape Services (“Strata” or the “Company”), a leadi ...
Closure of four northwest Minnesota newspapers feels like 'a death in the family,' said Dick Richards Dick Richards founded Richards Publishing with his wife, Corrine, in 1972.
New York newspapers had a field day riffing on Tyrese Haliburton's choke gesture: 'Choke's on Knicks' Videos cannot play due to a network issue. Please check your Internet connection and try again.
Legal newspapers are required by law to publish public notices from different government or private organizations, like school board minutes, budget hearings or zoning notices.
A syndicated, AI-generated summer reading list featuring fake books by real authors was published in major newspapers this week. Above, a reader enjoys the sunshine in Hyde Park in London in 2009.
A syndicated, AI-generated summer reading list featuring fake books by real authors was published in major newspapers this week. Above, a reader enjoys the sunshine in Hyde Park in London in 2009.
Originally written for King Features, a division of Hearst, “Heat Index” was printed as a kind of stand-alone magazine and inserted into the Sun-Times, the Inquirer, and possibly other ...