Smithsonian Magazine once asked the rhetorical question, “Can a weekly paper in rural New Mexico raise enough hell to keep its readers hungry for more, week after week?
The Rio Grande Sun, published in EspaƱola, NM, is considered one of the best weekly newspapers in the country. Bob Trapp, the Sun‘s founder, editor, and publisher, is the quintessential newspaperman—the last of a vanishing breed—a scrupulously honest, fearless, independent journalist, and a mentor to generations of young reporters.
The Sun is known for investigative reporting. The paper broke the story that its own rural community had the highest per capita heroin overdose rate in the country. It has led the fight for open records and open meetings in a county where political shenanigans are the rule.
The film follows the Sun’s
reporters and editors as they write about the
news, sports, arts and cultures of a
large rural county. John Burnett, a
National Public Radio correspondent,
reports on the Sun‘s Police Blotter—“the
best in the country.” The Sun‘s
journalists investigate the largest
embezzlement in the state’s history, and the
widespread use of tranquilizers in the county jail.
“The Sun Never Sets” is narrated by Bob Edwards, National Radio Hall of Fame and Peabody award-winning news anchor and radio host. It is an official selection of the Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival and the Ojai Film Festival, and will be screened at the Newseum in Washington, D.C.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment