A study released last week from the University of North Carolina ’s
School of Media
and Journalism illustrates the growing issue of news deserts in the U.S.
The study follows the school’s 2016 report “The Rise of a New
Media Baron and The Emerging Threat of News Deserts.” That study and the new
study, “The Expanding News Desert,” relied on the school’s proprietary database
of more than 9,000 newspapers.
Some details from the 2018 report include:
• The U.S.
has lost almost 1,800 papers since 2004, including more than 60 dailies and
1,700 weeklies. Around half of the remaining 7,112 in the country, 1,283
dailies and 5,829 weeklies, are in small and rural communities. Most have a
circulation of less than 15,000.
• Nearly 200 of the 3,143 counties in the U.S. have no
paper.
• Seventy percent (1,300) of the papers that closed or merged
were in metro areas. All but 50 were weeklies, most with circulation below
10,000.
• Over the past 15 years, total weekday circulation, which
includes both dailies and weeklies, went from 122 million to 73 million.
• California
lost the most dailies of any state. New York , Illinois and Texas
lost the most weeklies.
• The residents of America ’s emerging news deserts are
often its most
vulnerable citizens. They are generally poorer, older and less
educated than the average American.
The report says thousands of dailies and weeklies have become
shells, or “ghosts,” of their old selves. They still publish, “but the quality,
quantity and scope of their editorial content are significantly diminished,”
the report says.
The school has produced a website, usnewsdeserts.com, with details on the news
landscape in each of the 50 states and other data.
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