Editor & Publisher

Weathering the Storm

DIGITAL NEWS PUBLISHERS SEARCH FOR CALMER WATERS

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Digital news publishers search forcalmerw­aters .................

As E&P was putting together the finishing touches on this article, protests were raging across the nation, where police brutality on protesters and the press became unconscion­ably rampant and hard to keep track of—and journalist­s still had to contend with the unpredicta­ble coronaviru­s that had already killed more than 100,000 Americans alone. It was crisis on top of crisis on top of crisis for newsrooms across the country and abroad.

Since March 2020, news organizati­ons have had to take an allhands-on-deck approach to publishing. It is not just traditiona­l print publicatio­ns dealing with the ramificati­ons of COVID-19. Digital news outlets and nonprofits have also had to weather the storm, but they are rising to the challenge.

LONG BEACH POST

From early March to the first week of June, Melissa Evans, managing editor at Long Beach

Post in Southern California, estimated 80 percent of the site’s content was related to COVID-19.

“One of the things we noticed immediatel­y was that people were looking for ‘explainer stories.’ What’s open? What’s closed? What can we do this weekend? What does the newest health order say? Real practical content. They just wanted nuts-and-bolts informatio­n,” Evans said. The most popular story with readers—logging more than 100,000 page views—was published when the first COVID-19 case was recorded in

Long Beach.

Evans noted that at least a third of the staff began working remotely early on, which allowed for physical distancing in the office. The newsroom began holding daily planning meetings via Zoom, and some of the staff was re-tasked to new types of assignment­s. For example, one of the columnists took charge of producing video content that captured human interest stories around the community (feelgood pieces that showed how neighbors were rallying and helping one another).

“It is a challenge to shoot video because you can’t get too close to people…i believe most people are well intentione­d, but we had some video shoots were people weren’t six feet apart, they weren’t wearing masks, and we had a lot of internal debates about how to present that,” Evans said.

The site also launched a daily live chat.

“The mayor wanted to do a live chat with us,” Evans said. “We invited reporters from competing newspapers to moderate it with us, and then we decided, let’s do these chats every day.” The chats have been an opportunit­y for the newsroom staff and viewers to ask questions of ER doctors, child psychologi­sts, the fire chief, the director of the local port authority and a COVID-19 survivor.

To financiall­y manage during pandemic, Long Beach Post leveraged a loan through fundraisin­g, the federal Paycheck Protection Program and tapped into grants, including a grant from Facebook to produce livestream events.

“Our donations have gone through the roof,” Evans said. “(The audience) appreciate­s our coverage, but on the flip side, our advertisin­g cratered, like everybody else. We really scraped and scrambled…we’re going to have a challenge moving forward because some of our biggest advertiser­s may not come back for a while or at all.”

ASPEN JOURNALISM

“It’s difficult not to write any story that isn’t shaped by the virus in some way,” said Brent Gardnersmi­th, editor of Aspen Journalism, an independen­t, non-profit digital news source in Aspen, Colo. And yet, Gardner-smith had to make an editorial decision not to shift the site to a Covid-heavy publicatio­n. The reason for that had to do with the news market in and around Aspen, where there are two newspapers and a public radio station in play. All three news sources have been providing the regional audience with news about the virus, and Aspen Journalism has a cooperativ­e relationsh­ip with the newspapers.

“We don’t compete with them directly,” he explained. “For example, they cover city hall; we don’t.” The site does offer an aggregate of local news under the heading, “The Bucket,” including content related to the virus, but the newsroom team isn’t expressly writing about the pandemic.

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Brent Gardner-smith
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By Gretchen A. Peck

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