Southern Maryland News

Real newspapers still offering real news

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Newspapers — especially community newspapers — are alive and kicking, no matter what you may have read online. We chronicle the lives and times of our neighbors, and keep a close eye on government. And in addition to our print products, we maintain an up-to-date website to serve the public.

This is National Newspaper Week, Oct. 1 through 7, when newspapers are encouraged to promote themselves. Frankly, we don’t do a really good job of self-promotion — not nearly as good as television, probably because we don’t try as hard.

Yet we’re convinced we have great reason to be proud. We are the paper of record for this community, and we take that responsibi­lity seriously. As a twice-weekly newspaper, we may not be as immediate as television, but the race is not always to the swift. Television can give you snapshots and sound bites, but we can give you the big picture — and you can always go back and check the details at your convenienc­e.

And with the Maryland Independen­t’s website and burgeoning presence on social media, we can give you a bit of the swift as well.

This year’s theme for the week is “Real Newspapers, Real News.” That’s what we bring you twice a week, on the newsstand or in your mailbox. Real stories, real journalism, real work, real deadlines, real honesty, real facts and real changes, often in the face of real threats to our business.

Indeed, the job of newspapers in America, in thousands of communitie­s like ours, has never been more challengin­g — or more challenged.

Rollie Atkinson of Sonoma West Publishers in California reminds us, “once upon a time, newspaper circulatio­n grew faster than the country’s population … But since the 1980s, it has been on a steady and worsening decline. At the same time, newspapers remain the top choice for people seeking real news and reliable informatio­n.”

Atkinson cites a recent poll that found more than half of Americans still subscribe or pay for newspapers or access to their websites. Only 11 percent of the survey’s respondent­s said the internet was their primary news source.

“Newspapers have survived the advent of radio and broadcast TV,” Atkinson says. “but the threat of 24/7 internet-delivered media, commercial­s and amusement is disrupting the very reality for which newspapers were first invented. More and more people can’t tell the difference between real news and fake news … But no amount of tweets will protect the public’s right to know or watchdog our government.”

So what’s the future for newspapers when people these days, especially younger ones, think real news should be free and magically appear on their smart phones? This is a business that has had to change with the times, and will continue to do so. So even if newspapers as we have come to know them evolve into something different in the coming decades, keeping the content trustworth­y and reliable will remain the hallmark.

“The real matter here is not so much keeping newspapers real; rather, it is keeping journalism real,” Atkinson says. “Real news requires fact-checking, research, practice, trust building and a devotion to truth, honesty and democratic decision making. … Real newspapers have witnessed and experience­d changing realities, including the founding of this nation, world wars, space travel and personal computers, and next, robots and artificial intelligen­ce. So whatever reality that newspapers next face to stay real and keep real news alive will require real readers and real revenues.”

In many ways, local newspapers are the last refuge of unfiltered America. At the Maryland Independen­t, we realize we are important to our community. With your continued cooperatio­n, we make a difference.

So celebrate that with us twice a week, every week.

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