The Phoenix

Support your hometown newspaper

- By Melissa Martin Guest columnist Melissa Martin, PhD, is an author, columnist, educator, and therapist. She resides in Ohio. Contact her at melissamco­lumnist@gmail.com.

The First Amendment, which protects freedom of the press, was adopted on December

15, 1791, as part of the Bill of Rights. Before the Internet, social media, cable television, and radio, the hometown newspaper connected residents and neighbors to each other through stories, pictures, and published events.

P. T. Barnum declared, “He who is without a newspaper is cut off from his species.”

My grandparen­ts lived in the same house on the same piece of land in the same hollow in the same county for decades. The newspaper was fundamenta­l for them. As a child, I was amazed that a rolled up paper could be unfolded into a large paper with multiple pages. And I liked the feel of the thin paper on my fingertips, and the crinkly sound as the pages turned.

My grandpa read the newspaper from cover to cover. My grandma cut out any pictures or stories about people she knew and saved the newspaper clippings until they yellowed with age. Due to her upbringing in the hills of Appalachia, she reused almost everything. The older newspapers were used to line the bottom of her birdcages or cellar shelves or to wrap vegetables from the garden to give to neighbors.

The invention of modern technologi­cal devices has replaced newspapers for much of the younger crowd. They utilize Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat,

Instagram, Tumblr, YouTube, Podcasts, Apps, and Internet websites for their informatio­n.

While change is necessary, it also is scary.

“Printer’s ink is the great apostle of progress; whose pulpit is the press,” declared Horace Greeley. And some things like local newspapers need to remain intact.

Michael Connelly lamented, “A newspaper is the center of a community, it’s one of the tent poles of the community, and that’s not going to be replaced by websites and blogs.” I agree.

People still read newspapers. According to a recent online article in Editor & Publisher,a Nielsen Scarboroug­h study suggested “that in an average month, 169 million adults read a U.S. newspaper. They may be reading it in one or more iterations — in print, on the web, via a mobile app, courtesy of an enewslette­r or through a social media news feed.”

How do residents show support for their local newspaper? Plain and simple. Pay for a subscripti­on. Whether you read your news in the morning, afternoon, or evening; whether you read your newspapers in print or digital; whether you read state or local newspapers — take time to sprinkle a few words of kudos in an email, text, or card to the dedicated folks in front of and behind the printing presses.

Write a Letter to the Editor and express your gratitude. Compliment them on social media. Thank them for coverage of community events, grand openings, council meetings, births, weddings, and funerals, national, state, and local news. Give praise for good journalism.

Think about the many employment positions at newspaper offices. From the publisher to the carrier, each person needs appreciati­on for the teamwork it takes to publish a daily, a weekly, or a monthly newspaper. From the paper version to the online version, it takes diligence to snoop and scoop events, stories, and happenings.

Let us count our blessings for a free press in the United States of America.

How do residents show support for their local newspaper? Plain and simple. Pay for a subscripti­on.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States