๐ฒ๐ Rocky Mountain Media Review
Local media news in the Rocky Mountain West (and adjacent states) for October 2022
This is a special expanded edition of the โInside the News in Coloradoโ newsletter. Occasionally, Iโll try to round up news from local media scenes outside Colorado to offer a more regional perspective. (This one checks in on a cluster of states from Idaho to New Mexico.)
๐ We begin in Nevada where longtime journalist Jeff German, 69, of the Las Vegas Review-Journal, was stabbed to death outside of his suburban home early last month. His โfellow reporters knew they would have to investigate his death before they mourned it,โ Sarah Ellison wrote for The Washington Post this week. Police arrested and jailed a county official who had been the subject of Germanโs recent critical reporting and had lashed out at the reporter on social media. Authorities havenโt said to what extent they had developed the politician as a suspect before journalists at the Review-Journal had already โzeroed in on him,โ Ellison wrote. โThe journalists, though, shared some of their own intel with police, from their list of Germanโs controversial story subjects to their identification of his car as a possible match for the suspect vehicle.โ While journalists at the paper arenโt taking credit, an editor said, they put the suspect on police radar early.
๐ก๐ฑ The development of a slain investigative journalist and a story-subject suspect has caused press-freedom issues in Nevada. After police seized Germanโs digital devices, it created a โhistoric challenge to reporter shield laws.โ Authorities want to review what is on the journalistโs phone and computer hard drives. But reporters often rely on confidential sources โ and those sources might not expect their negotiated source-protection to die just because a journalist with whom theyโve made an agreement does and authorities or others wind up with access to the reporterโs private material. Last week, a judge temporarily blocked authorities from โimmediately searchingโ the deceased journalistโs devices, and this week a different judge barred them from doing the same, saying she wants โboth sides to work on language for the injunction that specifies what devices Las Vegas police seized.โ Another hearing is scheduled for next week.
Now, onto the rest of the regionโฆ
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๐บ Nebraska TV journalist Melanie Standiford lost her job after The Flatwater Free Press reported she was involved in collecting signatures for a local ballot initiative that would ban abortions and that the journalist had โextensively covered the very issue she helped petition for in her town.โ Standiford, who was news director at the NBC affiliate KNOP in North Platte, told The Star Herald that she has โzero regretsโ and was considering legal action. โIโm sad that we live in a world where we canโt have a personal life without it being questioned,โ she told the paper. Furthermore, Standiford said, โI wasnโt a journalist that dayโ when she sat at a table in her church as people signed petitions. โI should at least be able to feel safe in my church and with my community without being thought of as Melanie Standiford, News 2.โ KNOPโs general manager told the Star Herald the station โencourages civic involvement among our employees, so long as such activities do not give the appearance of interfering with journalistic impartiality.โ This week, Standiford took a position as chairwoman of her county Republican Party.
๐ฉบ In Oklahoma, viewers of KJRH in Tulsa watched as a local TV news anchor had the โbeginnings of a strokeโ while live on the air. โIโm glad to share that my tests have all come back great,โ she said. โThere are still lots of questions, and lots to follow up on, but the bottom line is I should be just fine.โ
โญ In Kansas, The Journal, a civic issues magazine, told its readers why it has embraced the solutions journalism movement. โIn my view, solutions journalism is fulfilling the promise that public journalism made decades ago to help journalism become more constructive and bolster democracy rather than weaken it,โ wrote the magazineโs editor, Chris Green.
7๏ธโฃ In Montana, for a project supported by the American Press Institute, journalists Nora Mabie, Antonio Ibarra and Larry Mayer โare reporting from all seven Montana tribal reservations on how voter outreach and registration efforts resonate in Indian Country.โ
๐ Across the American West, news deserts are spreading, reported Ruxandra Guidi for High Country News. The author found, however, that โcivic engagement is taking other forms.โ Guidi reported: โIn my corner of the desert, I may be mourning the demise of a decades-old alternative weekly, but a new nonprofit startup, Arizona Luminaria, is delivering in-depth accountability reporting in English and Spanish โ and stepping up its elections coverage.โ
๐ข Meanwhile, โas the closures of newspapers leave Americans struggling for information, Chevron has swooped in to serve up a mixture of local news and propaganda,โ Adam Gabbatt reported for The Guardian. โThe banner at the top of Permian Proud does state that the site is โsponsored by Chevron.โ But at first glance, the sponsorship seems like a benevolent grant.โ On a Wednesday in September, Permian Proudโs front page โincluded stories about an upcoming air show and a storytelling workshop โ typical local newspaper fare,โ Gabbatt reported. โBut interspersed with news of livestock sales and processions is a series of stories lauding Chevronโs achievements in the Permian Basin, a sprawling area covering parts of west Texas and east New Mexico, where the company operates numerous oil fields.โ
๐ธ Elsewhere, โwriters for a D.C.-based media operation run by prominent Democratic operatives are behind a sprawling network of ostensible local media outlets churning out Democrat-aligned news content in midterm battleground states,โ Lachlan Markay and Thomas Wheatley reported for Axios. States include โArizona, Colorado, Georgia, Michigan, New Hampshire, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Wisconsin.โ
๐ค In Wyoming, after more than three years of remote work, the Cowboy State Daily digital site recently opened a โbrick-and-mortar officeโ within walking distance of the statehouse in Cheyenne. Since its purchase earlier this year by wealthy businessman B. Wayne Hughes, Jr., the site has been on a hiring spree โ and is currently looking to hire another reporter. (Iโve become intrigued by Wyomingโs media scene and the emergence of new players there, and I hope to have something more on it soon.)
๐คบ Lawyers from five Utah law firms have agreed to โdonate their timeโ to the nonprofit Salt Lake Tribune newspaper to โhelp reporters appeal records request denials โ and get information that should be public under the law.โ
๐ The Nevada Independentโs 2022 election coverage mission statement reads, in part: โIt doesnโt mean that weโre squarely in the middle of an ever-shifting partisan debate, or happy to sit on the sidelines in matters of grave importance to the civic community of Nevada.โ
๐ The Lee Enterprises newspaper chain introduced readers to its public service team, including those here in the West. They include Marina Trahan Martinez and Emily Hamer in Texas, Corey Jones in Kansas, and Ted McDermott in Washington.
โ๏ธ โAn Arizona newspaper publisher who repeatedly claimed that his ex-wife poisoned him has dropped lawsuits against her ahead of a trial that was scheduled to startโ last month, The Associated Press reported.
๐ ProPublica has opened up five new opportunities with its Local Reporting Network โon local accountability projects for a yearโ โ including in New Mexico. Deadline to apply is Nov. 1.
๐ฏ Want to sponsor this newsletter? | Hereโs Denver agency SE2 founder Eric Anderson about why he did it
โItโs been great to work with Corey on this sponsorship,โ Anderson wrote in a recent post at SE2. โIโd encourage others who want to reach his uniquely influential audience to consider [this newsletter] as a cost-effective way to connect.โ
You should feel good about this, too, reader. He called you uniquely influential. If you or your organization would like to sponsor this newsletter, get in touch. ๐ฏ
๐ฏ ๐ The Argus Leader, which told readers that โno other news organization in South Dakota has our level of reach, or the ability to let government officials know weโre paying attention,โ is launching a โreader-driven investigative initiativeโ called 100 Eyes on South Dakota, which is โbased on our namesake and the philosophy of the 100-eyed Greek giant, the Argus โ keeping watch from all directions.โ
๐ In Oklahoma, Better News examined how The Oklahoman newspaper โchanged its newsroomโs mindset to focus on digital growth.โ
โก๏ธ The Kansas Defender published a letter from the editor saying it was exposing the Kansas City mediaโs โwhite supremacist hypocrisyโ and ensuring the Black community that the news organization โwill not back down.โ
โ๏ธ Gannett is looking to hire โa data-minded digital expert who can connect newsrooms to key audiences by combining digital analytics with strategy and best practicesโ for their newsrooms in Colorado, Oklahoma, New Mexico, and Texas.
โ๏ธ In Montana, Crow Tribe high school journalism teacher Luella Brien โnoticed the lack of news focusing on the Crow Indian Reservationโ and is now seeking stories โno one tells.โ
๐ฐ A Nebraska family โthat built its farmlands into a multi-million-dollar enterpriseโ has gifted the land โto support the University of NebraskaโLincolnโs College of Journalism and Mass Communications and its depth reportingย program.โ
๐ The Park City Recordโs new editor in Utah is โkeen to the responsibility of helming a community newspaper.โ
๐ป Kansas Publishing Ventures is launching โa new, online learning platform geared toward small community newspapers called โEarn Your Press Pass,โโ Editor & Publisher reported.
๐ The Salt Lake Tribuneโs editorial board urged its readers to support a federal law, writing, โUtahns who care about their communities, their nation, democracy in general, should contact members of Congress and ask them to support the Journalism Competition and Preservation Act of 2021.โ
๐ The editor of The Nevada Independent told readers she โknew a fair number of people would likely find one or more of my comments insensitiveโ after she asked in a newsletter: โIs it just me or does anyone else think the lionizing of reporter Jeff German [has] been a bit much?โ while indicating she did not think he was a โhero.โ Staff of the outlet publicly apologized. In addressing the matter, editor Elizabeth Thompson, said in part: โI did not foresee, though, that members of our newsroom would feel embarrassedย or think my opinion on the matter could beย a problem for our brand and/or was in conflict with our mission.โ
โฐ๏ธ Don C. Woodward, a โgentlemanโ of journalism in Utah, died at 86.
โโ Writing in Idaho Press, Thomas L. Knapp, director and senior news analyst at the William Lloyd Garrison Center for Libertarian Advocacy Journalism, said that in journalism, โobjectivityโ and โneutralityโ arenโt the same thing.
๐ฐ A nonprofit newspaper revolution has hit Colorado as the third paper in the span of a month decided to switch its ownership model โ this time a big-city alternative weekly.
Iโm Corey Hutchins, co-directorย of Colorado Collegeโsย Journalism Institute in Colorado Springs. For nearly a decade Iโve reported on the U.S. local media scene for Columbia Journalism Review, and Iโve been a journalist for longer at multiple news organizations. Theย Colorado Media Project, where I write case studies,ย is underwriting my weekly newsletter โInside the News in Colorado.โ Follow meย onย Twitter, reply or subscribe to this monthly newsletter rounding up local news issues in the Rocky Mountain regionย here,ย or e-mail me at CoreyHutchinsย [at] gmail [dot] com. Get in touch if youโd like to underwrite this project.
Great stuff, Corey, as always. Keep it coming!