Some news stories are national and some are international in scope. Some news stories are regional and some are state. But think about it — all news is local.
Take the green algae in the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool. It may be receiving national, even international coverage but it is a local story for Washington, D.C. and hyperlocal to the Washington Mall.
Every story has to start somewhere.
Which brings me to my friends at Local NEWS Network, headquartered in Durango, Colorado. LNN has recently launched its redesigned websites serving small towns across the U.S.
You can check out the Durango site or watch the LNN.news Overview Video. You also can read my essay from a year ago about the importance of small town news.
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Many people now realize that the closure of small-town newspapers has created a vast news desert covering virtually all of rural America. And that this has had dire consequences, in the form of conspiracy theories, lies and misinformation.
While it may be a stretch to claim this has led directly to the rise of MAGA, the lack of vibrant small-town journalism certainly has been a contributing factor.
Among the various efforts to do something about this problem, many take a national, non-profit, top-down approach, whereas the Local NEWS Network, based in Durango, CO, takes a local, for-profit, bottom-up approach. Through its digital network, LNN delivers local news and local advertising to communities that otherwise would be part of the news desert.
This week, LNN’s Laurie Sigillito published an article on LinkedIn titled “Advertising in Small Towns: It’s About Trust, Not Clicks.”
In it, she says: “Attempts to introduce advertising-supported digital media in small towns and rural areas hit up against the reality that the metrics used to measure effectiveness nationally—impressions, CTRs and programmatic segmentation—are all optimized for dense urban markets.”
Meanwhile, she continues, “What actually works in small towns is visibility. You need to be seen by everyone, not just target segments. Neighbors talk to neighbors and word gets around town organically.”
Her article pinpoints the main business reason national efforts to succeed in small towns fail more often than succeed. “Our conclusion is that national ad tools don’t work in small towns. The goal here is not more data, it’s more connection. Rural advertising should feel more like a handshake than a sales funnel—personal, human, and built to last.”
I’ve thought about the news desert problem a lot and have concluded that to re-establish media in localized settings, we need to address the business plan first, then get to the question of content,
LNN does that.
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Nieman reports that local news sites across the country are in trouble because people are “abandoning them for social media.”
By basing its content in video, LNN may be able to counter this trend. LNN is built to scale.
HEADLINES:
Senate Votes to Check Trump’s War Powers, Rebuking Him on Iran (NYT)
Drowning deaths soar in France as Europe buckles in peak of heatwave (BBC)
Dozens drown, schools close, heat records set to be annihilated: Europe has a major heat problem and it’s only getting worse (CNN)
U.S. and Iran Offer Conflicting Accounts of Nuclear Discussions (NYT)
Pentagon seeks $80 billion from Congress for Iran war (AP)
Mamdani Allies Sweep House Primaries in Big Night for Left-Wing Democrats (NYT)
Trump’s botched reflecting pool becomes 2,028ft metaphor (Guardian)
U.S. Bets Billions of Dollars in Low-Cost Loans Can Revive Nuclear Power (WSJ)
Rural America’s farms are already being crushed by an economic crisis. They now face the risk of a ‘mini-Dust Bowl’ as a rare Super El Niño looms (Fortune)
With Win in Washington, Socialists Have Momentum in Urban America (NYT)
THEY ARE DONE Former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) said she’s “done” with the Republican Party, which she said has turned into the “America LAST” party. Her comments came after right-wing commentator and former Fox News host Tucker Carlson said he was done with the party after voting Republican his entire life. [HuffPost]
Britain’s lost decade (Axios)
Israeli authorities and security forces deliberately targeted Palestinian children, resulting in genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes in Gaza, and war crimes in the occupied West Bank, an independent U.N. inquiry said. (Reuters)
Inside Japan’s billion-dollar quest to help a sleep-starved nation rest (WP)
China’s humanoid robots moving in as Asia’s workforce ages out (Asia Times)
New York’s primary went from celebrity contest to AI proxy war (WP)
GOP Urges Democrats To Tone Down Rhetoric Used To Quote President Verbatim (Onion)

