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Aspen Digital

Talk of ‘Reinventing Local Journalism’

An Essay from the 2025 Local News Summit

A photo of Richard J. Tofel at the 2025 Local News Summit for his essay on reinventing local journalism.
February 21, 2025

Journalism has found itself in the crosshairs amid the dizzying swirl of news coming out of Washington.

Amid the uncertainty, local journalism got a modest boost last month with the fourth annual Local News Summit, convened in New Orleans—just days ahead of the Super Bowl there—by the Lenfest Institute for Journalism (for which I do some consulting) and Aspen Digital. With a goal to spur the reinvention of local news, the Summit brought together about a hundred leaders in local news, philanthropy, journalism more broadly—and, for the first time, an invigorating selection of new news creators.

Many of us have the sense that local news needs not just to be reengineered as a business matter—which it surely does, as most legacy newspapers, especially (but not only) those controlled by hedge funds, continue to wither—but also to be reinvented editorially. The most exciting ideas proffered at the summit pointed in this direction.

But Merida suggested that the time may have come for local newsrooms to be reorganized away from a system of beats based on subject matter (and rooted in legacy newspaper sections dictated by advertising imperatives), such as education, criminal justice, business, etc., to beats centered on neighborhoods or local regions. As Evan Smith, cofounder of the Texas Tribune and now of Emerson Collective, observed approvingly, “proximity is the key,” while Northwestern University Medill professor Jeremy Gilbert, summarizing a recent study on Next Gen News, offered the axiom that the most effective news “must come from someone you know.”

Other intriguing thoughts from the Local News Summit included the following:

  • Participants wisely warned that headlines and social media posts that sensationalize or trivialize the reporting for which they seek attention are having the effect of eroding reader trust.
  • Spotlight PA CEO Christopher Baxter called for an avowedly populist pitch on behalf of newer entrants in local news, portraying them as a response to hedge fund gutting and neglect of community needs around the country.
  • Noting the Trump administration’s rhetorical attacks on the press, and the echoes already starting to surface locally around the nation, a number of summit participants suggested a need for what they termed “collective security” and ultimately perhaps even a “NATO for News” that would come jointly to the defense of any press outlet threatened for the free exercise of its constitutional rights.
  • Unusual for a local-journalism gathering was the presence of a dozen news creators publishing independently on TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, or Substack, some at meaningful scale and earning significant income. Several are native to these media platforms and bring the fresh perspective of other career paths, while others have created second careers following roles at CNN, NBC News, or the Globe & Mail.

There is no question that ours is a moment of confusion in our country and in journalism, and of no little despair. At the same time, as the setting in New Orleans at the beginning of the twentieth year since Hurricane Katrina should remind us, destruction, while real and painful, can also provide the impetus for rebuilding and reimagining. At its best moments, this year’s Local News Summit offered some important hints at the way forward.

The views represented herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Aspen Institute, its programs, staff, volunteers, participants, or its trustees.

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