Current:Home > ScamsFastexy Exchange|For 3 big Alabama newspapers, the presses are grinding to a halt -EverVision Finance
Fastexy Exchange|For 3 big Alabama newspapers, the presses are grinding to a halt
Poinbank View
Date:2025-04-08 17:39:50
BIRMINGHAM,Fastexy Exchange Ala. — It's gotten harder to find a sidewalk newspaper box to buy a copy of The Birmingham News, but you can find the latest edition at the public library downtown.
Sherrel Wheeler Stewart pulls a food stain-splattered copy hanging from a spindle.
"A lot of people read it," she says. "Look at this spaghetti sauce."
Stewart is a former editor and reporter who spent nearly two decades working for the newspaper, and she has fond memories.
"The front page used to be that place that was, I guess you could say, sacred," Stewart says. "To pick up that Sunday paper, open it up and see your name at the top ... it was just special."
But holding that Sunday paper will soon be a bygone thing.
Big loss for Birmingham
The Alabama Media Group says that after Feb. 26, 2023, one last Sunday, it will permanently stop the presses for The Birmingham News, The Huntsville Times and Mobile's Press-Register. The company had already curtailed publishing from daily to three times a week in 2012 — part of a restructuring by parent company Advance Publications that also affected New Orleans' The Times-Picayune.
Stewart says the move to digital only is a loss for a metropolitan city like Birmingham and the nearly 200,000 people who live there.
"It's just not a good thing," she says. "Birmingham is on the move. I think a city like Birmingham needs a printed newspaper."
She might get sad about the end of the print era, but even she acknowledges that she mostly gets her news these days from the papers' digital site, AL.com.
Newspaper executives say that's where the audience is.
"In an effort to try to deliver more news to more folks and follow where people were going, we've made the decision to stop printing next year," says Alabama Media Group President Tom Bates.
The numbers bear it out. A decade ago, Bates says, the combined daily circulation for the Birmingham News, Huntsville Times and Press-Register was about 260,000. Now it's down to roughly 30,000, he says, compared with AL.com's daily reach of about a million people a day.
"The growth on the digital side for us has been extraordinary," Bates says. "If our job is to get out important stories, we need to get them out the way that people want to receive them. ... Our goal is to do more journalism, not less."
The shift means closing a printing facility in Mobile and the loss of a little more than 100 jobs, mostly in production, circulation and advertising. No newsroom cuts are expected, says Kelly Ann Scott, the editor in chief and vice president of content for Alabama Media Group. She plans to add to investigative teams and other areas of focus.
"As we've evolved with our audiences to tell stories in different ways and different platforms, we've added people in different directions," Scott says. For example, videographers and podcasters. "We've definitely diversified the types of positions we have in our room."
Print-to-digital has been a long time coming
Longtime local journalists saw this day coming.
"I mourned the newspaper a dozen years ago, frankly," says John Archibald, a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for AL.com who has been with The Birmingham News since 1986.
Archibald says he hardly ever sees the print edition anymore. It might sound like heresy for an old-school newspaperman, but he says that's the future of journalism.
"While I have nostalgia for print and I love the newspaper, it's not the paper that I love. It's the notion of going out and covering news that people need to know," he says. "We are all in this industry learning how to do that in this environment."
What's happening in Alabama is where local papers have been headed for a while, says Penny Muse Abernathy, a visiting professor at Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism.
"It is part of a whole progression as we've seen the diminishment of daily newspapers over the past two decades," she says.
Abernathy is the author of annual reports on the state of local news around the nation. The 2022 report found that at least 1 in 5 of the 100 largest newspapers in the U.S. are now publishing two or fewer times a week in a print edition.
Newspapers as a binding force in the community
As papers disappear, Abernathy says the question is whether digital publications can play the same role in civic life that newspapers traditionally have.
"The best, strongest, most committed daily newspapers really help bind together a state," Abernathy says. "And I think that's really what you're dealing with is what is the relevance of these papers in a digital age? Who is setting the agenda for the topics that will be discussed, debated and decided on?"
Alabamians have been reading The Birmingham News since the late 1800s.
Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin says it will be an adjustment no longer having a print edition.
"It will be a shock to the system," he says.
Woodfin, 41, is a digital-first news consumer, but he knows not everyone in this city is wired that way.
"We embrace the innovation," he says. "I would just hope we still find a way to communicate with every generation."
He cites his stepmother, Yvonne Fluker Woodfin. She's been steadfastly clipping and collecting newspaper articles about Woodfin's political career. When he calls her up to get her take on the end of the papers' print publication, she sounds concerned.
"Well, I think it will make a lot of people not be aware of what's going on," Mrs. Woodfin says.
Digital access is a concern. During the pandemic, public schools here found that about 1 in 5 families had limited or no internet access.
Even so, you don't see newspapers like you used to scattered around tables at the coffee shop or local lunch counter.
Some longtime Birmingham News subscribers talked about the paper's end during a recent lunch buffet at the American Legion in Homewood, Ala., a close-in suburb in Birmingham's metro area.
"We call this our government in exile table back here," says Al LaPierre, a former executive director of the Alabama Democratic Party. He's sitting at a long table of politicos who get together here every Wednesday.
LaPierre says he's really not surprised that the newspaper's days are numbered.
"I noticed a few years ago even — you bought the Birmingham News on a Saturday or Sunday and then you'd seen it on their media site the day before, so why get it?"
But across the table, retired political scientist Natalie Davis defends the paper. She still subscribes, and worries about what will be lost when it's gone.
"The newspaper is probably the only thing left where if everybody reads the story in the same way and gets the same facts then you have a baseline, and that will go away," Davis says. "That's what newspapers do."
Retired veterinarian Chandler McGee stops by the table, and says the paper has been a lifeline.
"I'm 84 years old," he says. "One of the joys of my life is reading the newspaper."
He lives in a retirement community where he says few residents get news online.
"I think it means, especially for senior citizens, that we're going to be cut off from what's happening in our city and our state," McGee says.
Alabama Media Group executives say that's not their intent, and believe that everyone in the three metro areas they serve should have a way to access their free content online, whether on a computer or smart phone.
AL.com columnist Roy Johnson came to Birmingham in 2015. He'd been a longtime sports writer at Sports Illustrated and The New York Times, and various national magazines, some of which are no longer in publication.
"I really have lived the life that represents the evolution of the media industry," Johnson says.
He says the distribution method might have changed, but the mission remains.
"One of these days, we're going to have to explain to our grandkids why we put words on a piece of paper, balled it up, rolled it up, put it in a car or truck, drove it around and threw it on people's driveway. And that's how they got their news," he says. "It'll be like the Pony Express to us."
Johnson's advice to longtime print readers: This is the digital age, so come along.
veryGood! (33321)
Related
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- How Sophie Turner and Joe Jonas Are Celebrating the Holidays Amid Their Divorce
- Retired New York teacher charged with sexually abusing elementary students decades ago
- Spoilers! What 'Aquaman 2' ending, post-credit scene tease about DC's future
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- Laura Lynch, founding member of The Chicks, dies at 65 in Texas car crash
- Pakistani police free 290 Baloch activists arrested while protesting extrajudicial killings
- British Teen Alex Batty Breaks His Silence After Disappearing for 6 Years
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Morocoin Favors the North American Cryptocurrency Market
Ranking
- Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
- What makes pickleball the perfect sport for everybody to enjoy
- Iran’s navy adds sophisticated cruise missiles to its armory
- Peso Pluma bests Taylor Swift, Bad Bunny for most streamed YouTube artist of 2023
- 'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
- Bowl game schedule today: Everything to know about the seven college bowl games on Dec. 23
- Pete Davidson's standup comedy shows canceled through early January 2024
- Police suspect carbon monoxide killed couple and their son in western Michigan
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Florida State sues the ACC: `This is all about having the option' to leave
Minor earthquakes rattle Hawaii’s Big Island, Puget Sound area, with no damage reported
Blackhawks' Connor Bedard scores lacrosse-style Michigan goal; Ducks' Trevor Zegras matches it
Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
Mike Nussbaum, prolific Chicago stage actor with film roles including ‘Field of Dreams,’ dies at 99
Russian shelling kills 4 as Ukraine prepares to observe Christmas on Dec. 25 for the first time
In Mexico, piñatas are not just child’s play. They’re a 400-year-old tradition