PITTS: As newspapers die, expect no mourning from the crooks
Published: Wednesday, March 18, 2009 at 3:00 a.m.
Last Modified: Wednesday, March 18, 2009 at 9:02 a.m.
On the day the last newspaper is published, I expect no sympathy card from Kwame Kilpatrick. Were it not for a newspaper —
Nor will I expect flowers from Larry Craig. Were it not for a newspaper —
In short, the day the last newspaper is published — a day that seems to be rushing at us like a brick wall in an old Warner Bros.
It is the insult that compounds the injury, by which I mean the growing sense that we are working on the last major story of our lives and it is an obituary. Ours.
There remain pockets of optimism — Pew’s new State of the News Media report says, “We still do not subscribe to the theory that the death of the industry is imminent. The industry overall in 2008 remained profitable” — but it is hard to find much reflection of that sunny outlook in the newsroom, as colleagues are shoved unceremoniously into the unemployment line, media giants declare bankruptcy and century-old papers shut down.
And yes, I know some putative conservatives, displaying their usual delusions of potency, are gloating over all that. These hard times, they feel, are due to people turning against an industry they regard as biased against their ideology. But if that were true, the only papers in trouble would be those that endorsed Kerry over Bush and Obama over McCain.
That is not the case. We are “all” suffering. That’s because the industry’s decline is not due to ideology but to the fact that it was slow to recognize and react to the threat the Internet represented. So if we die, it will not be at the hands of righteous conservatives, but because we failed to anticipate and strategize.
Which is small comfort. Dead is dead.
And too many of us fail to understand what that death would mean, believe newspapers provide no service they can’t get elsewhere. But there is a reason Craig and Kilpatrick were not taken down by CNN or the local TV news. Local TV news specializes in crime, weather and sports. CNN has a national purview. Even the Internet primarily synthesizes reporting done in other media.
No, only the local paper performs the critical function of holding accountable the mayor, the governor, the local magnates and potentates, for how they spend your money, run your institutions, validate or violate your trust. If newspapers go, no other entity will have the wherewithal to do that. Which means the next Blagojevich gets away with it. The next Kilpatrick is never caught. The next Diaz and Rivero laugh all the way to the bank. And the next Freddie Pitts and Wilbert Lee, two innocent men saved from death row by the indefatigable reporting of
Sixty-three percent of all Americans think they won’t miss the daily paper? I think 63 percent of all Americans are wrong.
Leonard Pitts Jr. is a columnist for the Miami Herald. E-mail him at lpitts@herald.com.
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