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AC-Tís hyper-local accent strikes me as pandering
Tuesday, 17 April 2007 17:50

John North
Editor & Publisher
After covering a talk and question-and-answer session on ìThe Future of Newspapersî at UNC Ashevilleís Reuter Center on March 30, I was intrigued by the priorities that Jeffrey P. Green, the new publisher of the recently revamped Asheville Citizen-Times, revealed on two particular issues.

One issue raised more than once by the mostly gray-haired audience members concerned the responsibilities of a newspaper to the public as a community trust.

Should a paper present news and opinion that the community needs to know ≠ó and serve as a watchdog on governments and the private sector ó or should it pander to what its readership surveys and Internet story ìhitsî show are the kinds of articles in highest demand?

The other issue concerns what it says about a community when its daily paper chooses to feature hyper-local news coverage, while relegating international and national news to a page or two in the back of the business section.

To their credit, some audience members expressed revulsion at Greenís implication that most Ashevillians only want to read about themselves. They felt  this meant that Ashevillians are narcissists who could care less about the outside world. The question of the AC-Tís ìresponsibilitiesî persistently was raised.

Clearly exasperated, Green, ever the savvy businessman, wryly told one critic that ìëresponsibilityí doesnít guarantee paychecks for my shareholders and employees.î

However, he conceded, ìI do think newspapers have certain unique responsibilities,î but he tied those obligations to local news coverage. ìIíll leave it to The New York Times to worry about the rest of the countryî≠ ó and the world.

Green vowed that, as the AC-T becomes more profitable, it would reinvest a portion of the proceeds in more investigative reporting. (Inquiring minds, Iím sure, are waiting with an air of skepticism on this promise.)
When several audience members urged Green and the AC-T to step out boldly from what they perceived as the shackles of the Gannett Co. chainís ownership and take some nontraditional stances in editorials, one man insinuated that Green might lose his job if he did so.

In response, the ever-pragmatic Green said, ìIím far more likely to lose my job over financial performance than over any editorial position I take.î

The AC-T publisher noted his preference for taking moderate positions on issues and that he feels his paperís role is ìto reflect what my audience is.î To me, this once again sounded like pandering to public tastes, and I wonder how this moderation philosophy would have manifested if Green had led the AC-T during the Jim Crow era.

Ultimately, while I wish Green well on a personal level, I hope he is wrong in his approach of newspapering-by-opinion-poll. I, too, fear the AC-Tís hyper-local emphasis  in todayís increasingly globalized world will foster an increasingly narcissistic and ill-informed Asheville.
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John North, publisher and editor of the Daily Planet, may be contacted at publisher-at-ashevilledailyplanet.com.
 



 


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