"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder
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"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder
Each week, Editor & Publisher Magazine (E&P) produces a Vodcast of timely interviews with newspaper, broadcast, online and all forms of news publishing and media industry leaders. E&P has been publishing since 1884 and is considered the "bible" and "authoritative voice" of the North American newsp...
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305 एपिसोडहरू
304 State of Local News 2025: Smartphones surge, content creators rise, and only 15% pay
Local news is changing faster than anyone imagined — and Northwestern University’s Medill School just put numbers to the chaos. Its new State of Local...

303 Local publisher fights back after county strips legal notices in retaliation
What happens when a county government tries to silence its watchdog? In Pender County, North Carolina, officials yanked away the Post and Voice’s lega...

302 Nicole Russell, USA Today’s conservative voice, on why opinion journalism still matters
Polarization isn’t just dividing dinner tables anymore — it’s turning deadly in the wake of the Charlie Kirk tragedy and now the ICE office shooting i...

301 Censorship, cancel culture, and the First Amendment — why local publishers can’t afford to look away
When billion-dollar networks like CBS and ABC cave to political pressure and late-night stars like Colbert and Kimmel get muzzled, what chance does a...

300 After the Kirk shooting, Peter Laufer warns: Journalism is more dangerous than ever
In a world where speaking out can result in being silenced forever, journalism itself is under attack. Hours before this conversation was taped, comme...

299 Behind the launch: A closer look at the Philly-area’s new Fideri News Network
When E&P reported on Sept. 2 that Broad + Liberty and Access Network were merging to form the Fideri News Network, the press release generated more qu...

298 USA TODAY doubles down on women’s sports with Heather Burns at the helm
Heather Burns has spent three decades breaking barriers in sports journalism — and now she’s making history as USA Today’s first women’s sports editor...

297 The future of news: A deeper look at ASU’s Knight Center experiment
The Knight Center for the Future of News at ASU’s Cronkite School isn’t tinkering at the edges of journalism — it’s ripping up the blueprint and start...

296 The last American newspaper takes the stage
When Ken Tingley retired after more than two decades leading The Post-Star in Glens Falls, New York, he thought he was closing the book on his newsroo...

295 The CFINR mission: Clear values, stronger trust
What if every newsroom in America posted its journalistic values where everyone could see them? That’s the bold vision behind the Center for Integrity...

294 In Detroit, a powerful case is made for saving local journalism
What happens when more than 250 civic leaders, journalists, academics, and funders gather to face the collapse of local news head-on? In Detroit, it s...

293 New chapter for Lansing’s City Pulse: Philanthropy backs fierce independence
In an era when hedge funds gut local newspapers and trust in media is under siege, Lansing’s fiercely independent City Pulse has found a surprising ne...

292 Brewing trust: How a newsroom and brewery built community through beer
What happens when a local newspaper and a craft brewery join forces? In Spokane, Washington, it results in the First Amendment beer — a bold collabora...

291 When tragedy strikes, local journalism leads: Coeur d’Alene Press acts with clarity and compassion
When tragedy struck Coeur d’Alene, the local newsroom didn’t flinch — they mobilized. Within hours, the Press team defied routine, printed on an off d...

290 Print roots. Multimedia future. Adams evolves into “Adams MultiMedia”
Adams Publishing Group is stepping into a new era with a name that reflects its ambition: Adams MultiMedia. As local news organizations everywhere wre...

289 Rebuilding local news by thinking like an entrepreneur
Pason Gaddis thinks local newspapers don’t have to fade quietly into history. As CEO of Hoffman Media Group, he’s betting that lean operations, local...

288 Staying local, staying strong: Jeffrey Warshaw on what still works in media
Connoisseur Media CEO Jeffrey Warshaw isn’t chasing trends—he’s doubling down on what works: local content, real relationships, and a service-first sa...

287 Innovating hyperlocal: how Current Publishing redefines suburban news
When a suburban newspaper starts thinking like a startup, big things happen. At Current Publishing in suburban Indianapolis, innovation isn’t just a b...

286 Turning a small-town newspaper into a community hub
Four years ago, Max Kabat left Manhattan to reinvent local journalism in the remote West Texas town of Marfa. He didn’t just take over a newspaper—he...

285 From sales to SaaS: Todd Handy’s playbook for sustainable local media
What if local media companies stopped acting like publishers and started thinking like SaaS platforms? That’s the provocative challenge laid down by v...

284 Local media’s tipping point into oblivion — a 1-on-1 with Gordon Borrell
Local media isn’t just struggling — it’s at a tipping point, and most companies are leaning the wrong way. In a brutally candid conversation, Gordon B...

283 Coalition unites press associations to defend journalism’s future
With legislative threats mounting at the state level, America’s Newspapers has launched a new coalition to unite press associations and publishers in...

282 Print proud, data smart: Inside Charity Huff’s reinvention of 5280
After helping hundreds of publishers navigate digital transformation, Charity Huff decided to walk the walk — by acquiring Denver’s 5280 Magazine. Jus...

281 Should opinion journalism evolve or disappear? Live panel from the 2025 Mega-Conference
At a time when trust in journalism continues to erode, the future of opinion content is under intense scrutiny. Should newspapers continue publishing...

280 Saving the free press — before it’s too late
Press freedom is under attack — not in some distant land, but right here in the United States. From newsroom intimidation to funding cuts targeting pu...

279 Saving the story of print, one Linotype at a time: Inside the Museum of Printing
If you’ve ever marveled at a Linotype machine or debated whether Helvetica is overused, you’ve likely felt Frank Romano’s influence—even if you didn’t...

278 Ad taxes, subscription laws, postal chaos: Inside the fight to protect publishers
From coast to coast, a wave of new laws is quietly rewriting the rules of news publishing. Subscription models are under fire, ad revenues are being t...

277 Prof. Jeff Jarvis grades the Atlantic’s Jeffrey Goldberg on SignalGate
When an explosive leak hit The Atlantic, Editor-in-Chief Jeffrey Goldberg faced a moment of truth. Journalism professor Jeff Jarvis weighs in on how G...

276 Voice of America turmoil through the eyes of veteran VOA journalist Steve Herman
Voice of America (VOA),, the U.S. government-funded international broadcaster, is facing an unprecedented crisis. Journalists have been cut off from t...

275 Paul Deegan: Trade war threatens survival of local media on both sides of the border
As tensions rise between the United States and Canada over tariffs, newspapers on both sides of the border are feeling the strain. Paul Deegan, CEO of...

274 Examining self-presentation in journalism: Elia Powers on authenticity and industry norms
For decades, journalists have been judged by their reporting and how they look and sound, often conforming to rigid, unspoken industry standards. But...

273 Media Accountability, the FCC, and the Fight Over Fox
The battle over media regulation, political influence and journalistic integrity has reached a new flashpoint as the Federal Communications Commission...

272 What happens when a city silences a newspaper? An inside look at the Clarksdale censorship case
When a city government uses the courts to silence a newspaper, it’s not just an attack on one publication—it’s an attack on press freedom itself. That...

271 Post and Courier’s strategic print shift: A new era for South Carolina journalism
As more newspapers rethink their print schedules, The Post and Courier is making a bold move—scaling back to five-day print delivery while doubling do...

270 Time to challenge gag rules: Journalists fight back against restrictions on public employees’ speech
Journalists have long faced obstacles in their pursuit of truth, but in recent years, a troubling trend has emerged: government-imposed gag rules that...

269 Ryan Dohrn on selling value, overcoming price objections, and reviving advertiser workshops
Local advertisers are drowning in a sea of digital choices, overwhelmed by ever-changing marketing trends and unsure where to invest their dollars. Ye...

268 Dave Morgan on the future of local news: Embracing AI, social video and a startup mindset
Dave Morgan, a digital media pioneer who helped shape the evolution of online advertising, offers a candid look at the challenges and opportunities fa...

267 Navigating news media mergers: Trends, valuations, and future projections
As the local news industry continues to evolve, mergers and acquisitions (M&A) remain a crucial part of its future. While challenges persist, opportun...

266 Meta’s fact-checking shift: Katie Sanders on what’s next for PolitiFact and the news industry
Meta’s recent announcement to end its third-party fact-checking program by January 2025 has sent ripples through the media and fact-checking industrie...

265 Building momentum into 2025: How the Baltimore Banner is shaping the future of local journalism
The Baltimore Banner, a nonprofit news organization, closed out 2024 with remarkable achievements, positioning itself as a model for sustainab...