20200
P
1
20100
R  E
2
2070
D   I   C
3
2050
T   I   O   N
4
2040
S   F   O   R   J
5
2030
O  U  R  N  A  L
6
2020
I  S  M  2  0  2  0
7

Public media stops trying to serve “everybody”

“The truth is that when we make audio news and content — both in public radio and beyond — for an imagined ‘everybody,’ we’re just making it for white, cisgender, heterosexual audiences of a particular class and education, and centering their experience and perspectives.”

In 2020, public radio will stop trying to serve “all,” and instead actually reflect and center the United States’ vast diversity of experiences and perspectives.

The truth is that when we make audio news and content — both in public radio and beyond — for an imagined “everybody,” we’re just making it for white, cisgender, heterosexual audiences of a particular class and education, and centering their experience and perspectives.

The profile of a public media consumer has become something of a parody of itself — who can forget the still-resonant 1998 SNL skit mocking the “NPR sound”? Though NPR has made some inroads with diverse audiences over the last few years, national NPR listenership remains overwhelmingly white, highly educated, and middle to upper class.

Podcasts and other audio and news sources are filling in the gaps where public broadcasting has failed by directly defining and speaking to their unique audiences. And while it’s easy to absolve public media’s responsibility here by saying their needs are being met elsewhere, 2020 is the year we say that’s not good enough and find radical ways to live up to our shared mission of service.

We must get specific about who we’re failing to serve and recognize how the ways we tell stories and frame the news help define who our audiences are. That’s critical in order for public media to fulfill its mandate — first laid out in the 1967 Public Broadcasting Act — to be “responsive to the interests of people both in particular localities and throughout the United States” and “address the needs of unserved and underserved audiences, particularly children and minorities.” To do this, public broadcasting must become more polyphonic, multivocal, and many-centered — which is not to say cacophonous.

So what does this look and sound like?

  • We need to name the audiences that are missing, find ways to listen to their needs, and create real strategies and goals for reaching them. We must recognize that it takes time to build trust, that “success” won’t be instant, and that we can and must learn from local stations and engagement journalists who have been doing this work for years. And we can’t put all the onus on engagement and audience teams — this is everyone’s responsibility. In fact, it should be a crucial part of every newsroom’s editorial strategy.
  • Editors, producers and reporters need to ask “who is this story for?” — and then make sure that our overall coverage reflects a variety of different audiences. The facts remain the same; the work is in admitting who we are centering, because there’s always a center and we as journalists are always speaking to an imagined someone. Let’s make sure that someone isn’t always the same someone.
  • Finally, we must keep doing the work we’re already doing, but with added vigor and urgency. In 2020, we’ll continue to diversify our newsrooms and get better at diversifying our management and, as dismal new numbers show us, our sources. We can’t afford to get worse; we have to get better or risk becoming obsolete. It’s not a question of making room — it’s about getting out of the way so that new voices can grow and redefine the sound of public broadcasting.

Cristina Kim is producer of the NPR news show Here & Now.

In 2020, public radio will stop trying to serve “all,” and instead actually reflect and center the United States’ vast diversity of experiences and perspectives.

The truth is that when we make audio news and content — both in public radio and beyond — for an imagined “everybody,” we’re just making it for white, cisgender, heterosexual audiences of a particular class and education, and centering their experience and perspectives.

The profile of a public media consumer has become something of a parody of itself — who can forget the still-resonant 1998 SNL skit mocking the “NPR sound”? Though NPR has made some inroads with diverse audiences over the last few years, national NPR listenership remains overwhelmingly white, highly educated, and middle to upper class.

Podcasts and other audio and news sources are filling in the gaps where public broadcasting has failed by directly defining and speaking to their unique audiences. And while it’s easy to absolve public media’s responsibility here by saying their needs are being met elsewhere, 2020 is the year we say that’s not good enough and find radical ways to live up to our shared mission of service.

We must get specific about who we’re failing to serve and recognize how the ways we tell stories and frame the news help define who our audiences are. That’s critical in order for public media to fulfill its mandate — first laid out in the 1967 Public Broadcasting Act — to be “responsive to the interests of people both in particular localities and throughout the United States” and “address the needs of unserved and underserved audiences, particularly children and minorities.” To do this, public broadcasting must become more polyphonic, multivocal, and many-centered — which is not to say cacophonous.

So what does this look and sound like?

  • We need to name the audiences that are missing, find ways to listen to their needs, and create real strategies and goals for reaching them. We must recognize that it takes time to build trust, that “success” won’t be instant, and that we can and must learn from local stations and engagement journalists who have been doing this work for years. And we can’t put all the onus on engagement and audience teams — this is everyone’s responsibility. In fact, it should be a crucial part of every newsroom’s editorial strategy.
  • Editors, producers and reporters need to ask “who is this story for?” — and then make sure that our overall coverage reflects a variety of different audiences. The facts remain the same; the work is in admitting who we are centering, because there’s always a center and we as journalists are always speaking to an imagined someone. Let’s make sure that someone isn’t always the same someone.
  • Finally, we must keep doing the work we’re already doing, but with added vigor and urgency. In 2020, we’ll continue to diversify our newsrooms and get better at diversifying our management and, as dismal new numbers show us, our sources. We can’t afford to get worse; we have to get better or risk becoming obsolete. It’s not a question of making room — it’s about getting out of the way so that new voices can grow and redefine the sound of public broadcasting.

Cristina Kim is producer of the NPR news show Here & Now.

Joni Deutsch   Podcasting unsilences the silent

Zizi Papacharissi   A president leads, the press follows, reality fades

Bill Adair   A Nobel Prize, a Brad Pitt film, and a Taylor Swift song

Marie Gilot   This is fine

Meredith Artley   Stronger solidarity among news organizations

Elizabeth Hansen and Jesse Holcomb   Local news initiatives run into a capital shortage

Lauren Duca   The rise of the journalistic influencer

Heather Bryant   Some kinds of journalism aren’t worth saving

Jakob Moll   A slow-moving tech backlash among young people

Julia B. Chan   We 👏 take 👏 breaks 👏

Michael W. Wagner   Increasingly fractured, but little bit deliberative

Nico Gendron   Make better products if you want to reach Gen Z

Brian Moritz   The end of “stick to sports”

Gordon Crovitz   Fighting misinformation requires journalism, not secret algorithms

Logan Jaffe   You don’t need fancy tools to listen

Rachel Davis Mersey   The business of local TV news will enter its downward slide

Whitney Phillips   A time to question core beliefs

Stefanie Murray   Charitable giving goes collaborative

Dannagal G. Young   Let’s disrupt the logic that’s driving Americans apart

Steve Henn   The dawning audio web

Seth C. Lewis   20 questions for 2020

Kerri Hoffman   Opening closed systems

Matt DeRienzo   Local broadcasters begin to fill the gaps left by newspapers

Margarita Noriega   The platforms try to figure out what to do with single-subject newsrooms

Helen Havlak   Platforms shine a light on original reporting

Eric Nuzum   Podcasting finally creates another mega-hit show

Hossein Derakhshan   AI can’t conjure up an Errol Morris

Christa Scharfenberg   It’s time to make journalism a field that supports and respects women

Dan Shanoff   Sports media enters the Bronny era

S. Mitra Kalita   The race to 2021

Alfred Hermida and Mary Lynn Young   The promise of nonprofit journalism

Sue Robinson   Campaign coverage as test bed for engagement experiments

Nikki Usher   All systems down

Talia Stroud   The work of reconnecting starts November 4

Knight Foundation   Five generations of journalists, learning from each other

Ben Werdmuller   Use the tools of journalism to save it

Josh Schwartz   Publishers move beyond the metered paywall

Raney Aronson-Rath   News deserts will proliferate — but so will new solutions

Matthew Pressman   News consumers divide into haves and have-nots

Craig Newmark   Formalizing newsrooms’ battle against disinformation

Carrie Brown-Smith   Engaged journalism: It’s finally happening

Jim Brady   We’ll complain about other people living in bubbles while ignoring our own

Tom Glaisyer   Journalism can emerge newly vibrant and powerful

Nathalie Malinarich   Betting on loyalty

John Garrett   It’s the best time in a century to start a local news organization

Joshua P. Darr   All that campaign cash will make the media’s problems worse

Francesco Zaffarano   TikTok without generational prejudice

Mira Lowe   The year of student-powered journalism

Irving Washington   Leadership isn’t something you learn on the job

John Keefe   Journalism gets hacked

Nushin Rashidian   Are platforms a bridge or a lifeline?

Mary Walter-Brown and Tristan Loper   Power to the people (on your audience team)

Colleen Shalby   Journalists become media literacy teachers

Alice Antheaume   Trade “politics” for “power”

Bill Grueskin   Our ethics codes get an overhaul

Alexandra Borchardt   Get out of the office and talk to people

Cristina Kim   Public media stops trying to serve “everybody”

Laura E. Davis   Know the context your journalism is operating within

Tanya Cordrey   Saying no to more good ideas

Masuma Ahuja   Slower, quieter, more measured and thoughtful

Monica Drake   A renewed focus on misinformation

Candis Callison   Taking a cue from Indigenous journalists on climate change

Rick Berke   Incoming fire from both left and right

Adam Thomas   The silver bullet

Kourtney Bitterly   Transparency isn’t just a desire, it’s an expectation

Tamar Charney   From broadcast to bespoke

Richard Tofel   A constraint of the reader-revenue model emerges

Catalina Albeanu   Rebuilding journalism, together

Monique Judge   The year to organize, unionize, and fight

Doris Truong   The year of radical salary transparency

Victor Pickard   We reclaim a public good

Don Day   Respect the non-paying audience

Rachel Glickhouse   Journalists get left behind in the industry’s decline

Peter Bale   Lies get further normalized

Elizabeth Dunbar   Frank talk, and then action

Felix Salmon   Spotify launches a news channel

Meg Marco   Everything happens somewhere

Kathleen Searles   Pay more attention to attention

Sonali Prasad   Climate change storytelling gets multidimensional

Linda Solomon Wood   Everyone in your organization, moving toward a common goal

Rachel Schallom   The value of push alerts goes beyond open rates

Kristen Muller   The year we operationalize community engagement

Geneva Overholser   Death to bothsidesism

Sarah Schmalbach   Journalist, quantify thyself

Rasmus Kleis Nielsen   The business we want, not the business we had

Alana Levinson   Brand-backed media gets another look

Annie Rudd   The expanded ambiguity of the news photograph

Fiona Spruill   The climate crisis gets the coverage it deserves

Brenda P. Salinas   Treating MP3 files like text

Errin Haines   Race and gender aren’t a 2020 story — they’re the story

Jake Shapiro   Podcasting gets listener relationship management

Simon Galperin   Journalism becomes more democratic

Pablo Boczkowski   The day after November 4

Juleyka Lantigua   A changing industry amps up podcasters’ ambitions

A.J. Bauer   A fork in the road for conservative media

Jennifer Brandel   A love letter from the year 2073

Moreno Cruz Osório   In Brazil, collaboration in a time of state attacks

Emily Withrow   The year we kill the news article

Nicholas Jackson   What’s left of local gets comfortable with reader support

Heidi Tworek   The year of positive pushback

Kevin D. Grant   The free press stands against authoritarians’ attacks on truth

Mariana Moura Santos   The future of journalism is collaborative

Anthony Nadler   Clash of Clans: Election Edition

Mike Caulfield   Native verification tools for the blue checkmark crowd

Madelyn Sanfilippo and Yafit Lev-Aretz   News coverage gets geo-fragmented

Greg Emerson   News apps fall further behind

Ernie Smith   The death of the industry fad

AX Mina   The Forum we wanted, the forum we got

Jeff Kofman   Speed through technology

Sarah Alvarez   I’m ready for post-news

Sarah Stonbely   More people start caring about news inequality

Cory Haik   We’re already consuming the future of news — now we have to produce it

Jeremy Olshan   All journalism should be service journalism

Ståle Grut   OSINT journalism goes mainstream

Mario García   Think small (screen)

Joanne McNeil   A return to blogs (finally? sort of?)

Cindy Royal   Prepare media students for skills, not job titles

Jasmine McNealy   A call for context

M. Scott Havens   First-party data becomes media’s most important currency

Jonas Kaiser   Russian bots are just today’s slacktivists

Sarah Marshall   The year to learn about news moments

Logan Molyneux and Shannon McGregor   Think twice before turning to Twitter

Joe Amditis   Collaborative journalism takes its rightful place at the table

Jeremy Gilbert and Jarrod Dicker   A call for collaboration between storytelling and tech

Tonya Mosley   The neutrality vs. objectivity game ends

Lucas Graves   A smarter conversation about how (and why) fact-checking matters

Beena Raghavendran   The year of the local engagement reporter

Barbara Gray   Join local libraries on the frontlines of civic engagement

Carl Bialik   Journalists will try running the whole shop

J. Siguru Wahutu   Western journalists, learn from your African peers

Millie Tran   Wicked

Sara K. Baranowski   A big year for little newspapers

Imaeyen Ibanga   Let’s take it slow