Photo by SJ Childs |
The McClatchy Company, which owns
the Bee (and other Bees) is in bankruptcy and restructuring. The McClatchy family company, which started
in Sacramento, is no longer family-owned.
The name McClatchy is everywhere here.
Our daughter is a proud graduate of McClatchy High for example.
I grew up with my father
ranting at the San Diego Union or Tribune (one was a morning paper and one
was an evening paper, back when that was a thing). Both were relatively conservative and
infuriated him, but we "took" them anyway.
Later I moved to Portland,
Oregon and enjoyed The Oregonian. After that it was Buffalo, New York and The Buffalo News followed by years of
the luxury of having a national paper as my local news (which has its own set
of problems since they often give local news short shrift), The Washington Post.
The past 22 years I have read
The Sacramento Bee most days, and
definitely always subscribed to it. As
local papers died or dwindled around the country I found comfort in still
having a relatively vibrant one. Lately
that has been less true. I know they are
doing the best they can. I love our
editorial cartoonist Jack Ohman who is also now the editorial editor. He is smart, funny and frequently hits the
mark. The Bee is historically Democratic
leaning, but often uncomfortable with real progressive politics, tending to
cling to the center.
As former presidential
candidate Andrew Yang frequently pointed out, vibrant independent news media is
absolutely key to a Democracy. I am very
active on Twitter (@snicholsblog, please follow me) engaging with the news, but
it’s not the same. We must have trusted
relatively objective reporters who actually check the facts. This is why I continue to read The Washington Post and The New York Times even though I often
disagree with their editorial choices.
At least I know that they have real reporters who triple check
sources.
--> I am sad that our beloved local institution is dying while I am grateful that it is still alive. I urge everyone in this country to subscribe to and advertise in their local newspaper and do everything they can to keep them alive.
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