After Blank Front Page, Newspaper Learns It’s Appreciated

April 2, 2021by David Bauder, AP Media Writer
After Blank Front Page, Newspaper Learns It’s Appreciated
Publisher Michael Bushnell, left, and Managing Editor Abby Hoover pose in the offices of The Northeast News, a community paper in Kansas City, Mo., on March 31, 2021. The paper chose to leave the front page of their March 24 issue blank to show community members what they'd miss if the newspaper folded. (The Northeast News via AP)

NEW YORK (AP) — Stories are back on the cover of Kansas City’s Northeast News this week after the newspaper intentionally printed a blank front page of its previous edition to show community members what they’d miss if the newspaper folded.

On this week’s cover of the paper, distributed each Wednesday in one of the Missouri city’s grittier neighborhoods, residents were told about the local ironworkers who repaired a fence at a historic cemetery for free.

In the past week, the 89-year-old newspaper has received more than $3,000 in pledged donations, including one from Florida after the blank front page received national attention. A handful of new advertisers have emerged, along with other ideas to keep the Northeast News afloat, said Michael Bushnell, publisher and co-owner.

“We never expected this to blow up like it did,” Bushnell said. “In the end, thank God it did.”

The idea for the blank page was cooked up in a staff meeting, coupled with a decision not to post any news online or answer office phones for 24 hours.

Bushnell was personally inundated with texts and calls when the paper was distributed last week: “Are you aware there’s nothing on the front page?” “Your printer might have made a mistake.” He directed friends to open the paper, where managing editor Abby Hoover’s column explained why it was done.

Because of the pandemic, two local laundromats, a grocery store and charter school had stopped advertising, making $2,700 in monthly revenue vanish.

Without any changes, the paper had about a 60-day lifespan, she wrote.

If it goes, there’s nothing to replace it. The big-city Kansas City Star has a bigger area to follow and its own economic worries, and Northeast News staffers usually only see Star reporters on the scene of a murder or bad accident.

No one else takes the day-to-day pulse of the neighborhood, Hoover said in an interview.

“People kind of take for granted what community news does,” she said. “We host forums with candidates, sponsor community clean-ups. There’s so much more than showing up, taking notes and going home.”

Dan Smith, owner of the Eleos Coffee House in northeast Kansas City, was one of the people who texted Bushnell.

The Northeast News is distributed in Eleos. Smith is an advertiser despite his own tough times; Eleos closed for two months due to COVID-19. He said he appreciates the support the newspaper gives to local businesses and its staff members’ personal dedication to the neighborhood.

“It really is part of the glue of the community,” Smith said. “If you take that out, I think we would all feel a little more like individual islands.”

The Northeast News is hardly alone. About a quarter of the nation’s newspapers ceased operations over a 15-year period, the vast majority community weeklies, said Penelope Muse Abernathy, a Northwestern University journalism professor  who tracks the industry.

A survey taken last October found more than 60 newspaper shut-downs tied to the pandemic, and Abernathy said she has since learned of more than a dozen more. If the 2008 recession is any guide, newspapers will face some of their toughest problems in the next two or three years when immediate government relief wears out, she said.

Abernathy admires the Northeast News’ visual plea. “It’s a nice, sophisticated way to remind people what’s at stake,” she said.

Bushnell is trying all sorts of things to keep operating.

After one banker told him Northeast News wouldn’t get any more than its initial $12,000 COVID relief payment from the government, he’s found a more aggressive, and optimistic, banker. He’s received a $5,000 journalism grant from Google and another low-cost loan from the government. He’s exploring going non-profit. While Northeast News doesn’t charge for subscriptions or have a paywall on its website, he’s looking at ways to give benefits to people who voluntarily pay for a subscription.

And, late Wednesday, Bushnell learned that the El Mercado Fresco grocery store — which had pulled advertising late last year — is coming back.

A+
a-
  • Kansas City
  • newspapers
  • Northeast News
  • In The News

    Health

    Voting

    Media

    Trump Called This Visa 'Very Bad' for Americans. Truth Social Applied for One

    MIAMI (AP) — The social media company founded by former President Donald Trump applied for a business visa program that he sought to... Read More

    MIAMI (AP) — The social media company founded by former President Donald Trump applied for a business visa program that he sought to restrict during his administration and which many of his allies want him to curtail in a potential second term. Trump Media & Technology Group, the company behind... Read More

    April 19, 2024
    by Dan McCue
    Stiglitz Reminds News Consumers You Don’t Get Quality Journalism for Free

    WASHINGTON — The press face many challenges, ranging from violence and treachery perpetrated against reporters to public figures diminishing the... Read More

    WASHINGTON — The press face many challenges, ranging from violence and treachery perpetrated against reporters to public figures diminishing the value of the work, though the most pernicious of all the threats besieging the profession may well be social media, a Nobel Prize-winning economist said. “These... Read More

    April 11, 2024
    by Tom Ramstack
    Journalists Tell Congress Federal Law Needed to Protect Confidential Sources

    WASHINGTON — Former CBS television investigative reporter Catherine Herridge told a congressional panel Thursday about how reprisals she endured for... Read More

    WASHINGTON — Former CBS television investigative reporter Catherine Herridge told a congressional panel Thursday about how reprisals she endured for her reports demonstrate a need for a federal law to protect journalists’ news gathering. Herridge refused a court order in February to reveal her sources for... Read More

    College Newspaper Sweeps Up Two Publications in Volley Against Growing News Deserts

    With hundreds of U.S. newspaper closings leaving legions with little access to local news, a college newspaper in Iowa has... Read More

    With hundreds of U.S. newspaper closings leaving legions with little access to local news, a college newspaper in Iowa has stepped up to buy two struggling weekly publications. The move by The Daily Iowan, a nonprofit student paper for the University of Iowa, is believed to... Read More

    April 1, 2024
    by Kate Michael
    AEI Holds Discussion on How Current Trends May Be Reshaping Media

    WASHINGTON — As NBC News was dealing with the aftermath of hiring and then firing former Republican National Committee Chairwoman... Read More

    WASHINGTON — As NBC News was dealing with the aftermath of hiring and then firing former Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel, prominent figures in journalism and academia spoke on what they see as concerning trends reshaping the media landscape and its impact on democratic values.... Read More

    Fake Images Made to Show Trump With Black Supporters Highlight Concerns Around AI and Elections

    WASHINGTON (AP) — At first glance, images circulating online showing former President Donald Trump surrounded by groups of Black people... Read More

    WASHINGTON (AP) — At first glance, images circulating online showing former President Donald Trump surrounded by groups of Black people smiling and laughing seem nothing out of the ordinary, but a look closer is telling. Odd lighting and too-perfect details provide clues to the fact they... Read More

    News From The Well
    scroll top