FOCUS ON WEEKLIES
Helping newspapers
find their souls
By Rob Carrigan
“Teach me, like you, to drink
creation whole. And casting out, myself, become a soul.” — Richard Wilbur, 1961.
I think the biggest threat to
the newspaper industry today resides in the possibility that, in many
communities, the local paper is in grave danger of losing its soul.
As we have standardized
process, and streamlined technique, and adopted best practices, we have somehow
lost sight of what it means to be a unique voice helping communities to become
individual, exceptional, distinctive and one of a kind.
And that is part of our job.
For local newspapers, it is
crucial that they encourage their communities’ rare elements to survive and to
help the matchless aspects of their neighborhoods to thrive and prosper.
None of us really wants to
live in the town down the road.
None of us wants to pick up a
paper in that distant town and say to himself, “This is exactly the same paper I
read this morning in my own town.”
We can’t afford to become
fast food. Even the idea of a concept restaurant is out. We won’t survive — long
term — in any other role other than as an individual provider with a strong menu
of local color and flavor.
We need to produce an
extraordinary, singular experience as we serve our readers, sources, advertisers
and ourselves.
If we are not able to create
such an experience, we are doomed. Readers and others will find it elsewhere,
the Internet being only one option.
Yet how do we offer such a
singular experience? How do we continue to nurture that soul? How do we build on
years of doing just that?
I think the answer might be
found in the same manner as the local, and not chain-owned, restaurant. Soul
comes from the people who work there and the community itself.
It lives in the kitchen, with
a chef that won’t compromise on ingredients. It comes from the wait staff that
cares about how customers are treated, or even the dishwasher who takes pride in
how even the mundane tasks are performed.
Soul also survives and grows
in the customers — the regular who eats there every night and the “special
occasion” diner that could think of no other place as appropriate for such a
celebration.
It is in the music that is
played, and the sights, and sounds and smells. There is soul in the beer that is
served, and in the tall, cool glass in which it magically appears.
Keeping it intact
That soul is, of course, in
the capable hands of the responsible owner who knows and worries that all of it
— everything — can disappear if careful attention is not paid.
For newspapers, the first step
in keeping their souls intact is to recognize they’re in danger of losing them.
Then reach for that individual experience with local texture, color and flavor.
As novelist, poet and
short-story writer Charles Bukowski once observed, “If you are losing your soul
and know it, then you’ve still got a soul left to lose.”
Now is the time to try to save
what we can.
Rob
Carrigan is in the sales and business development group of weekly newspaper
publisher Colorado Publishing Co., a Dolan Media Co. unit based in Colorado
Springs. He can be reached at
rob.carrigan@csmng.com.