The Truth Will Cost You, and That’s a Problem for US Democracy
The Miami Herald is one of America’s top newspapers—winner of a whopping 24 Pulitzer Prizes, renowned in its heyday for its extensive coverage of Latin America, and publisher of the epic investigative reporting that took down late financier and sex fiend Jeffrey Epstein.
Checking it out Monday, I read the latest on the raids on hip-hop star Diddy’s Miami Beach mansions; a report from Haiti by its longtime, award-winning correspondent; and then on the fourth click I hit the paywall. A subscription would be 99 cents for the first month, then $15.99 a month for this out-of-towner to be able to read South Florida’s best journalism.
But you can still read the Miami Chronicle for free.
Bedraggled city editors lack the budget to send reporters out on a story, but apparently Putin, Xi Jinping, and their fellow dictators have millions of dollars to spend on their brand of “journalism.”
The Chronicle’s website is topped by a Gothic-style header that looks borrowed from the Herald’s fonts. A tagline reading “the Florida News since 1937” seems to have vanished since The New York Times reported the site actually didn’t exist before late this February. The Chronicle’s headlines link to stories from the BBC and other sources.
There’s no “about” page. You have to read the (also paywalled) Times to know that, according to researchers and government officials, the Chronicle and at least four sister sites like the New York News Daily (as opposed to the Daily News) or D.C. Weekly are part of a Russia-backed disinformation network. The paper called the new news sites “a technological leap” forward in the Vladimir Putin regime’s goal of fooling U.S. voters, with fears that more deceptive “fake news” will appear on these pages as the November election gets closer.
In 1984, Whole Earth Catalog hippie guru Stewart Brand said famously, “Information wants to be free.” The reality, 40 years later, is that for millions of internet readers, it’s disinformation—articles that twist facts; offer toxic opinions and; increasingly, include AI-generated deepfake videos, pictures, and audio—that wants to be free.
The truth? That’s probably going to cost you.
You’ve probably heard that 2024 has been an annus horribilis for the American media, even though we’re only 12 weeks into the year. Hard-working journalists—many of them young, and disproportionately people of color—have been laid off or taken buyouts at news organizations such as the Los Angeles Times, Vice Media, Sports Illustrated, and The Messenger, which closed after just a year.
This happened as smaller local newspapers are shutting down at a rate of two a week, leaving as many as 200 “news deserts”—mostly rural counties with no working journalists—across America. The large Gannett chain of newspapers even announced it was dumping wire stories from The Associated Press so it could use the cash savings to fill “gaps”—which, based on history, could be gaps in Gannett’s top executive pay.The backstory is that the 20th-century business model for........
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