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American Deadline

Reporting from Four News-Starved Towns in the Trump Era

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The dramatic events of 2020—the presidential election, the COVID-19 pandemic, protests for racial justice—affected every corner of American life. What did these events mean for the residents of small towns and cities that are often overlooked by national newspapers? How do local stories change when they are told by journalists with roots in these communities? And what is lost as this kind of coverage disappears?
American Deadline brings together dispatches from four longtime local journalists in different parts of the United States that tell the story of 2020 anew. It shares reporting from Bowling Green, Virginia; Macon, Georgia; McKeesport, Pennsylvania; and McAllen, Texas—two towns that lost their local newspapers and two where they are barely hanging on. The authors consider what makes each town distinctive and how these local perspectives tell a part of a broader American story. This book reports on how residents of these towns grapple with and talk about issues relating to race, schooling, health, immigration, deindustrialization, as well as local and national politics amid a changing and increasingly precarious information ecosystem. A distinct and intimate look at a calamitous year, American Deadline is an important book for all readers interested in the possibilities and future of local journalism.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 13, 2023
      In this unique and often heart-wrenching collaboration, four journalists with ties to struggling or shuttered newspapers in different parts of the U.S. share their reporting from 2020. In McAllen, Tex., where the construction of Donald Trump’s border wall and Covid-19 were at the top of citizens’ concerns, Sandra Sanchez poignantly describes families on both sides of the border trying to negotiate a potentially separated future and the devastating onslaught of a disease that killed more than 1,400 people in Hidalgo County by September. Elsewhere, Jason Togyer documents how the closure of manufacturing plants in McKeesport, Pa., and other towns in the Pittsburgh area in the 1980s fueled nativist tendencies that drove away young people (“especially if they’re Black, creative, or liberal”), and Greg Glassner reports on the fight over a 114-year-old Confederate monument of the grounds of a courthouse in Bowling Green, Va. Though not every detour pans out, the reporting is consistently fine-grained, evocative, and insightful. It’s a fitting testament to the value of local journalism.

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Languages

  • English

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