We have 12 candidates in Hammond. I'm reasonably confident four of them have no connection to the community whatsoever.
@peristrathearn
Murray Bridge News founder, interested in the future of local journalism. Also ukulele player, tea drinker, Leafs fan, Audrey and Daisy's dad. π Murray Bridge, South Australia / Ngarrindjeri ruwe π www.murraybridge.news
We have 12 candidates in Hammond. I'm reasonably confident four of them have no connection to the community whatsoever.
Marty Baron's Post thrived because it took meaningful steps away from false balance, toward a defensible north star. As long as media execs insist financial pressures require wooing back right-wing audiences, why help them build a false sense that this is possible? www.offmessage.net/p/a-requiem-...
I saw a very similar-looking slime at Alonnah, on Bruny Island, on December 29.
Looks like Seppeltsfield to me.
News MAP money is coming!
Actual grant funding by the federal government, 3.5 years after it was first promised by a Labor opposition two elections ago.
Applications to the $67.6 million Journalism Assistance Fund will open in mid-November.
#NewsMAP
I'm so excited about this.
The @lina.org.au summit is my favourite few days of the year. Getting to host it in Murray Bridge in 2026 is gonna be a career highlight.
Can't wait to welcome you all to the Murraylands.
It has been 20+ years since I did my undergrad degree, but I agree with Chrisanthi here: the experience wouldn't have been so formative without in-person, shoulder-to-shoulder learning, including in lecture theatres.
(I'm curious about the idea of viva voce too, but that's another story.)
Anyway, if you've got this far, read the thing: www.publicmediaalliance.org/resources/kn...
They also propose an Australian Local News Proximity Index, which could be used to target government funding on the basis of geographic, cultural and social proximity.
I'm always interested in contributions to this conversation... but I also wish governments would actually deliver some funding!
Broadly, the researchers suggest:
π€ Meaningful public-private sector collaboration is "essential"
π So is measuring its impact on democracy, social cohesion, sector sustainability etc
π We need clear ideas about what "local" news is
β Value-adding is better than straight syndication
There are some really interesting examples, like Norsk Rikskringkasting's collaboration desk, RNZ's version of the UK's Local Democracy Reporting scheme, even the CBC's local news directory for a low-intensity initiative....
Working Together | Examining public service media collaboration in local news ecologies: A global perspective
For news publishers, there's a lot to take out of this recent report by Kristy Hess, Angela Ross et al, looking at public broadcasters' partnerships with other media around the world...
Keen to give this whole report a read, but here's a taste. What can public broadcasters do to help amid a crisis for local news?
I'm not a subscriber, but even the free section of this piece by Doug Shapiro is insightful. This is the big-picture thinking we need to survive in media.
"Only if the ACMA now imposes a new condition that breaching the decency standard for a tenth (11th; 12th?) time could affect the licence, might we see an actual commercial consequence."
This s*** gives everyone in media a bad name. ACMA, or someone, needs to bring it to heel.
Excited to be bringing ice cream mogul Dimi Kyriazis to Murray Bridge on October 15 for a breakfast chat about his business' expansion plans in the Murraylands.
Chalk another win up for public pressure + local media: a major Murraylands employer has agreed to tighter licence conditions after neighbours complained about the smell.
To my colleagues in Canberra: please be better than this!
I know you have professional FOMO. I know it's your responsibility to ensure your readers get access to every story. But not on ridiculous terms dictated by the government or opposition, surely.
"Genuinely open democracies start with the assumption that all info should be freely shared unless there is a strong public interest reason why not. Australian institutions often start with an assumption that you shouldnβt share info unless you have to."
I hate how right Tim Burrowes is on this.
From me: How can a community get rid of its bad, old reputation? I ask a couple of Murraylands marketing experts, and put their thoughts to the council CEO.
To watch a publication that came up at the same time as my own, on the same platform (albeit in a market 150x bigger), go on to this kind of success is just incredible. Hats off to @joshiherrmann.bsky.social and his team.
"Labor considers that govt intervention to support public interest journalism should be done within a principles-based and evidence-informed framework. It is unacceptable that the LNP govt has distributed tens of millions in grants without a clear plan."
Plan came out last December, but no $$$ yet.
Now the movers and shakers are talking about tax offsets for journalists' salaries instead of a digital platforms levy, or a bargaining code, reports @timburrowes.bsky.social.
More than three years have passed since Labor (in opposition!) promised certainty to the media sector. We're still waiting!
Congrats to Belinda Willis as she settles into one of the most important roles in South Australian media.
The identity of a jockey who suffered a nasty fall in Murray Bridge last week has been revealed. Thankfully her condition is stable.
This spring has been a bad time for fires and accidents in the Murraylands. Yesterday it was a shed fire on my old street.
Mis- and disinformation are among the biggest threats to world peace at the moment. Why is our government dragging its feet on addressing the problem?
A black and white photo of Peri Strathearn taken on a vintage twin-lens camera by Ethan Klemm.
File this under friggin' cool.
I recently wrote a story about an analogue photographer who had produced a book about car culture. During our interview, he shot a pic of me on his old twin-lens Mamiya C330. He just sent me the developed image.
Thank you Ethan Klemm!
"Audiences want local news that is related to their everyday lived experiences, initiatives and achievements in their local community, and stories that highlight community resilience."
Encouraging bit of research by @skpark.bsky.social and her colleagues.
Finding out what's happening in the world shouldn't be depressing, should it?
That's why, at Murray Bridge News, we've introduced a Good News section, with all the celebrations, award wins and sporting victories you could want β not a crime or disaster in sight.