Rocky Mountain News, RIP
Today is the last day for Denver’s Rocky Mountain News. The paper won four Pulitzers in the last eight years. The paper would have celebrated its 150th anniversary in April. It was the oldest continually run business in the state. This is its own self obituary. Who knows how long that’ll remain online, though.
I expect I’ll make a bunch of posts like this in the next year or two. The owners of 33 different daily papers have gone into Chapter 11 since December. This is a big deal, people. Daily newspapers have been the only real brake on corruption in huge chunks of this country for much of its existence. A good newspaper is beating heart of its local community. It’s true that the same economics that are closing newspapers right now have forced a decline in their quality over the last decade. Newspapers are not what they once were, but they’re still important.
Denver still has The Post. The two papers have been running under a joint operating agreement for a while. Many of the cities that will lose their newspapers in the next year or two won’t have another daily. We may soon see major cities without a daily newspaper. That is sad and frightening.


