The New York Times said in a 16 Dec 2013 article
that The Patch is on its way out. That's not news to readers in Matawan
and Aberdeen, where the service started with considerable promise but
soon became an advertisement-ridden website filled with public service
announcements, human interest features, and little news of local
interest or import.
Tonight's Top News starts with job
opportunities at Sleepy's, the Aberdeen Registrar's Office's new
expanded hours, a local high school's art show win, and the latest home
sales. Oh, and Lifestyle offers to teach you how to make
buttermilk-battered fried chicken. And don't forget the big lottery ad:
$2 million is only a scratch away.
The local editor
who started The Matawan-Aberdeen Patch left the online newspaper a while
ago and her replacement had no local roots and served at least two
sites. Matawan-Aberdeen is now managed by a regional editor whose
umbrella covers half the county. Articles these days are derived from
news releases from law enforcement, school districts and municipalities.
The
Patch had the worthy goal of filling the gap in local news coverage
that staff-starved newspapers like the Asbury Park Press and Newark
Star-Ledger were unable to produce. But The Patch produced few if any
hard-hitting articles that might challenge our local governments, likely
fearing that if they bite the hands that feed them, they will lose
access to local officials. And what little true journalism was on
display in those early years is virtually gone.
All in
all, the coverage provided by The Patch doesn't protect its communities
through what is recognized as the power of the Fifth Estate. Its
patchwork of websites has been a placeholder for whatever comes next.
What came before -- in print or online - has let us down.
No comments:
Post a Comment