Editor’s note: This is the final API Need to Know newsletter of the year! We’re grateful for your continued support and wish you and your loved ones a peaceful holiday season. We’ll be back in your inbox on Monday, Jan. 5, with a new series we hope will inspire you to make the meetings you facilitate in the new year more efficient and effective.
Empower community experts with storytelling tools
As local journalism looks to diversify its storytelling and audiences, news leaders have an opportunity to identify and create more on-ramps for individuals with deep ties to their communities. When local newsrooms give people the tools and platforms for creative storytelling, they can start building trust and supporting the creative and cultural health of their communities, too.
That’s one of the themes we heard at API’s recent Local News Summit on Inclusion, Belonging and Local Leadership, and something we asked four summit attendees to share more about. In our latest essay series, news and community leaders detail the ways they are empowering communities with skills and opportunities to have influence in their local news ecosystem:
- The War Horse holds writing seminars for military personnel and their families, offering a trauma-informed way for them to be the experts of their own stories and join the civic conversation.
- StoryWorks built a curriculum of narrative storytelling, research, oral history collection and event planning to produce vibrant, community-led explorations of Mississippi Delta history in response to the cultural extraction of the community’s history.
- AL.com partnered with local creatives, including Birmingham, Ala.’s poet laureate, to hold a community event that helped people connect with other residents who had a positive vision for the city.
- The 51st partners with D.C. natives to serve as local experts, both as cultural event facilitators and community liaisons.
Garry Pierre-Pierre, founder of The Haitian Times, writes for Nieman Lab’s Predictions for Journalism that the people he sees shaping news in the coming year aren’t in newsrooms at all, and likely don’t consider what they’re doing journalism, but are trusted messengers providing essential information to their communities.
“That’s my prediction for 2026,” Pierre-Pierre writes. “The news industry will finally realize that these informal community information networks are not peripheral to local news — they are the most functional version of it.”