Loss of Rocky Mountain News is heartbreaking
Until now, the loss of so many of the nation's newspapers due to the lousy economy and technological changes seemed to be something that happened to other people in far away places.
This past Thursday, it got personal. On that day, E.W. Scripps Co. officials announced that the Rocky Mountain News would publish its last edition on Friday, Feb. 27. No buyer had come forth to purchase the Denver newspaper, which had been put up for sale in December. With that, Colorado's oldest newspaper — a couple of months shy of its 150th anniversary — was shut down, idling 230 employees.
One of the saddest things I've read about these events involved Rocky employees opening a time capsule that was supposed to be saved for the newspaper's 200th anniversary in 2059. Inside it were copies of the Rocky and the rival Denver Post, a book of employees' signatures, a map of Denver and books from Rocky cartoonist Ed Stein and the late columnist Gene Amole, who was an elegant man and writer.
To me, losing the Rocky is like losing a friend. Growing up in Colorado, newspapers were a staple in my home. On Sundays, the living room would be littered with various sections of the paper and we'd talk as a family about things we had read. The Rocky was one of those treasured papers.
Thus began my love affair with newspapers and journalism. Thus explains why the Rocky's demise is so heartbreaking.
The Rocky was more than a source of news, sports, features and opinion. It was my connection to the state's capital. In my high school and college journalism days, the Rocky was my textbook. "This is how 'real' journalists do it," I'd often think as I read it and learned from it.
Once in a great while, when working at The Pueblo Chieftain, Associated Press would pick up one of my stories. That was pretty exciting. The icing on the cake, though, was the rare occasions that the Rocky would run it under my byline.
Monday morning, I walked to the end of my driveway to retrieve my Deseret News and Salt Lake Tribune. I thought about how skinny our Monday newspapers had become. Even so, they're both still alive.
Mostly, though, I thought about all the talented Rocky Mountain News employees who didn't have a place to go Monday morning. I thought about their readers, who have yet to fully realize why it matters to have competing voices in their marketplace. I thought about the huge responsibility The Denver Post has to stay lean and mean without its long-time rival breathing down its neck.
Recent comments
Actually the DN is likely to survive and do better because of the...
@Ernest | March 4, 2009 at 1:02 p.m.
I've never read an issue. How could I miss them? I guess the...
How could I miss them? | March 4, 2009 at 8:39 a.m.
Was there a rocky mountain news?
Who knew?
Anonymous | March 3, 2009 at 9:15 p.m.
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