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$20 million seems like…more than enough money to get a nonprofit news outlet through its first two years.
In the case of the Houston Landing, it wasn’t. The Texas news nonprofit, which raised more than $20 million before it launched in 2023, announced this week that it will shut down in May after less than two years of publishing. The funding came from the American Journalism Project and the Knight Foundation, as well as three Houston philanthropies: Arnold Ventures, the Houston Endowment, and the Kinder Foundation. Funders also made up half of the site’s six-person board.
Sophie, Nieman Lab’s local news staff writer, is working on a story about what happened at the Landing, and what lessons there might be for other nonprofit news sites. We’re interested in learning more about the situation from anyone close to it, even if you don’t want to speak on the record. You can reach Sophie via email or Signal (sculpepp.28).
— Laura Hazard Owen
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Eggs are how much? News outlets launch grocery price trackersTracking the prices of supermarket staples over time is a service to readers — and a way to keep an eye on the national economy. By Laura Hazard Owen. |
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“Multi-local” newsrooms aim to get more news to more peopleThe model could allow local reporters to be part of bigger, better-resourced teams, while maintaining a level of community trust that’s out of reach for most national counterparts. By Sophie Culpepper. |
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The Houston Landing raised $20 million pre-launch. Less than two years later, it’s shutting down.The site will stop publishing by mid-May, CEO Peter Bhatia said Tuesday, and its 43 employees will be laid off. By Sophie Culpepper. |
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The unreality of reality TV: How competition shows influence U.S. politics and shape views about economic inequalityColumbia University’s Eunji Kim: “The behavioral data tells us that most American life is not political — so why don’t we study what people are actually consuming every day, however lowbrow it may seem?” By Joshua Benton. |