With WaPo’s demise, what other sources of DC metro news coverage?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:WaPo never covered Montgomery County or Fairfax County well, even back when many people subscribed. Good riddance.



That's obviously wrong. The Post used to have a huge number of reporters throughout the suburbs. They used to have a dozen journalists covering Fairfax County alone (and they were really good reporters).


If they did, those reports rarely got printed in the newspaper delivered to my Fairfax address. Lots of column-inches about DC government though.

And I don't read or care about the editorial page in any case.


Perhaps you weren't paying attention. Some of the Post reporters who covered Fairfax and other suburbs went on to become pretty famous.


Maybe you are thinking of the 1970s or 80s?

I was actively looking for local news for NOVA. Some news, but really very slim coverage.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:WaPo never covered Montgomery County or Fairfax County well, even back when many people subscribed. Good riddance.



That's obviously wrong. The Post used to have a huge number of reporters throughout the suburbs. They used to have a dozen journalists covering Fairfax County alone (and they were really good reporters).


If they did, those reports rarely got printed in the newspaper delivered to my Fairfax address. Lots of column-inches about DC government though.

And I don't read or care about the editorial page in any case.


Perhaps you weren't paying attention. Some of the Post reporters who covered Fairfax and other suburbs went on to become pretty famous.


Maybe you are thinking of the 1970s or 80s?

I was actively looking for local news for NOVA. Some news, but really very slim coverage.


We're pretty much limited to the 11 o'clock news for good local news and sports coverage, and weather. Problem is most locals don't watch it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:

We're pretty much limited to the 11 o'clock news for good local news and sports coverage, and weather. Problem is most locals don't watch it.


News flash: It's 2026. TV news channels have websites.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:WaPo never covered Montgomery County or Fairfax County well, even back when many people subscribed. Good riddance.



That's obviously wrong. The Post used to have a huge number of reporters throughout the suburbs. They used to have a dozen journalists covering Fairfax County alone (and they were really good reporters).


If they did, those reports rarely got printed in the newspaper delivered to my Fairfax address. Lots of column-inches about DC government though.

And I don't read or care about the editorial page in any case.


Perhaps you weren't paying attention. Some of the Post reporters who covered Fairfax and other suburbs went on to become pretty famous.


Maybe you are thinking of the 1970s or 80s?

I was actively looking for local news for NOVA. Some news, but really very slim coverage.


We're pretty much limited to the 11 o'clock news for good local news and sports coverage, and weather. Problem is most locals don't watch it.


Comparing the Washington Post to local news outlets is like comparing the Washington Nationals to a Double-A baseball team.
Anonymous
The New York Times has a long story today on Bezos & the Post. The takeaways:

1. He says the paper has to be profitable
2. The editorial page is explicitly libertarian, and he doesn't care if you don't like it
3. He doesn't get involved in the news coverage at all
4. He isn't going to sell the paper. He's rejected many offers to buy it from him.

I dunno. Doesn't really seem like a good reason to cancel your subscription.

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/14/business/media/washington-post-jeff-bezos-layoffs.html
Anonymous
I was hoping this thread was bumped because all the laid-off journalists had started an indy type endeavor. I would pay cash money for some real investigative reporting and honest facts.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I was hoping this thread was bumped because all the laid-off journalists had started an indy type endeavor. I would pay cash money for some real investigative reporting and honest facts.


Most of those people will probably go into PR. People have bills to pay. It's a real loss to the profession and for the public. Good job former subscribers.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The New York Times has a long story today on Bezos & the Post. The takeaways:

1. He says the paper has to be profitable


This is just a baldfaced lie and a sign of how arrogant he is to think that anyone would believe it. Nothing that he’s done, nothing, has been designed to increase the paper’s profitability. Because, of course, he doesn’t need it to be profitable. Like Musk with Twitter, he simply needs to control a major media outlet to control how things are covered, if at all. He profits from controlling the narrative, not selling ad space.

2. The editorial page is explicitly libertarian, and he doesn't care if you don't like it


Yeah, this is the well-worn dodge that RWNJs go to when they want to avoid being labeled RWNJs.

3. He doesn't get involved in the news coverage at all


Adorable.

4. He isn't going to sell the paper. He's rejected many offers to buy it from him.


Of course he’s not going to sell. See 1 above.

I dunno. Doesn't really seem like a good reason to cancel your subscription.


I dunno. For a capitalist with no ulterior motives, aren’t subscription cancellations precisely the sort of market feedback he’d want to inform his 100% good faith pursuit of profitability with which he is so genuinely concerned? And good news! The market has been speaking to him for years now. I look forward to his nimble pivot from his failed approach to date.

Unless, you know, he’s lying.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The New York Times has a long story today on Bezos & the Post. The takeaways:

1. He says the paper has to be profitable


This is just a baldfaced lie and a sign of how arrogant he is to think that anyone would believe it. Nothing that he’s done, nothing, has been designed to increase the paper’s profitability. Because, of course, he doesn’t need it to be profitable. Like Musk with Twitter, he simply needs to control a major media outlet to control how things are covered, if at all. He profits from controlling the narrative, not selling ad space.

2. The editorial page is explicitly libertarian, and he doesn't care if you don't like it


Yeah, this is the well-worn dodge that RWNJs go to when they want to avoid being labeled RWNJs.

3. He doesn't get involved in the news coverage at all


Adorable.

4. He isn't going to sell the paper. He's rejected many offers to buy it from him.


Of course he’s not going to sell. See 1 above.

I dunno. Doesn't really seem like a good reason to cancel your subscription.


I dunno. For a capitalist with no ulterior motives, aren’t subscription cancellations precisely the sort of market feedback he’d want to inform his 100% good faith pursuit of profitability with which he is so genuinely concerned? And good news! The market has been speaking to him for years now. I look forward to his nimble pivot from his failed approach to date.

Unless, you know, he’s lying.


Eh, I'd say maybe you should keep the uninformed, weird ravings to yourself and just read the story.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The New York Times has a long story today on Bezos & the Post. The takeaways:

1. He says the paper has to be profitable
2. The editorial page is explicitly libertarian, and he doesn't care if you don't like it
3. He doesn't get involved in the news coverage at all
4. He isn't going to sell the paper. He's rejected many offers to buy it from him.

I dunno. Doesn't really seem like a good reason to cancel your subscription.

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/14/business/media/washington-post-jeff-bezos-layoffs.html


LOL. It's a good reason to cancel both, which so many have already done. The NYT is just as bad.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:WaPo never covered Montgomery County or Fairfax County well, even back when many people subscribed. Good riddance.



That's obviously wrong. The Post used to have a huge number of reporters throughout the suburbs. They used to have a dozen journalists covering Fairfax County alone (and they were really good reporters).


If they did, those reports rarely got printed in the newspaper delivered to my Fairfax address. Lots of column-inches about DC government though.

And I don't read or care about the editorial page in any case.


Perhaps you weren't paying attention. Some of the Post reporters who covered Fairfax and other suburbs went on to become pretty famous.


Maybe you are thinking of the 1970s or 80s?

I was actively looking for local news for NOVA. Some news, but really very slim coverage.


We're pretty much limited to the 11 o'clock news for good local news and sports coverage, and weather. Problem is most locals don't watch it.


Comparing the Washington Post to local news outlets is like comparing the Washington Nationals to a Double-A baseball team.


This thread is about local news. For many years, the WaPo local coverage has been very limited.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The New York Times has a long story today on Bezos & the Post. The takeaways:

1. He says the paper has to be profitable
2. The editorial page is explicitly libertarian, and he doesn't care if you don't like it
3. He doesn't get involved in the news coverage at all
4. He isn't going to sell the paper. He's rejected many offers to buy it from him.

I dunno. Doesn't really seem like a good reason to cancel your subscription.

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/14/business/media/washington-post-jeff-bezos-layoffs.html


LOL. It's a good reason to cancel both, which so many have already done. The NYT is just as bad.


Area man believes NFL players aren't actually all that good, and he could probably do better.
Anonymous
Dana Milbank announced today that he is leaving the Post and joining a new venture from Politico founder Robert Allbritton “that will be both the hometown publication the D.C. region sorely needs and a scrappy and fearless national news organization.”
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