thousands of people across Leeds, in a format that mimics the city's
Yorkshire Evening Post – albeit with articles on the collapse of the
city centre, climate change, the role of public transport and the
financial turmoil at Elland Road.
city. "While some people were queuing up to take them out of our
hands, others rushed past, thinking it was just another Evening Post,"
said Colleen Platts, one of the people behind the project.
The Yorkshire Evening Pest is the latest example of a new form of
'citizen journalism' which has emerged in the current financial
crisis. Last week, thousands of spoof copies of the Financial Times
( http://www.ft2020.com) were handed out in London ahead of the G20
summit. Its editor accused the media of complicity by failing to to
ask the difficult questions in the lead-up to the fiscal meltdown.
"It's the job of journalists to support facts and not opinions, but a
lot of what's reported as facts are actually the opinions of powerful
people," said Raoul Djukanovic.
With falling advertising revenue and the inexorable rise of other
media, the UK's regional papers are facing problems of their own.
Johnston Press, owners of the Yorkshire Evening Post, are embroiled in
a bitter industrial dispute: 140 workers have been taking strike
action since mid-February over its plan for compulsory redundancies at
the paper and its sister title, the Yorkshire Post. As the Yorkshire
Evening Pest explained, such cutbacks inevitably mean even less time
to research stories, and greater pressure to regurgitate press
releases.
But it's not all doom and gloom, as Colleen Platts explained. "Local
papers still have a hugely important role to play. They have a street
presence which means they can provide that city-wide 'water-cooler
moment' in a way that online news portals can't. But they'll only do
this if they ask the right questions – something they seem
increasingly reluctant to do."
http://yorkshireeveningpest.co.uk
For further information, contact info@yorkshireeveningpest.co.uk