Here in our backyard of Cambridge, Mass., The Harvard Crimson is breathing new life into the local news landscape.
On April 7, the Crimson sent out the first edition of its Metro Briefing newsletter, a new weekly roundup of coverage of the Cambridge-Boston area. The Metro Briefing includes summaries of the top local news and arts stories from the past week and a list of local events.
In recent years, student journalists have filled local news gaps around the country, covering statehouses and reporting on higher education to partnering local professional publications. Beyond the Crimson, Cambridge’s primary local news outlet is Marc Levy‘s nonprofit news site Cambridge Day. (Cambridge Day’s newly formed advisory board launched a crowdfunding campaign on Tuesday to raise $75,000; by comparison, the Crimson’s 2020 tax filings show the paper made more than $756,000 that year, 80% of it from donations.) The Gannett-owned Cambridge Chronicle serves the city in name only; on Thursday, there was not a single story on the site’s homepage about Cambridge.
The Crimson’s managing editor Brandon Kingdollar and newsletters editor Elias Schisgall answered my questions via email about the Crimson’s decision to expand its local news offerings. The interview is slightly edited for length and clarity.
If you’re a student journalist filling in local news gaps in your community in an innovative way, get in touch: hanaa@niemanlab.org.
Hanaa’ Tameez: Where did the idea for the Metro Briefing newsletter come from? How many people work on it?
We want the Crimson to be a resource for local residents, and we felt it was important to offer a curated selection of stories most relevant to them each week.
Elias Schisgall: As the newsletters editor, I manage a team of three wonderful writers on our metro team who will be writing and curating the newsletter for the rest of the year and helping to brainstorm exactly what form it will take. Because the newsletter is still in its infancy, there’s a lot of room for growth, innovation, and creativity, and I’m excited to work with our metro reporters to see where everything goes.
Tameez: Why was it important for the Crimson to launch this newsletter now?
Moreover, as local journalism resources become scarcer in Cambridge, it is more important than ever for us to look beyond our campus and to our community and the issues facing it. With these two trends in mind, we felt the timing was right to debut a metro briefing newsletter.
Last year, I reported on local politics in Cambridge, and while I’m incredibly proud of that coverage, I was part of a pretty small team doing metro reporting on a regular basis. This year, we have a far larger team of writers doing deep reporting on a range of local topics — many of which, such as education in Cambridge, we hadn’t devoted many resources to before — and the volume of metro coverage is much greater.
Tameez: How has the Crimson’s metro coverage has changed, evolved, or expanded in the years that you all have been at Harvard?
Tameez: Tell me about the Crimson audience’s interest in off-campus local news up until now.
Our metro briefing already has an audience of 1,300 subscribers, and we hope to grow it further by providing residents with consistent, diligent metro journalism.
Tameez: Who do you think the audience for this work is?
Kingdollar: With our metro beats covering local government, education, business, and advocacy, we hope our newsletter and coverage genuinely interest all Cambridge and Boston residents, especially those who live in the neighborhoods around campus, like Harvard Square and Allston. We also hope Harvard affiliates can rely on this coverage to learn more about the city they live, work, and learn in.
In addition to the new metro briefing, we are always looking for new opportunities to reach Cambridge and Boston residents with our coverage. A Cambridge advocate emailed us today and said they were glad to see the new metro briefing launch, calling it “great news for us in the community.”
Tameez:Is there anything else that you think is important to know about this initiative?
Until now, these different sections had been relatively isolated from each other. I believe the metro newsletter is a great opportunity to take Cambridge- and Boston-centric content from Arts, News, and the magazine and consolidate them in one central place.