Here's a couple concrete examples I found. It seems like most have to rely on multiple revenue streams for it to work -- something like 1/3 reader revenue (membership), 1/3 grants/philanthropy, 1/3 earned income (events, merchandise, etc).
Small team does local journalism, motivated locals donate to keep it running. It's that simple. Some people are happy to donate $20 a month to their favorite Twitch streamer or open source project, and other people are happy to do the same for their local newspaper.
The failed model is trying to run it like a journalism factory: producing articles at some marginal cost and selling them at a fixed price that exceeds marginal cost.
Just look at NPR and member stations. The federal government ended their funding, but they kept right on going because of donations.
From here you can see there's various references and entry points to hyperlocal journalism in the US, Canada, etc, all working to fill the void of local newspapers departing, or local newspapers increasingly only providing national or state level news.
Instead of ads alone, its a sponsorship model, one from the readers side (optional), and one from the local organizations who are outright sponsoring the local news to be created, maybe in different categories, etc.
Here's a couple concrete examples I found. It seems like most have to rely on multiple revenue streams for it to work -- something like 1/3 reader revenue (membership), 1/3 grants/philanthropy, 1/3 earned income (events, merchandise, etc).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bristol_Cable
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Ferret_(website)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_Bureau
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Correspondent
Small team does local journalism, motivated locals donate to keep it running. It's that simple. Some people are happy to donate $20 a month to their favorite Twitch streamer or open source project, and other people are happy to do the same for their local newspaper.
The failed model is trying to run it like a journalism factory: producing articles at some marginal cost and selling them at a fixed price that exceeds marginal cost.
Just look at NPR and member stations. The federal government ended their funding, but they kept right on going because of donations.
NPR member stations in many communities have _not_ made up lost federal funding through donations, in fact many are at risk of closing: https://www.adn.com/alaska-news/rural-alaska/2025/07/22/kotz...
Donations are definitely a piece of the puzzle but local journalism will never reach the level it was in the early 2000s without a new revenue stream.
I thought about the best way to share it and realized it might vary in different countries and regions.
As a general introduction to hyperlocal journalism: https://www.google.com/search?q=hyperlocal+journalism
From here you can see there's various references and entry points to hyperlocal journalism in the US, Canada, etc, all working to fill the void of local newspapers departing, or local newspapers increasingly only providing national or state level news.
Instead of ads alone, its a sponsorship model, one from the readers side (optional), and one from the local organizations who are outright sponsoring the local news to be created, maybe in different categories, etc.