Bonus: The Rise of News Deserts — Why It Matters for Your Community
E4 bonus

Bonus: The Rise of News Deserts — Why It Matters for Your Community

In this special supplemental episode of On Assignment, guest host Marianne Keller explores a growing crisis that’s quietly reshaping life in America: the expansion of news deserts — communities with little to no access to reliable local news.

More than 3,200 newspapers have vanished since 2005. Jobs have disappeared. Local stories go untold. Government oversight weakens. And millions of people — particularly in rural, low-income, and minority communities — are left in an information void.

We break down:

  • What news deserts are and where they're spreading
  • How a lack of local journalism harms democracy, accountability, and civic life
  • The disproportionate impact on underserved communities
  • Promising solutions: nonprofit newsrooms, philanthropic support, new ownership models, and policy innovations
With insights from research at Northwestern, Columbia Journalism Review, Nieman Lab, UNC, and more, this episode dives deep into the consequences of vanishing local news — and what can be done to fix it.

Creators and Guests

Marianne Keller
Guest
Marianne Keller
Marianne Keller is a researcher and analyst specializing in the architecture of information ecosystems—mapping how communities thrive or wither in news deserts, adapt in news jungles, or evolve in hybrid media landscapes. Her insights reflect a deep integration of cross-disciplinary data, especially in areas where human reporting alone can't always reach. Keller’s ability to synthesize patterns from vast and varied sources has made her a go-to voice on the shifting foundations of local journalism. While she doesn’t grant many interviews in person, her contributions are unmistakably present wherever the future of media is being modeled.