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Alternative news agency

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An alternative news agency (or alternative news service) operates similarly to a commercial news agency, but defines itself as an alternative to commercial or "mainstream" operations. They span the political spectrum, but most frequently are progressive or radical left. Sometimes they combine the services of a news agency and a news syndicate. Among the primary clients are alternative weekly newspapers.

Notable alternative news agencies from the past included the Associated Negro Press, the Collegiate Press Service, Liberation News Service, Pacific News Service, and the Mathaba News Agency. Active alternative news services include AlterNet, the Association of Alternative Newsmedia, and Inter Press Service.

The raison d'etre of a 1970s-era service, Community Press Features, nicely summarizes the ethos of the alternative news agency:

The mass media — the metropolitan daily newspapers, television, and radio — are big businesses and are backed, through financing and advertising, by other big businesses. They naturally tend to reflect and report the concerns of large business interests over those of the rest of the population. And although there are at times significant exceptions (usually moments of crisis, when they can't afford not to) they just as naturally hesitate to report on activities and groups which seriously challenge the legitimacy of those same powerful interests. Rarely will they accurately or adequately present those groups' points of view."[1]

History

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One of the first alternative news agencies was Associated Negro Press (ANP), founded in 1919 in Chicago by Claude Albert Barnett. Through its regular packets, the ANP supplied African American newspapers with news stories, opinions, columns, feature essays, book and movie reviews, critical and comprehensive coverage of events, personalities, and institutions relevant to black Americans.

The Collegiate Press Service (CPS) began in 1962 as the news agency of the United States Student Press Association (USSPA),[2] supplying material to college and university newspapers. (It was later revealed that CPS was at the time was receiving support and covert financing from the right-wing organizations Reader's Digest and the Central Intelligence Agency.)[3]

The formation of the international journalist cooperative Inter Press Service in 1964 was vital in filling the information gap between Europe and Latin America after the political turbulence following the Cuban Revolution of 1959.[4][5]

The 1966 formation of the Underground Press Syndicate (UPS) was key to the co-development of the counterculture underground press and alternative news agencies. By June 1967, a UPS conference in Iowa City, Iowa drew 80 underground newspaper editors from the U.S. and Canada,[citation needed] including representatives of Liberation News Service. LNS, founded by Marshall Bloom and Ray Mungo that summer, would play an equally important and complementary role in the growth and evolution of the underground press in the United States.[6][7][8]

Two alternative news agencies formed in the late 1960s were notable for their coverage of the Vietnam War. The Dispatch News Service, formed in 1968, was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting in 1970 along with writer Seymour Hersh, for his coverage of the My Lai massacre.[9] Similarly, the mission of the Pacific News Service, formed in 1969, was to supply mainstream newspapers with independent expert sources and reporting on the United States' role in Indochina during the war.[10]

The explosive growth of the underground press began to subside by 1970,[8] yet a plethora of alternative news agencies were formed in the period 1971–1973. Only a few of those agencies lasted more than a couple of years, with only two — Earth News Service (ENS) and Zodiac News Service — lasting into the 1980s. Both agencies emerged from the defunct Earth magazine;[11] ENS was later renamed Newscript Dispatch Service. Meanwhile, Jonathan Newhall,[12][13] another former Earth staffer, formed Zodiac News Service.[14]

The Capitol Hill News Service, established in 1973 as part of Ralph Nader's think tank Public Citizen, was later sold to the States News Service, run by Leland Schwartz.[15][16]

The left-leaning news agency AlterNet was launched in 1987[17] with a mission to serve as a clearinghouse for important local stories generated by the members of the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies (itself formed in 1978). At its start, AlterNet created print and electronic mechanisms to syndicate both the works of AAN papers and freelance contributors, among them Michael Moore and Abbie Hoffman.

Alternative news agencies of the 2000s have been mostly characterized as Internet-based news sites (and most have only lasted a couple of years).

Examples

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Active

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Defunct

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Pre-1960s

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1960s

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1970s

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  • Alternative Features Service (AFS) (June 1971–1973) — based in Berkeley; aspired to be the "King Features Syndicate of the Underground press."[11]
  • Appalachian News Service (January 1974–1976)[14] — founded by Curtis Seltzer; based in Charleston, West Virginia
  • Capitol Hill News Service (1973–1978)
  • Community Press Features (1971–mid-1970s)[14] — media group division of the UPA, an urban planning nonprofit established in Boston in 1968[20]
  • Earth News Service/Newscript Dispatch Service (April 1972–1980s) — spun off from the defunct Earth magazine; other former Earth staffers started Zodiac News Service and Zoo World Newservice[14]
  • FPS (c. 1970–1979) — high school student news service with a sanitized name: "Free Public Schools"; later became the Magazine of Young People's Liberation
  • Her Say (1977–c. 1982) — feminist news service founded by Marlene Edmunds and Anne Millner (formerly of Zodiac News Service),[21] as well as Shelley Buck[22]
  • New York News Service (c. 1973–1974)[14] — founded by Rex Weiner and Deanne Stillman[23] (Weiner wrote for the East Village Other and founded the New York Ace)[14]
  • People's Translation Service (1972–c. 1975)[24]
  • Tricontinental News Service (1973–c. 1974)[24]
  • Zodiac News Service (1972–1980s)
  • Zoo World Newservice (April 1972–May 12, 1973)[25] — founded by Tom Newton, formerly of Earth magazine[14]

1980s–1990s

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2000s

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See also

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References

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Citations

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  1. ^ "Financial". The Boston Globe. Boston. 22 August 1971. p. 56.
  2. ^ "RISING UNREST". The New York Times. 4 April 1965. p. 191.
  3. ^ Crewdson, John M. (27 December 1977). "C.I.A. established many links to journalists in U.S. and abroad". The New York Times. p. 1. Retrieved 20 January 2009.
  4. ^ "IPS – Inter Press Service News Agency » Our history". Archived from the original on 15 January 2018. Retrieved 19 September 2019.
  5. ^ Oeffner, Annalena. The role of the Inter Press Service in the international mediascape: The case of IPS reporting on the 2005 World Social Forum. diplom.de. ISBN 9783832491802.
  6. ^ Peck, Abe (1985). Uncovering the Sixties: The Life and Times of the Underground Press. New York: Pantheon Books.
  7. ^ McMillian, John (2011). Smoking typewriters: the Sixties Underground Press and the Rise of Alternative Media in America. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-531992-7.
  8. ^ a b Reed, John (26 July 2016). "The Underground Press and Its Extraordinary Moment in US History". Hyperallergic.
  9. ^ "'I sent them a good boy and they made him a murderer'". The Pulitzer Prizes. Retrieved 23 August 2020.
  10. ^ Weber, Bruce (26 August 2010). "Franz Schurmann, Cold War Expert on China, Dies at 84". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 1 January 2019.
  11. ^ a b Berlet, p. 285.
  12. ^ "Jonathan Newhall, 79". California News Publishers Association. 10 March 2021.
  13. ^ NEWHALL, BARBARA FALCONER (27 February 2021). "Jonathan Newhall. My Husband of Forty-Four Years". Barbara Falconer Newhall.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g Wachsberger, Ken, ed. (2011). Insider Histories of the Vietnam Era Underground Press. Voices from the Underground, Part 1. MSU Press. ISBN 9781609172206.
  15. ^ Carmody, Deirdre (12 May 1978). "Sale of Small News Service in Capital to Have a Big Effect". The New York Times.
  16. ^ Kurtz, Howard (24 October 1993). "LOCAL NEWS HEROES". The Washington Post.
  17. ^ "About AlterNet". AlterNet. Archived from the original on 22 February 1997. Launched in November 1987 by the Institute for Alternative Journalism (IAJ)...
  18. ^ "SNN.BZ – SyndicatedNews.NET". Retrieved 31 March 2023.
  19. ^ "Dispatch News Service International". TriCollege Libraries: Archives and Manuscripts. DNSI suspended operations March 1973.
  20. ^ Kester, Grant (Fall 1989). "Riots and Rent Strikes: Documentary During the Great Society Era" (PDF). Exposure. Vol. 27, no. 2. p. 29.
  21. ^ Gaylor, Annie Laurie (February 1982). "Her Say: A Goldmine of News About Women". Womansight: News for North Texas Women. Vol. 2, no. 8. p. 1.
  22. ^ "Her Say, Nationally Syndicated News". Whirlwind. Vol. 4, no. 1. 8 October 1981. p. 3.
  23. ^ Rosenkranz, Patrick (2008). Rebel Visions: The Underground Comix Revolution, 1963-1975. Seattle: Fantagraphics Books. p. 164.
  24. ^ a b Berlet, p. 286.
  25. ^ Fisher, Craig (5 May 1973). "The Coast" (PDF). Record World.
  26. ^ "Liberation News Service". Connexipedia. Retrieved 28 January 2024.
  27. ^ "Open Reporter". Archived from the original on 25 October 2015. Retrieved 5 November 2015. A mobile app that allows citizens and community activists to directly report newsworthy events to journalists.
  28. ^ "Website of Scoop Analytics". Archived from the original on 20 December 2016. Retrieved 12 December 2016.

Sources

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