Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
8-Year-Old Editor In Chief
Columbia Journalism Review
|September/October 2015
In one small Pennsylvania town, an 8-year-old's newspaper is serving the public interest.

Hilde Lysiak hopped on her bike and pedaled south past the old Selinsgrove Inn, past the farmers market with the Amish couple selling home-grown veggies and pies, past the local police station where no one was around to answer the door, and over the green truss bridge above Penns Creek before hanging a right onto a shady road that hugs the river. It was a brilliant July Saturday morning in Selinsgrove, a quaint hamlet of about 5,000 in Pennsylvania’s Susquehanna River Valley, where Hilde publishes Selinsgrove’s only monthly newspaper, The Orange Street News.
Today was Selinsgrove’s sixth annual Ta-Ta Trot, a 5K that drew some 2,100 runners and raised more than $71,000 to fight breast cancer—a feel-good story, for sure, but Hilde wasn’t interested. There was hard news to chase.
Two days earlier, a small tornado had torn through town, toppling trees and scattering debris. The street along the river caught the brunt of it, and Hilde had come to survey the damage. She parked her bike, whipped out her Moto G Android smartphone, and started snapping pictures of downed branches and limbs. Then she walked up to a white ranch house and knocked on the door.
An older man with an ample potbelly answered, and apologized for being shirtless. With a mix of affability and confusion, he looked down at the freckly blonde 8-year-old standing before him. She had her pen and pad in hand. Homemade press credentials dangled from her neck. “Hi. I’m Hilde from The Orange Street News, and I was wondering if you could tell me what happened a couple nights ago.”
Bu hikaye Columbia Journalism Review dergisinin September/October 2015 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
Columbia Journalism Review'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

Columbia Journalism Review
What Would Social Media Look Like If It Served The Public Interest?
What would social media look like if it served the public interest?
12 mins
Fall 2019

Columbia Journalism Review
The Investigator
Some reporters mine data. Carole Cadwalladr mines people.
23 mins
Fall 2019

Columbia Journalism Review
Sisi's Crusade
One country’s legislative assault on the press
20 mins
Fall 2019

Columbia Journalism Review
Manipulation Machines
How disinformation campaigns suppress the Black vote
11 mins
Fall 2019

Columbia Journalism Review
Interference 2020
The disinformation is coming from inside the country
12 mins
Fall 2019

Columbia Journalism Review
Bad Romance
What happened to the National Enquirer after it went all in for Trump?
27 mins
Fall 2019

Columbia Journalism Review
VICE - Digital Bad Boys
Digitals bad boy heads to prime-time news
21 mins
July/August 2015

Columbia Journalism Review
8-Year-Old Editor In Chief
In one small Pennsylvania town, an 8-year-old's newspaper is serving the public interest.
13 mins
September/October 2015
Translate
Change font size