VVK Podcast | Attention Spans, Algorithms, and the Future of News

Local news fuels nearly every conversation we have, from politics to schools to the stories we share at work, yet the system that produces it is under real strain. 

In this episode, we sit down with Katy Locker of Bridge Michigan and BridgeDetroit, Annalise Frank of Axios Detroit, and Zoe Clark of Michigan Public to talk plainly about what’s changing and what’s worth protecting as journalism adapts to shrinking newsrooms, fractured audiences, and nonstop platform shifts. 

We dig into how people actually consume information today, from early morning newsletters to breaking news on the radio and fast-moving, personality-driven social platforms, while also examining the business realities behind local journalism, including paywalls, membership models, nonprofit funding, public media support, and the lasting impact of the “free news” era. Trust runs through it all, as we explore how misinformation spreads when local coverage disappears, how authenticity and transparency can rebuild credibility, and how partnerships can help fill gaps. 

We also tackle AI’s growing role, from tools that summarize news without clicks to the ethical lines newsrooms are drawing, and why human reporting still matters when presence, context, and care are required. 

The conversation closes with real examples of local journalism creating impact, from policy change to community pride. 

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