BKLYNER

Bklyner[1] (pronounced "Brooklyner", often stylized in all-caps) is a hyper-local news site from the borough of Brooklyn in New York City.[2]

The site began in 2017 when several hyper-local sites merged into one.[2] The publication mostly publishes material online, but has also published printed newspapers.[2]

It has been described as "telling the stories considered too small for the major newspapers to bother with." Exclusives such as a 27,000 gallon oil spill "that the authorities had not made public"[3] led to legal changes.[4]

Major New York City newspapers[5] such the New York Daily News and the New York Post cite their information as a source.[6][7]

A neighborhood news website named Ditmas Park Corner,[8] after five years on its own, was folded into Bklyner.[9] Prior to merging into Bklyner, Ditmas Park Corner funded paying a reporter to walk around the neighborhood.[8][10]

Funding

Bklyner, although it carries ads, in 2017 "cut its staff from six full-time reporters to two-and-a-half, primarily because ad revenue had fallen"[1] and also sought "paying subscribers, even though the site remains free." As of early 2020, ads and subscribers was still the support model for free access.[11]

gollark: Why use electricity and not light or something?
gollark: Great, I'll forward that to the President of Physics.
gollark: Also, they would take infinite time and materials to build, and light lag between bits of the computer would be a problem.
gollark: Do you want the extra space to have things in it or not have things?
gollark: Hmm, good idea. What sort of features do you want?

References

  1. Andy Newman (November 5, 2017). "News Sites With Local Ambitions Hope to Fill Digital Void". The New York Times.
  2. "Scrappy Brooklyn news site ventures into print". Columbia Journalism Review. Retrieved July 20, 2020.
  3. NYTimes gave as an example "Breaking: a 27,000-gallon oil spill toward Gravesend Bay". BKLYNER. (NYTimes) that the authorities had not made public
  4. "NYTimes: to introduce a bill requiring agencies to immediately notify local officials of pollution hazards.
  5. "Brooklyn luxury tower's rooftop pool will be highest in the city". New York Post. February 4, 2018.
  6. "Brooklyn Councilman Kalman Yeger kicked off immigration committee". New York Daily News. April 1, 2019.
  7. "Why NYC feels so much less safe, even when major crime is still down". New York Post. December 1, 2019.
  8. founded 2007, sold 2011 to Corner Media: Vivian Yee (July 16, 2014). "Corner Media Expands Its Network of Brooklyn Blogs". The New York Times.
  9. Ditmas Park Corner was standalone 2012 thru 2017, then "incorporated into" "Ditmas Park Corner Joins BKLYNER - BKLYNER". BKLYNER. December 28, 2016.
  10. NYT: starting salary $30,000
  11. The author is BKLYNER's founder's husband: Ben Smith (March 29, 2020). "Bail Out Journalists. Let Newspaper Chains Die". The New York Times.
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