Atlanta, GA
Local news is in crisis. This paper has a $150 million plan
Publisher and CEO Andrew Morse says the Atlanta Journal Constitution can surmount tough industry headwinds by capturing readers throughout Georgia and the South. “Instead of reading story after story about the futility of this,” Morse asks, “why don’t we grasp onto notions of, ‘How do we build for the future?’”
Paras Griffin/Getty Images
hide caption
toggle caption
Paras Griffin/Getty Images
Dashed hopes and slashed jobs define the local news industry in far too many corners of the country.
In Atlanta, Andrew Morse, the president and publisher of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, has splashy plans to revive the ailing newspaper. And he’s been given a $150 million runway over the next several years to figure it out.
“I did not come here to manage decline,” says Morse, a former CNN executive who joined the newspaper in January 2023. “We understand that the ad marketplace has been hollowed out by Google and Facebook. We know that news deserts have emerged throughout much of the country.
“Instead of reading story after story about the futility of this,” Morse asks, “why don’t we grasp onto notions of, ‘How do we build for the future?’”
From a journalistic standpoint — heck, from an actuarial standpoint — the local newspaper industry is in dire straits.

The companies are largely concentrated in the hands of a few corporate titans, many controlled by investment funds. Owners often seek to prop up immediate profits while shrinking their newspapers’ staff in what’s considered by critics to be a money-making death spiral.
More than 2.5 newspapers, on average, closed each week over the year ending in October, according to Northwestern University’s Medill State of Local News Report.
President-elect Donald Trump’s win earlier this month led to even more hand-wringing among journalists about the importance Americans place on news based on the traditional principles of objectivity, accountability and the facts. Trump eschewed interviews with many mainstream news outlets, choosing instead sympathetic podcasters. And many voters simply gained information about the candidates and the race elsewhere.
The Journal-Constitution’s own recent past features retrenchment and cost-cutting. In recent decades, it retreated from covering Georgia beyond the Atlanta suburbs. It stopped circulating in farther reaches of the state.
Its parent company, Cox Enterprises, shed most of its other newspapers, but not the Journal-Constitution. Cox Enterprises CEO Alex C. Taylor, a great-grandson of the company’s founder, says the newspaper plays a critical role in Atlanta — one of providing reliable news and information.

“We believe that journalism and facts are an essential component of our community, particularly now,” Taylor writes in a statement to NPR. And he says that the company embraces Morse’s vision for a sustainable business.
The plan
Morse has undertaken a literal rebuilding: When I visited in the spring, we spoke outside the midtown Atlanta site where Morse is having a state-of-the-art newsroom built from scratch for reporting, podcasting, streaming video shows, live events and more. He’s moving the paper back into the heart of the city from the northern suburbs. The office is set to open on Monday.
“Our mission is to be the most essential and engaging source of news for the people of Atlanta, Georgia, in the South,” Morse says.
On his first day, back in January 2023, Morse drew concentric geographic circles for readers’ interests. Politics came first.
“Georgia’s the center of the political universe,” he says.
Before the election, both Trump and Vice President Harris were frequent visitors to the purple state, which ultimately went for Trump. But he also faces a multicount indictment here for conspiring to overturn Georgia’s 2020 presidential vote, which was narrowly won by President Biden.
The paper’s coverage of the race and the legal case has been widely cited in the national press.
“If we cover Georgia politics exceptionally well, we’ll pick up subscribers in Atlanta, Georgia, the South and beyond,” Morse says.
Andrew Morse, the publisher and chief executive of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, stands before a mural advertising the newspaper.
David Folkenflik/NPR
hide caption
toggle caption
David Folkenflik/NPR
After politics, sports and Black culture
Morse next drew circles around regional sports, food, culture and Black life. The paper’s coverage of that last category falls under the heading “UATL,” for “Unapologetically Atlanta.” Morse green-lit a six-figure budget for a documentary on the rise of hip-hop there called “The South Got Something To Say.” It featured interviews with Andre 3000, Suge Knight and Snoop Dogg, among others.
He met frequently with Atlanta Hawks CEO Steve Koonin to learn how he reconnected the basketball team to an alienated Atlanta fan base, especially African Americans.
This fall, the paper started the UATL as a stand-alone product, inviting readers to become members. More than 5,000 people signed up as members in the first few weeks. The approach echoes the New York Times’ strategy of creating separate apps for games and cooking.
As the number two at CNN, Morse followed a similar strategy, also inspired by the Times, in building the streaming service CNN+, knitting a journalistic core with programs serving as book clubs, parenting guides and coffee klatches.
That playbook lasted just a month; it fell victim to a change in both the ownership and CEO at CNN. Morse left shortly after.
A hands-on approach at a time of crisis
Morse operates with a personal touch. Staffers say he shows up routinely at company softball games and civic events. He has met all 400 employees in small groups and dinners and written front-page editorials, including one promising longtime subscribers that the paper is not dispensing with the daily print edition — not for the foreseeable future.
Indeed, Morse has doubled down on print, for the moment. To advertise the Journal-Constitution’s coverage and its revived ambitions, it’s offered for free at stores in the Georgia cities of Athens, Macon and Savannah — all places where the local papers have declined in staffing, circulation and breadth of coverage.

The Athens Banner-Herald and the Savannah Morning News are owned by newspaper giant Gannett. The Macon Telegraph is owned by McClatchy, which is held by a hedge fund. The newsrooms of all three have been cut back severely. Like many local newspapers, they no longer publish seven days a week.
The AJC took its podcast Politically Georgia, which also airs as a show on the public radio station WABE, on the road as well, to appeal to listeners and potential subscribers.
Back in Atlanta, Morse regularly leads daily news sessions in tandem with Editor-in-Chief Leroy Chapman Jr., a 13-year veteran at the paper whom Morse elevated to the job last year. It’s a TV news move: Morse’s longtime boss at CNN, the former President Jeff Zucker, was famous for steering coverage at the network.
Atlanta Journal-Constitution Editor in Chief Leroy Chapman Jr. says the current media crisis requires “all hands on deck.”
Paras Griffin/Getty Images
hide caption
toggle caption
Paras Griffin/Getty Images
At most newspapers, by contrast, the publisher’s direct involvement in coordinating news coverage would be problematic — even a crisis — with the potential to blur lines between business and journalistic imperatives.
Chapman tells NPR that the real crisis — the threat of financial collapse in local newspapering — is already here. And he argues that Morse is helping the Journal-Constitution pull through it.
“The responsibility at the top for transformational change is a commitment,” says Chapman. “It can’t necessarily be effectively done by emails and by things you write.”
“Change and the commitment to change really does come from hands-on [involvement], day to day, moment to moment,” he adds.
Morse rejects potential concerns about his involvement, including concerns about coverage of the Cox family’s other corporate holdings. He says he shields the newsroom from corporate or political pressures.
“Everybody wants to try to play an angle. They try to exert their influence,” Morse says. “If not for our editorial integrity, we don’t have a business model. As long as everyone understands that, there’s no problem.”
So will it succeed?
“We’ve set a vision to be able to transform the AJC from this storied 155-year-old organization into a modern media company,” Morse says.
In a hopeful sign, the newspaper is doing something rare among its kind: It’s adding staffers. By the end of this year, the Journal-Constitution will have added nearly 100 more people than when Morse started, an increase of about a quarter. (That takes into account a handful of layoffs and buyouts this year.)
These days, a spokesperson says, the paper has a bit north of 100,000 paying print and digital subscribers, a modest increase from recently disclosed levels. The spokesperson also says the Journal-Constitution has enjoyed consistent growth this year. Morse is shooting for 500,000 subscriptions — that is, almost five times as many as it has right now.
For this story, I surveyed six industry executives with experience in local news about Morse’s plans. I anticipated at least some skepticism.
Five said they thought Morse stood a pretty good chance of pulling this off.
All six said they were rooting for him.
Atlanta, GA
Semi-truck, train collide in fiery crash in SW Atlanta
ATLANTA, Ga. (Atlanta News First) — A semi-truck collided with a train overnight on the city’s southwest side, sparking a fire in the wreckage.
No injuries have been reported as authorities have yet to locate the driver of the tractor-trailer. No occupants were found on the train either, according to Atlanta Fire Rescue.
Crews responded to reports of a vehicle fire just before 4 a.m. at the intersection of Lee and Spark streets in southwest Atlanta.
When first responders arrived, they encountered a tractor-trailer afire after being struck by a train. Firefighters worked to put out the flames in the cab, trailer as well as on debris strewn about the railroad and roadway, Atlanta Fire Rescue told Atlanta News First.
Crews have not identified any hazardous materials in the wreckage.
An investigation is ongoing as no occupants were found in the tractor-trailer, train or surrounding area, authorities said.
Norfolk Southern and MARTA briefly halted operations in the area as police activity and cleanup continued.
The crash happened just below elevated MARTA rail tracks which run between the West End and Oakland City transit stations.
MARTA said that it had requested a bus bridge to transport riders between Oakland City and West End Stations “due to police activity” until further notice.
The transit agency was also offering riders Uber and Lyft credits for rail travel involving the Lakewood, Oakland City, West End and Garnett stations.
This is a developing story. Please stay with Atlanta News First as we learn more.
Copyright 2026 WANF. All rights reserved.
Atlanta, GA
Seahawks Travel To Atlanta And Alabama For A Civil Rights Learning Tour
“I am at this point where I can’t imagine not going,” Wilkins-Mickey said. “Every year I learn something new. Of course they add different experiences everything we go, so it really does feel different every time, but I want to learn. I want to continue to learn. This is our culture, it’s our history and I would like to continue to understand why we are where we are today. And I think the only way to do that is to understand our past. Every time I go, I just feel so inspired. It gives me purpose to do the work that I do.”
The trip starts with a flight from Seattle to Atlanta where the group has their first glimpse of what to expect for the rest of their week. The group was given a tour of an area of downtown Atlanta called “Sweet Auburn Ave.” which was once a booming community and neighborhood, filled with businesses, that was systemically dismantled by a highway that was built through the neighborhood. Businesses and families were forced to leave.
Keenan Allen Ladd, one of three educators on the tour said, “I really just appreciated the educators in those moments, because they take you through the whole story of the major moments that happened in the Civil Rights Movement.”
The rest of that first day was spent at the Martin Luther King Jr. National Historical Park, his birth home and other sites in Atlanta before making the drive to the neighboring state of Alabama to visit Anniston, where the Freedom Riders boarded a bus at the Greyhound station and which was attacked by a group of white supremacist,
The group spent the remainder of their trip in different cities in Alabama, including Birmingham, Montgomery and Selma.
While in Montgomery, the group visited the Montgomery riverfront, a location where enslaved people were brought off of boats and taken to the city’s downtown area to be auctioned off.
Leann Coates, Seahawks premium service representative, described the experience as shocking.
“It’s very powerful to be standing there at the riverfront, and know that not long ago, people were brought on ships and sold. That street is still called commerce street. Things have not changed in the way you think they have changed.”
While the group was in Montgomery, one of the locations they visited was the Legacy Museum, a museum that immerses visitors in the history of Black Americans from the Transatlantic slave trade all the way through to present day and mass incarceration.
And while the actual tour of the South was just five days, the journey doesn’t stop there. Ladd said he immediately returned to his classroom and thought about ways to get his students involved and educated on the topics he learned about on the tour. Allen Ladd said he utilized the one thing he knows all of his students use, social media, specifically Tik Tok and Instagram reels, to help the students learn information in a natural way.
“When I got back, I actually had them all take out their phones and go on Tik Tok and look up the Institute for Common Power, just so they could see that experience first-hand. We did that for like two days. By the third day, a lot of their algorithm’s changes and they were able to get real life information that they weren’t getting before.”
He added, “This tour furthers my want, urge and that yearning to make sure I’m standing up for everyone who doesn’t have the opportunity to utilize their voice, to just amplify voices. There’s a lot of people that we’ve learned on this trip, this Truth and Purpose, to utilize your voice for the voice of others. And that’s something that I’m going to do… I’m in a unique position as an educator. I have the opportunity to guide or facilitate youth, and I have an opportunity to open the eyes of our youth and I have something that is precious… I want to make sure they have the correct information. I don’t want to steer them in a particular direction, but I definitely want to put the correct information in front of them, so they can understand what this country looked like previously, to give them a vision of what they believe this country should look like moving forward in the future.”
A lot of the participants come away from the trip feeling a sense of community, empowered and are more enlightened about the history of Black Americans than they were before.
Learn more about the Truth and Purpose tour and the organization, the Institute for Common Power, that spearheads this trip here.
Atlanta, GA
Fallen tree damages cars, blocks I-285 WB in Fulton County
ATLANTA, Ga. (Atlanta News First) — I-285 WB was blocked in Fulton County on Thursday morning as crews cleaned up a fallen tree.
Video of the scene showed the tree and leaf litter sprawled across several lanes. Crews were using chainsaws to clean up the mess.
Several vehicles at the scene appear to be damaged, but it’s unknown if anyone was hurt. Atlanta News First has reached out to the fire department for more information.
As of 9 a.m., the road had partially reopened.
This is a developing story. Check back with Atlanta News First as we learn more.
Copyright 2026 WANF. All rights reserved.
-
Illinois9 seconds agoIllinois Democrats face backlash after blaming Trump in Chicago cross-burning case | Fox News Video
-
Indiana5 minutes ago
Top-rated freshman focused on one big thing before Indiana basketball season
-
Iowa12 minutes agoA new facility in Marshall County could spark more conservation on Iowa farms
-
Kansas15 minutes agoChicken chain expanding to Kansas and five other Midwest states
-
Kentucky27 minutes agoOfficials identify missing woman as search enters third day
-
Louisiana30 minutes agoAASHTO Journal – Louisiana DOTD Completes I-20 Rehabilitation Project
-
Maine35 minutes agoAmtrak train strikes, kills man in Old Orchard Beach, Maine
-
Maryland42 minutes ago
Celebrate America 250 at Maryland State Parks with Fun Events Planned All Weekend