© 2025 Michigan State University Board of Trustees
Public Media from Michigan State University
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

TECHNOTE: Thu 9/4/25 Radio broadcast interruptions during tower work 9am-5pm

Mid-MI grassroots journalists discuss their roles, impact

East Lansing city hall photo
WKAR File Photo
/
WKAR Photo

The internet has triggered profound changes in print journalism. Sometimes, local grassroots journalists step in to help communities stay informed. We talk to two “citizen journalists” from the Lansing area about why they do what they do and the influence they think they have.

Last week on his HBO show, John Oliver of "Last Week Tonight" made a point about the broadcast media’s reliance on print journalism. It was a mash-up of references to newspaper stories by TV news hosts. Oliver also revisited many profound changes that have transformed  journalism, many would say for the worse.

But perhaps the biggest of those changes, the internet, has also played a role in energizing another kind of reporting: citizen journalism. The internet has meant that ordinary citizens can play a greater role in reporting news.

Current State talks with two Lansing area citizen journalists. Alice Dreger is the founder, board president and journalist at eastlansinginfo.org, a free East Lansing news website. Steve Harry is  the researcher, reporter, fact checker and editor at steveharrypublicpolicy.com.

Related Content
Together we’ve already reduced WKAR’s $1.6 million budget gap created by the loss of federal funding. With your sustaining support we can close the remaining $500,000 gap and keep trusted public media strong for mid-Michigan. The best way to support WKAR is to become a sustainer. Already a sustainer? Please consider upgrading your current monthly gift.