The Ultimate Youth Sports Newsletter Vol. 48: USA Wins 2025 Junior Ryder Cup, C-Suite Corner, DICK’S Sporting Goods House of Sport Expands,Tuition of Best Private High School Football Teams
When asked what it will take to move youth sports beyond its echo chamber, our executives delivered a unified message: the industry’s endless cycle of talk without action has reached a breaking point.
PlayersHealth CEO Tyrre Burks cut straight to the core issue, noting that “the same conversations about safety, cost, and access happen year after year, often within the same small circle. At some point, talk is not enough, and you must put real resources behind solutions.” Burks backed up this philosophy by committing 1% of his company’s revenue to youth programs exactly the type of concrete action the industry desperately needs.
BASE Sports Group CEO Mark Dvoroznak echoed this call for substantial commitment, emphasizing that breakthrough requires “strong commitment…from large brands/organizations, professional sports teams/leagues or the government” rather than simply “throwing money at an issue.” The distinction? Strategic, sustained investment versus superficial gestures.
Perhaps most intriguingly, TeamSnap CEO Pete Frintzilas identified a growing divide in how companies approach market intelligence. He urged leaders to engage “in market everyday speaking to participants & partners” rather than “creating a media narrative based on others POV” or “amplifying the growing ‘hype’ of topics in the echo chamber to drive clicks.”
YSBR’s Insight:
While these C-suite leaders call for breaking through youth sports’ echo chamber, Youth Sports Business Report recognizes our unique responsibility in this transformation. As an industry publication, we sit at the intersection of conversation and action, with the power to either perpetuate the cycle these executives describe or help disrupt it.
That’s why we’re committed to advancing beyond traditional sports media approaches. Rather than simply amplifying the same voices and perspectives, we’re building strategic partnerships with organizations across the youth sports ecosystem and leveraging rich data insights to uncover stories that haven’t been told. Our goal isn’t just to report on the industry’s challenges around safety, cost, and access, but to illuminate the innovative solutions and diverse voices that often get overlooked in industry discourse.
We’re working to bridge the gap between the conference room conversations these leaders reference and the real experiences of families, athletes, and grassroots organizations. Through data-driven storytelling and strategic partnerships, we aim to surface the concrete actions and measurable impacts that move beyond industry rhetoric, exactly the type of substantive progress our executives are calling for. More on this coming from YSBR soon 😁
📋 Today’s Lineup
🇺🇸 U.S. Defeats Europe 17½-12½ in 13th Junior Ryder Cup
🏪 DICK’S Sporting Goods House of Sport Expands in Jersey City and Dallas
🎮 LeagueSpot Extends Three-Year Esports Partnership with Epic Charter Schools
🏈 MaxPreps Shares Annual Tuition of Best Private High School Football Teams in America
🤝 Vantage Foundation Partners with Laureus Sport for Good on Global Youth Programs
📊 New Study Shows Private Club Sports Participation Tripled Across Generations
⛳ U.S. Reclaims Junior Ryder Cup with 17½-12½ Victory Over Europe
Read more here…
The U.S. junior golf team reclaimed the Junior Ryder Cup with a 17½-12½ victory over Europe at Nassau Country Club in Glen Cove, New York, improving their overall record to 8-4-1 across 13 editions. The competition featured 24 elite amateur golfers under 18, with equal gender representation of six boys and six girls per team.
U.S. Captain Suzy Whaley, a PGA Past President, led the American squad in the match-play format that mirrors the professional Ryder Cup. Stanford University commits Anna Fang and Asterisk Talley secured crucial early points in decisive singles matches, while captain’s pick Rayee Feng clinched the cup with a 4&3 victory.
“Being a captain of a team holds a lot of responsibility, but it wasn’t just me. This was a team effort for Team USA to bring that Cup home and set the tone for tomorrow’s Ryder Cup,” said Whaley.
The tournament serves as a premier pathway for elite amateur golfers, with winning U.S. team members set to attend the Ryder Cup opening ceremony at nearby Bethpage Black. The event’s positioning alongside the professional Ryder Cup creates operational synergies while connecting junior and professional levels of the sport.
🏪 DICK’S House of Sport Expands in Jersey City and Dallas
Read more here…
DICK’S Sporting Goods opened House of Sport locations in Jersey City and Dallas, as the retailer integrates youth sports programming into major store launches. The Jersey City location marks the chain’s first NYC-area House of Sport at 85,000 square feet, while the Dallas opening featured structured youth basketball programming with Wings stars Paige Bueckers and Arike Ogunbowale.
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The Dallas launch included a youth 3-on-3 tournament on a custom half-court, with The DICK’S Sporting Goods Foundation awarding a surprise $20,000 Sports Matter Grant to Top Achievers Foundation. This funding model shows how retail partnerships create direct financial support for youth organizations beyond traditional sponsorship arrangements.
Both locations feature interactive experiences including climbing walls, TrackMan golf simulators, and multi-sport training cages, positioning DICK’S as a destination for equipment testing rather than transaction-based shopping. The Jersey City store carries 13,000 unique footwear SKUs despite being the smallest House of Sport format to date.
DICK’S now operates 26 House of Sport locations with plans to reach 75-100 by fiscal 2027, representing significant acceleration from current pace. The company’s strategy integrates professional athlete community engagement with corporate foundation investment, creating measurable youth sports impact while building authentic community connections through retail expansion.
🎮 LeagueSpot Extends Three-Year Esports Partnership with Epic Charter Schools
Read more here…
LeagueSpot renewed its partnership with Epic Charter Schools for the 2025-2026 school year, marking the third consecutive year serving one of Oklahoma’s largest virtual school systems. The platform delivers FERPA/COPPA-compliant esports experiences to over 30,000 K-12 students statewide.
Since launching in 2022, the program has engaged over 600 student participants across Rocket League, Minecraft, and Fortnite tournaments. Epic Charter uses LeagueSpot’s white-label platform to run compliant tournaments and digital clubs while maintaining brand consistency and educational technology security standards.
The partnership expansion includes varsity tryout integration, student leadership pathways, and enhanced competitive offerings. The Games Club model focuses on academic and life skills development through structured gaming activities, emphasizing communication, collaboration, and digital citizenship.
“Our efforts have allowed us to impact the lives of hundreds of students through the sheer passion of gaming,” said Steve Briggs, Head Coach of Epic’s Esports Program. The virtual school model allows Epic Charter to scale esports programming across Oklahoma’s diverse student population without geographic constraints.
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If you want to play big time High School Football in the US, here is what tuition costs today… via MaxPreps
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🤝 Vantage Foundation Partners with Laureus Sport for Good on Global Youth Programs
Read more here…
Vantage Foundation announced a partnership with Laureus Sport for Good Foundation Spain, expanding the charitable organization’s global youth development initiatives. Laureus operates more than 300 programs worldwide using sport to help underprivileged youth build resilience and inclusion in vulnerable communities.
The partnership, announced from Madrid on September 24, explores how sport-based programs create measurable impact for youth facing challenging circumstances. Laureus programs extend beyond traditional athletic training, incorporating lessons in respect, teamwork, and perseverance while creating safe spaces for confidence and life skills development.
Vantage Foundation, launched in 2023 at McLaren Technology Centre in the UK, has established partnerships across Indonesia, Nigeria, Malaysia, and Brazil. “It was truly inspiring to see how Laureus is changing lives through sport. This is work that strengthens individuals and builds more resilient societies,” said Steven Xie, Executive Director of Vantage Foundation.
📊 Research Shows Private Club Sports Participation Tripled Across Generations
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A comprehensive study of 3,938 adults published in the Journal of Sport and Social Issues reveals youth born in the 1990s were three times more likely to play club/travel sports than those born in the 1950s. Only 4% of 1950s-born adults played club sports compared to 13% of 1990s-born participants.
Parental education emerged as the strongest predictor, with college-educated parents’ children showing 16% participation rates versus 6% for non-college families. For families born in the 1950s, parental education made virtually no difference in sports participation rates, indicating a fundamental shift in access patterns.
The research, led by Chris Knoester of Ohio State University and Chris Bjork of Vassar College, used National Sports and Society Survey data tracking athletic experiences from ages 6-18. Youth sports costs jumped nearly 50% between 2019-2024, with parents now spending over $40 billion annually.
“The experience of playing sports is a lot different for kids growing up today compared to those growing up in previous generations, with the shift from school-based and community-based sports to private club sports,” said Knoester, the study’s lead author.
The findings reveal that talent alone no longer determines athletic success, as family income, education, and community sports culture now play decisive roles. “Opportunities are steadily declining for less educated families that don’t have the knowledge or the money to invest in their kids’ sports careers,” noted co-author Bjork.
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AMARILLO, Texas (KFDA) – A NFL Flag Football youth initiative is coming to Amarillo. This league catered toward youth is bringing new, non-contact sports for kids to get involved and learn the game of football in a different way while still having fun.
The Texas Panhandle is expanding the opportunity for youth to get more involved this summer through the NFL Flag Football program. This league gives boys and girls in Amarillo the chance to play with an NFL name.
Amarillo native, Tascosa High School alum and program owner and operator for this new initiative Mark Jackson explained why he wanted to bring this opportunity to Amarillo to give youth in the Panhandle the chance to be part of a growing sport and put an emphasis on the importance of inclusivity for the sport.
National reach and local opportunity
“When I had the opportunity to bring it up here because they’re playing all across the nation. Over 500,000 youth across the United States are playing right now. So I said, why not Amarillo? Why not, the kids up here have a chance to play like the kids across the United States and have a chance to, you know, maybe be national champions and go to the Pro Bowl and go to other countries and play,” Jackson said. “So, yeah, that’s why I did it.”
Jackson emphasized the NFL’s commitment to inclusivity.
“Well, that’s one of the NFL’s initiative is to have everybody included. Girls, boys, it doesn’t matter. They want everybody who wants to play to play. That’s what we’re gonna, in Amarillo, we’re gonna give. If you’re a girl, it don’t matter. If you think you can play football or you want to tell your dad or mom, look, I want to play, get out there,” he said.
Registration and schedule
Registration will open in January. Games will start at the end of June and beginning of July.
This league is for boys and girls and open to ages 13 through 17. There is still time to get involved as an athlete or a coach as well.
An official website for this initiative and where people can donate to help this grow will be announced at a later time.
BEREA – “Human Nature” couldn’t have been on louder display Sunday afternoon at Conkin Gym if the decades-old Michael Jackson song by that title had been blaring over the speakers.
One of the toughest challenges of coaching youth sports is keeping your troops focused when they’re beating the opponent like a drum. Matt Walls has seen it up-close two days in a row, and at least a half dozen times already this season with his Great Crossing girls’ basketball team.
“I don’t know if we just need to stay out on the court during halftime,” Walls wondered half-jokingly. “Do I walk out and try to keep them in there themselves to figure it out? Have I got to go in there and yell and stomp and act like a crazy man?”
It’s a happy problem, one Great Crossing will take into the championship round of the Berea Holiday Classic after a 54-19 pummeling of the host Pirates.
Monday’s title game against West Jessamine, a 67-36 winner over Lexington Catholic, tips off at 4:15 p.m. It’s a rematch of last year’s final in the Bryan Station Defender Classic, won by the Colts.
Great Crossing (8-3) held Berea (3-4) to one field goal in each of the first two periods and led by 30 at the end of the first half, in which sophomore Samantha Brown scored 22 of the Warhawks’ 41 points.
Brown buried five 3-pointers in the first half and hit her program record-tying sixth midway through the third quarter.
A couple of rim-outs and the one-sided nature of the contest stopped her there at 25. For now, she shares the single-game mark of six triples with Rachel Smith, who did it on three different occasions.
“She filled it up. I don’t know how many she ended up with. Especially how open she was, she’ll shoot it all night,” Walls said. “The way she shoots it, I’m sure she’ll have (the record by herself) at some point within the next few years. If she can start making six a game, that would be really nice.”
Brown, able to rise and fire almost every time without a Berea defender even in her shadow, scored 10 of the Warhawks’ first 12 points and had 16 at the end of the first quarter.
Kendall Kearney also delivered a deep three and a pull-up jumper in that stanza, while Emery Corrigan and Maya Custard each chipped in a transition basket.
Great Crossing led 17-0 with 3:40 still remaining in the period. It was 25-6 at the horn.
Corrigan and Brown christened the second quarter with 3-pointers from opposite corners, followed by another steal and layup from Corrigan.
“Our defense and our offense in the first half might have been one of the best halves we’ve played all year,” Walls said. “That’s what we talked about. Making that extra pass. Trying to get open looks. Just drive it and make them guard you, especially in the zone defense there. If we drive that gap and make them collapse down, we can get consistent looks that way.”
Threes by Natalya Nafee in the first quarter and Avery Plessinger in the second were the only first-half offense aside from free throws for the Pirates.
Berea finished with nine more turnovers (28) than field goal attempts (19) on the day, in part due to an 18-3 differential in fouls. The hosts missed 14 of their 23 attempts from the line.
GC found equally unkind rims after intermission, dipping from its break-even clip of 16-for-32 in the first half to 6-for-28 on the other side.
“It’s hard to have a killer instinct when you’re shooting 21 percent from the field,” Walls said. “Whatever we made in the first half, we missed in the second half.”
Maddie Napier’s basket capped the third quarter and pushed the lead past the running clock threshold at 50-14.
Great Crossing has held opponents to an average of 37.6 points per game in its eight wins. Only one of those victories was in any real second-half danger.
“I told them to get ready for the end of the year and just use it as a practice session,” Walls said. “Work on our stuff. Work on our execution. We’ve got to have that mindset about us at some point.”
Brown supplemented her perimeter prowess with six rebounds. Corrigan added 14 points, while Kearney stacked up seven points, five assists and four steals.
Custard, Corrigan, Brown and Claire Tierney joined Kearney with multiple takeaways.
GC seeks its first tournament title since the Bourbon County Classic in December 2021.
“It’s got to be a mentality,” Walls said. “You’ve got to learn how to do it. It doesn’t come naturally. Hopefully we can start learning tomorrow (Monday),”
West Jessamine has won five of six since losing both its games at the Billy Hicks Classic on Dec. 9 and 11.
“I know their really good girl (Claire Marshall) is hurt,” Walls said. “That’s a big loss for them. You’ve got to take what is given to you.”
Egyptian Swimming Federation Under Scrutiny After Swimmer’s Death
The Egyptian Swimming Federation is facing major changes in the wake the death of a swimmer at the national under-12 championships in December in Cairo.
According to Reuters, the federation has been forced to appoint an interim committee to run the organization after the head of the federation and its board were removed last week. The Egyptian Ministry of Youth and Sports has reached out to World Aquatics for interim guidance of the federation.
A swimmer named Youssef Mohamed Abdel Malek drowned during a meet on Dec. 2 at Cairo’s International Stadium swimming complex. Per reports from within the country, Malek’s body was not found until the start of the following race.
Yasser Idris, the head of the swimming federation and a member of the Egyptian Olympic Committee, has been ordered by public prosecutors to stand trial. Also referred for prosecution are the executive director of the swimming federation, its board, the director of the meet, its chief referee, other officials from the Al-Zohour Sporting Club and several lifeguards. All are accused of failure to do their duty in keeping Malek and other swimmers safe.
The Ministry of Youth Sports referred the matter to public prosecution following an investigation that included interviews with witnesses present and reviewing video footage of the incident.
In a statement, the swimming federation said it was halting all activities, “out of respect for public opinion and the family of Youssef Mohamed, pledging full compliance with court rulings and accountability for anyone found negligent.”
Teaching Generosity: How 4H youth turn the holiday season into a time of service
Published 1:09 am Monday, December 29, 2025
By Meghan Corvin / County Extension Coordinator
“I pledge my head to clearer thinking, my heart to greater loyalty, my hands to larger service, and my health to better living….” Every meeting for 4-H members across the country begins with these familiar words, helping them connect to the values that nurture their growth as young leaders. The phrase “my hands to larger service” goes beyond mere words; it acts as a call to action and a reminder that genuine leadership begins with generosity, compassion, and a readiness to serve others.
The holiday season provides a meaningful opportunity to teach young people the value of generosity. Across the country, 4-H highlights that generosity is a key component of positive youth development, alongside belonging, mastery, and independence. Each element is crucial in fostering confident and compassionate young people. The University of Georgia Extension has long emphasized that learning about generosity helps youth understand how to give back to their communities in meaningful ways, and that 4-H members are committed to improving their “club, community, country, and world.” Research from Tufts University reinforces this message, stating that 4-H youth are four times more likely to make positive contributions to their communities than their peers. During the holiday season, acts of giving, such as volunteering, making cards for seniors, or collecting winter clothing, highlight generosity and help young people develop empathy, leadership, and resilience by teaching them to look beyond themselves. These experiences strengthen communities while instilling confidence and responsibility in youth.
This season is an ideal time to promote generosity. Communities recognize more needs, families are more open to giving, and young people participate in acts of kindness. The holidays emphasize service naturally, and volunteering encourages youth to develop lifelong giving habits. When young people serve together with neighbors, local leaders, and peers, they form meaningful community bonds. These shared experiences foster a sense of belonging and purpose, helping youth see themselves as important members of their community.
Generosity in 4-H isn’t limited to the holidays. It’s a year-round practice that encourages youth to give their time, talents, and energy to meaningful causes. Still, the holiday season provides a unique opportunity to emphasize and celebrate this vital aspect of positive youth development and foster lifelong habits. Ultimately, teaching youth to give during the holidays is more than just a festive activity; it’s an investment in the future. When young people see that generosity can be shown through simple acts of kindness or larger service projects, they carry those lessons into adulthood. The season becomes not just a time of receiving, but a time of shaping caring leaders who will continue to serve and engage their communities.
Meghan Corvin is the County Extension Coordinator and 4-H Youth Development Agent for the University of Georgia Extension, Whitfield County. Contact her at 706.278.8207 or meghan.corvin@uga.edu.
AUSTINTOWN — James Stephen “Big Jim” Hanigosky, 67, departed this world on Monday, Dec. 22, 2025, at home after a courageous bout with cancer. Every step of the journey was taken with stoicism and a never-ending love and appreciation for life, nature, family, friends and faith.
Jim was born Oct. 6, 1958, to Anthony and Margaret Oleksa Hanigosky. He was a lifelong member of St. Mary Byzantine Catholic Church in Youngstown, where he was very active and giving of his time in the maintenance of church properties. Whether at church or with friends and family, Jim was known to put others’ needs first, selflessly offering his support or efforts in any way he could.
Jim worked for over 30 years at Northside Hospital in Youngstown in various capacities, where he was well-respected by his coworkers.
Jim was a dependable father, brother, uncle and friend, with a characteristic sense of humor and wit that brought laughter wherever he went. He approached life with creativity, ingenuity and humility, particularly in his love of woodworking and furniture restoration. He was passionate about sports, from rooting for his favorite Ohio State Buckeyes and Cleveland professional teams to playing and instilling a love of baseball in young people. In his youth, Jim excelled in baseball and basketball, and in his adulthood, he enjoyed playing and coaching baseball and softball leagues with friends.
To cherish his memory forever, Jim leaves his brother, John Hanigosky, and sister-in-law, Becky Hanigosky; his sister, Susan Hanigosky-Teter, and brother-in-law, Rick Teter; his daughter, Taylor Hanigosky; his “brother from another mother,” Willie Rosa, and his wife, Delia Rosa; his niece, Christine (Andrew) Kitchens; his nephew, John Hanigosky Jr.; and great-niece and nephews, Katie, James and Joshua; along with countless cousins, relatives and friends.
Jim was preceded in death by his parents.
Family and friends may gather to pay respects 10 to 11 a.m. Tuesday, Dec. 30, 2025, at St. Mary Byzantine Catholic Church, 356 S. Belle Vista Ave., Youngstown, where a funeral liturgy will take place at 11 a.m.
Interment will follow at St. Mary’s Parish Cemetery in Youngstown.
In lieu of flowers, Jim’s family suggests memorial contributions be made to St. Mary Byzantine Catholic Church.
Arrangements have been entrusted to Kinnick Funeral Home in Girard. Visit kinnickfuneralhome.com to send condolences to Jim’s family.
This photo shows a completed Montana Standard crossword sitting on a chair in Colleen Elliott’s home on Oct. 18 in Butte, Mont. Colleen Elliott via AP
The sun would rise over the Rockies in Butte, Mont., and Robin Gammons would run to the front porch to grab the morning paper before school.
She wanted the comics and her dad wanted sports, but the Montana Standard meant more than their daily race to grab “Calvin and Hobbes” or baseball scores. When one of the three kids made honor roll, won a basketball game or dressed a freshly slain bison for the History Club, appearing in the Standard’s pages made the achievement feel more real. Robin became an artist with a one-woman show at a downtown gallery and the front-page article went on the fridge, too. Five years later, the yellowing article is still there.
The Montana Standard slashed print circulation to three days a week two years ago, cutting back the expense of printing like 1,200 U.S. newspapers over the past two decades. About 3,500 papers closed over the same time. An average of two a week have shut this year.
That slow fade, it turns out, means more than changing news habits. It speaks directly to the newspaper’s presence in our lives — not just in terms of the information printed upon it, but in its identity as a physical object with many other uses.
“You can pass it on. You can keep it. And then, of course, there’s all the fun things,” says Diane DeBlois, one of the founders of the Ephemera Society of America, a group of scholars, researchers, dealers and collectors who focus on what they call “precious primary source information.”
“Newspapers wrapped fish. They washed windows. They appeared in outhouses,” she says. “And — free toilet paper.”
The downward lurch in the media business has changed American democracy over the last two decades — some think for better, many for worse. What’s indisputable: The gradual dwindling of the printed paper — the item that so many millions read to inform themselves and then repurposed into household workflows — has quietly altered the texture of daily life.
American democracy and pet cages
People used to catch up on the world, then save their precious memories, protect their floors and furniture, wrap gifts, line pet cages and light fires. In Butte, in San Antonio, Texas, in much of New Jersey and worldwide, lives without the printed paper are just a tiny bit different.
For newspaper publishers, the expense of printing is just too high in an industry that’s under strain in an online society. For ordinary people, the physical paper is joining the pay phone, the cassette tape, the answering machine, the bank check, the sound of the internal combustion engine and the ivory-white pair of women’s gloves as objects whose disappearance marks the passage of time.
“Very hard to see it while it’s happening, much easier to see things like that in even modest retrospect,” says Marilyn Nissenson, co-author of “Going Going Gone: Vanishing Americana.” “Young women were going to work and they wore them for a while and then one day they looked at them and thought, ‘This is ludicrous.’ That was a small but telling icon for a much larger social change.”
Nick Mathews thinks a lot about newspapers. Both of his parents worked at the Pekin (Illinois) Daily Times. He went on to become sports editor of the Houston Chronicle and, now, an assistant professor at the University of Missouri’s School of Journalism.
“I have fond memories of my parents using newspapers to wrap presents,” he says. “In my family, you always knew that the gift was from my parents because of what it was wrapped in.”
In Houston, he recently recalled, the Chronicle reliably sold out when the Astros, Rockets or Texas won a championship because so many people wanted the paper as a keepsake.
Four years ago, Mathews interviewed 19 people in Caroline County, Virginia, about the 2018 shuttering of the Caroline Progress, a 99-year-old weekly paper that was shuttered months before its 100th anniversary.
In “Print Imprint: The Connection Between the Physical Newspaper and the Self,” published in the Journal of Communication Inquiry, wistful Virginians remember their senior high school portrait and their daughter’s picture in a wedding dress appearing in the Progress. Plus, one told Mathews, “My fingers are too clean now. I feel sad without ink smudges.”
The many and varied uses
Flush with cash from Omahans who invested years ago with local boy Warren Buffett, Nebraska Wildlife Rehab is a well-equipped center for migratory waterfowl, wading birds, reptiles, foxes, bobcats, coyotes, mink and beaver.
“We get over 8,000 animals every year and we use that newspaper for almost all of those animals,” Executive Director Laura Stastny says.
Getting old newspapers has never been a problem in this neighborly Midwestern city. Yet Stastny frets about the electronic future.
“We do pretty well now,” she says. “If we lost that source and had to use something else or had to purchase something, that, with the available options that we have now, would cost us more than $10,000 a year easily.”
That would be nearly 1% of the budget, Stastny says, but “I’ve never been in a position to be without them, so I might be shocked with a higher dollar figure.”
Until 1974, the Omaha World-Herald printed a morning edition and two afternoon ones, including a late-afternoon Wall Street Edition with closing prices.
“Afternoon major league baseball was still standard then, so I got to gorge on both baseball and stock market facts,” an 85-year-old Buffett told the World-Herald in 2013, By then, he had become the world’s most famous investor and the paper’s owner.
The World-Herald ended its second afternoon edition in 2016 and Buffett left the newspaper business five years ago. Fewer than 60,000 households take the paper today, according to Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism, down from nearly more than 190,000 in 2005, or about one per household.
Time marches on
Few places symbolize the move from print to digital more than Akalla, a district of Stockholm where the ST01 data center sits at a site once occupied by the factory that prints Sweden main newspaper, Kaun says.
“They have less and less machines, and instead the building is taken over more and more by this colocation data center,” she says.
Data centers use huge amounts of energy, of course, and the environmental benefit of using less printing paper is also offset by the enormous popularity of online shopping.
“You will see a decline in printed papers, but there is a huge increase in packaging,” says Cecilia Alcoreza, manager, of forest sector transformation for the World Wildlife Fund.
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution announced in August that it would stop providing a print edition at year’s end and go completely digital, making Atlanta the largest U.S. metro area without a printed daily newspaper.
The habit of following the news — of being informed about the world — can’t be divorced from the existence of print, says Anne Kaun, professor of media and communication studies at Södertörn University in Stockholm.
Children who grew up in homes with printed newspapers and magazines randomly came across news and socialized into a news-reading habit, Kaun observed. With cellphones, that doesn’t happen.
“I do think it meaningfully changes how we relate to each other, how we relate to things like the news. It is reshaping attention spans and communications,” says Sarah Wasserman, a cultural critic and assistant dean at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire who specializes in changing forms of communication.
“These things will always continue to exist in certain spheres and certain pockets and certain class niches,” she says. “But I do think they’re fading.”
This photo shows the Montana Standard lying on Colleen Elliot’s doorstep on Oct. 18 in Butte, Mont. Colleen Elliott via AP
This photo shows a Montana Standard article about Colleen Elliot’s daughter, Robin Gammons, that was cut out of the paper and put on Elliott’s refrigerator, on Oct. 18 in Butte, Mont. Colleen Elliott via AP
This photo shows a Montana Standard article about Colleen Elliot’s daughter, Robin Gammons, that was cut out of the paper and put on Elliott’s refrigerator, on Oct. 18 in Butte, Mont. Colleen Elliott via AP