Texas Rural Report
In this episode of the Texas Rural Reporter, Suzanne Bellsnyder sits down with Roger Estlack, editor of the Clarendon Enterprise, to talk about what it takes to keep a rural newspaper—and a rural town—alive. Roger shares how local journalism runs in his blood, tracing his family’s newspaper roots back to 1929, and explains why rural newspapers still matter: they record local history, hold government accountable, and provide context and perspective in a world flooded with misinformation. He makes a clear case for how communities can support local papers: subscribe—but more importantly—advertise, because local business support keeps the newsroom running. The conversation also moves beyond the newsroom into Roger’s work in economic development, including projects like the Mulkey Theater restoration, downtown revitalization efforts, and quality-of-life investments that help small towns compete. Suzanne and Roger discuss rural policy frustrations with Austin, emphasizing that democracy works best closest to the people—what Suzanne calls “dirt democracy.” Finally, Roger weighs in on AI/data-center development in the region, arguing rural communities should negotiate smartly for benefits and protections while welcoming good-paying jobs that could bring young people home. He closes with a heartfelt picture of Clarendon—and why rural Texas is still “the real Texas.” Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2135895/support]
8 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Texas Rural Report!