The sun would rise over the Rockies, 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