Paul Samyn Editor’s Note
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Here’s to your trust, our purpose and an informed, connected Manitoba

I didn’t go looking to upset Taylor Swift’s fans when I started penning my annual New Year’s Eve message to readers.

But I fear I might incur the wrath of the Swifties by not following the lead of Time magazine, which named the singer-songwriter as its choice for Person of the Year.

There’s no question the woman redefining the musical era with her Eras Tour had one heck of a year. However, if I’m to use Time’s yardstick of who most shaped our headlines over the past 12 months, my choice goes to faithful readers of the Free Press.

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Without our subscribers, the Free Press would be in danger of being, to use the title of one of Swift’s biggest hits, a blank space. And if you think I’m exaggerating, consider what has happened to journalism just in the past year.

Tracking from April Lindgren, the principal investigator for the Local News Research Project at Toronto Metropolitan University’s School of Journalism, shows between Jan. 1 and Dec. 1, 36 local news outlets closed in Canada. Twenty-nine were community newspapers and seven were privately owned radio stations.

Since 2008, 516 local radio, TV, print and online news operations have closed in 345 communities across Canada.

Things aren’t any better south of the border, where the decline has led to the rise of “ghost newspapers” that still technically exist but really don’t cover the communities they purport to serve.

As if things weren’t bad enough, this was also the year that Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta blocked Canadian news on Facebook and Instagram while artificial intelligence began infecting the reputation of trusted legacy titles such as Sports Illustrated.

Fortunately, the Free Press has readers like you willing to help pay the bills for a newsroom delivering the information you need and can trust.

As per Time’s criteria, its Person of the Year springs from the Great Man Theory of history, “a belief that individuals have the power to transform society.”

In our post-truth age, one in which news avoidance is on the rise, those willing to invest their dime and time to ensure their community is informed are a transformative force. You are part of a bulwark against the dystopian alternative Kevin D. Williams described so eloquently in a recent essay in the Wall Street Journal: “With the old media gatekeepers gone, right-wing content creators rushed in and filled the world with QAnon kookery on Facebook, conspiracy theories powerful enough to vault the cretinous likes of Marjorie Taylor Greene into Congress, fake news sponsored by Moscow and Beijing and fake-ish news subsidized by Viktor Orban and his happy junta, and whatever kind of poison butterfly Tucker Carlson is going to be when he emerges from the chrysalis of filth he’s built around himself. The prim consensus of 200 Northeastern newspaper editors has been replaced by the sardonic certitude of 100 million underemployed rage-monkeys and ignoramuses on Twitter.”

That’s not a future I want for our city and province, and thanks to you, the Free Press can be a place to find refuge from the underemployed rage monkeys and ignoramuses on Twitter.

As this year drew to a close, the World Health Organization warned of the growing threat of a global epidemic of loneliness. The WHO’s solution was to launch a new Commission on Social Connection.

While reading the Free Press is usually a solitary activity, it’s also one rooted in community. It allows you to draw connections, to better understand what is happening around you, how information can strengthen and empower you.

We don’t normally think of newspapers as part of our social infrastructure, but it’s not too late to start.

In a world of more isolation, more automatization, we need more connective tissue, more newspapers like the Free Press.

As I raise a toast to the new year, I will give thanks to Free Press readers like you who were our newsmakers in 2023. And I know I can count on you to help us build a stronger and more connected Manitoba in 2024.

Happy New Year!

 

Paul Samyn, Editor

 

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ONE GREAT PHOTO

Sisters Olivia (left) and Amelia Ross-Choken scream with laughter as they toboggan down the hill at Westview Park Wednesday. Dad, Joseph, watched from nearby, smiling as they whizzed down the slopes. (Ruth Bonneville / Winnipeg Free Press)

Sisters Olivia (left) and Amelia Ross-Choken scream with laughter as they toboggan down the hill at Westview Park Wednesday. Dad, Joseph, watched from nearby, smiling as they whizzed down the slopes. (Ruth Bonneville / Winnipeg Free Press)

 
 

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WELL-READ STORIES THIS YEAR

Katie May, Chris Kitching, Tyler Searle:

‘Our hearts are broken’

Fifteen dead, 10 injured after seniors bus collides with semi-trailer on Trans-Canada Read More

 

Chris Kitching:

Cuba vacation woes land in small claims court as more travellers seek compensation

Deanna Lang was hoping for at least a little bit of relaxation when she jetted to Cuba for a beach vacation with her mother and her five sons in April. Instead, the Winnipeg woman claims cockroache... Read More

 

Gabrielle Piché:

‘You’re buying a lifestyle’

Multimillion-dollar homes for sale a sign of Winnipeg’s changed real estate market Read More

 

Malak Abas:

New owners transforming dangerous hotel into Indigenous-focused wellness centre

A notorious inner-city hotel long plagued by violence is undergoing a transformation that will include a walk-in medical clinic and a drop-in centre for families in need. Three investors formally t... Read More

 

Joshua Frey-Sam:

Baby not on board: mom says golf course out of bounds for penalizing her, infant son

A Lorette woman is teed off after she was kicked off a city-area golf course Thursday for having a young spectator along for the ride in her cart. The observer was her seven-month-old son Madden, w... Read More

 
 
 

LEAN BACK: GREAT LONG READS

Winnipeg Free Press staff:

24 HOURS: DOWNTOWN

On the eve of summer solstice, the Free Press set out to document 24 hours of people, places and events in the city's core Read More

 

Chris Kitching, Danielle Da Silva and Carol Sanders:

Orange crush

NDP wave washes over province, premier-designate Kinew makes Canadian history Read More

 

Jen Zoratti:

A landing for the ages

The story of the Gimli Glider can’t be told without the perspective of the boys on the bikes, who had an up-close view of aviation history 40 years ago Read More

 

Ben Waldman:

The meteoric rise and tragic fall of the Toilers

A Canadian dynasty in the early days of the sport of basketball, Winnipeg’s hoop heroes’ dreams of international glory crashed down to Earth in a Kansas corn field nearly a century ago Read More

 

Alison Gillmor:

The power and glory in a new story

Rising again, Hudson’s Bay building is six storeys of potential in the hands of Southern Chiefs’ Organization Read More

 

Winnipeg Free Press:

Winnipeg, then and now

The Free Press is digging into the archives to see how neighbourhoods and streetscapes have evolved over the last 150 years. Read More

 

Gabrielle Piché:

Bus? Pass!

How can Transit become the main artery Winnipeg needs if only 12 per cent of residents use it. A new series starts by looking at that fear and reluctance Read More

 
 

WELL-READ OPINIONS THIS YEAR

Niigaan Sinclair:

Indigenous people’s relationship status with Buffy Sainte-Marie? It’s complicated

In 1971, on the first anniversary of Earth Day, the organization “Keep America Beautiful” ran an advertising campaign featuring an actor by the name of Iron Eyes Cody. More popularly known as the “... Read More

 

Dan Lett:

Wab’s (and Brian’s) way: how the NDP won the Manitoba election

The NDP’s historic Manitoba election win Tuesday night was forged by the hard lessons of a bitter byelection defeat nine months earlier. When Progressive Conservative premier Heather Stefanson call... Read More

 

Jen Zoratti:

We can have ‘Little America’ and still support local

According to a Seasons of Winnipeg retail leasing brochure making the rounds on social media, Winnipeg is getting a Krispy Kreme and an Arby’s along the Sterling Lyon strip — an area of the city I’ve long called ‘Little America.’ Read More

 

Mike McIntyre:

Hockey hall of fame, human hall of shame

Golden Jet put Winnipeg on global hockey map, but off-ice behaviour, world view shocked fans, destroyed legacy Read More

 

Tom Brodbeck:

Distressed MDs confirm diagnosis again and again: Manitoba’s health-care system in grave condition

I don’t recall the last time we’ve seen this many doctors in Manitoba speaking out against government’s handling of the health-care system. Normally, physicians — or any medical staff — are loath t... Read More

 

Rebecca Chambers:

Independent thought challenges the echo chamber

By sustaining a daily independent paper, Winnipeg declares our lives and stories worthy of broader conversation and validates the importance of this city and the people who live here. Read More

 

Charles Adler:

M is for misinformation

A video of a stunt performed by Canada’s opposition leader alongside his candidate in Durham, Ont. and a constituent they called Peggy is now polluting social media, contaminating Canada’s political environment with misinformation. Read More

 
 

GOOD NEWS THIS YEAR

Erik Pindera:

Winnipeg… where you can bite into one of the world’s ‘nine greatest sandwiches’

If you knew, you knew. But now, thanks to a recent article in the U.K.’s Guardian newspaper, everyone can savour one of the world’s “nine greatest sandwiches” prepared and sold by a Vietnamese deli... Read More

 

Gabrielle Piché:

A century of success

Broadway Florists, Cholakis family celebrating 100 years of passion for flowers Read More

 

David Sanderson:

True tastes of home

Displaced by the Russian invasion, newcomers are upping the local Ukrainian food game Read More

 

Jen Zoratti:

Tools of the trade

Local woodworker lends a hand to meet sex-ed demand Read More

 

Mike McIntyre:

Jays pitcher relaxes in Manitoba lake country

There’s no question that being a professional baseball pitcher can be stressful, especially when you are a late-inning, high-leverage reliever like Erik Swanson. So where the does the talented Toro... Read More

 
 

BEST OF 2023

Free Press staff:

We heard it

Free Press reviewers pick their favourite albums of 2023 Read More

 

Winning words

Fiction, non-fiction, poetry and more: Free Press book reviewers pick their top titles for 2023 Read More

 

Denise Duguay:

The power, the glory, the grief and the kitchen chaos

A look back at some of the best TV in 2023 Read More

 

Ben Waldman:

Take a bow

Some of the year’s best moments from local theatre productions Read More

 

Alan Small:

That Manitoba sound

Five songs by local music artists that could not be contained by our borders Read More

 
 

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