at://rude1.blacksky.team/app.bsky.feed.post/3mboqb3dhok2r

Back to Collection

Record JSON

{
  "$type": "app.bsky.feed.post",
  "createdAt": "2026-01-05T15:17:19.155Z",
  "embed": {
    "$type": "app.bsky.embed.images",
    "images": [
      {
        "alt": "In 2026, the people shaping the future of news won’t be in newsrooms. They won’t have titles, Slack channels, or even the faintest interest in CMS redesigns. Many won’t call what they do “journalism.” But they’ll be doing the work anyway — often more effectively than the institutions built for it.\n\nI spend a lot of time in Haitian and immigrant communities across the United States. In Brooklyn, Miami, Chicago, and the Midwest, I keep seeing the same thing: the people keeping their communities informed aren’t reporters. They’re the pastor who delivers immigration updates before the sermon. The barber who streams local politics on Facebook Live. The neighbor who translates every school notice and distributes it through five different group chats. The teacher who explains American bureaucracy to families who arrived last week. The WhatsApp moderator running a rumor-control operation that outperforms the mayor’s office.",
        "aspectRatio": {
          "height": 511,
          "width": 729
        },
        "image": {
          "$type": "blob",
          "ref": {
            "$link": "bafkreia33pjejofhas6zhrjcmj72acaddagqrurpibhehqkdvenry26utu"
          },
          "mimeType": "image/jpeg",
          "size": 544466
        }
      }
    ]
  },
  "langs": [
    "en"
  ],
  "text": "\u003e the people keeping their communities informed aren’t reporters.\n\u003e They’re the pastor who delivers immigration updates before the sermon. The barber who streams local politics on Facebook Live. \n\u003e The WhatsApp moderator running a rumor-control operation that outperforms the mayor’s office."
}