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The Schneps Media local news playbook
Episode 19420th November 2025 • The Rebooting Show • Brian Morrissey
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The Schneps Media story is a blueprint for how local publishing can still work when it’s treated like a real business, not a civic charity. Josh Schneps explains how he and his mother built a diversified local empire by combining print, digital, and events into a single ecosystem that feeds itself. He talks about why print still drives more than half of their revenue, how they use events to build relationships and coverage, and why proximity—not scale—is the true advantage in local media. We also get into the economics behind their acquisitions, the logic of staying focused on New York, and how they’re adapting to AI and shifting audience habits without losing touch with their roots.

Transcripts

Brian:

Welcome to the Rebooting Show.

Brian:

I am Brian Morrissey.

Brian:

local news is the hardest of the hard, of all the problems, in building sustainable news businesses.

Brian:

And I think, you know, the narrative.

Brian:

We've got shrinking newsrooms, we've got news deserts, and of course there's our

Brian:

friends in private equity and hedge funds that are consolidating a lot of assets.

Brian:

but there are of course always exceptions and I think this is an area that is attracting.

Brian:

real media operators, that are gonna build real businesses.

Brian:

and it's probably an area that is due for growth.

Brian:

so I wanted to talk with Josh Schneps, because Schneps Media has been at this, for a long time.

Brian:

I mean, it began as a community newspaper in Queens, the borough of New York City.

Brian:

By Josh's mother.

Brian:

it grew out of actually her own sort of community activism.

Brian:

and it, it's, it's grown to become one of the largest local media companies in New York.

Brian:

It now spans, borough specific, community, news brands like QNS and Brooklyn Paper.

Brian:

And it's got Citywide reach through AM New York.

Brian:

It's got lots of niche verticals and, of course it has a, an events engine

Brian:

that Josh and I get to that, that.

Brian:

Runs a lot of events and that's what you gotta do.

Brian:

And of course, as we talk about, print still matters, you know, local.

Brian:

I feel like the, the death of print is exaggerated when it comes to local.

Brian:

'cause I regularly talk with entrepreneurs on this show who tell me that print is

Brian:

still the mainstay of their business.

Brian:

that is of course an opportunity and a risk, and we discuss that.

Brian:

And of course, You know, this is just one channel.

Brian:

Schneps does newsletters, as I said, they do events.

Brian:

they put a real premium on being physically present in their community.

Brian:

Josh describes their role as something of a. Chamber of Commerce on steroids.

Brian:

So we get into what the real local news playbook is.

Brian:

Why Hyperlocal, you know, only works when you're all in the economics of print in 2025.

Brian:

how trust is built through brand familiarity.

Brian:

why events are, the most durable revenue stream that's media has, and what changes and what

Brian:

doesn't, in a future, increasingly mediated.

Brian:

By ai.

Brian:

we also get into the limits of the newsletter, only approach to local, which we see out

Brian:

there a lot when nonprofit newsrooms tend to struggle when, business discipline

Brian:

is optional and how Josh thinks about, you know, playing the long-term game.

Brian:

in this business.

Brian:

'cause it is critical.

Brian:

So I hope you enjoy this conversation I really did with Josh.

Brian:

As always, would love to have your feedback.

Brian:

My email is brian@threebooting.com.

Brian:

and if you do like the show, please share it with someone and also leave a rating and review on

Brian:

Apple or Spotify or wherever you get the podcast.

Brian:

Now here's my conversation with Josh.

Brian:

All right, Josh, happy that you're doing this.

Josh:

Yeah, no, it's a pleasure to be here.

Josh:

I really appreciate the opportunity.

Josh:

Thank you so much.

Brian:

Okay, so for those who do not know Schneps Media, give me, give me

Brian:

the capsule, of the company and, and the local properties that you've run.

Josh:

Yeah, so Brian, you know it, it's really a great story.

Josh:

You know, my mom founded the business starting a newspaper out of our house.

Josh:

I was seven years old.

Josh:

My mom was a huge community activist.

Josh:

My oldest sister was born mentally handicapped at birth, and this was in the

Josh:

sixties, and it was my parents' first child.

Josh:

They didn't know what to do.

Josh:

They sent her to an institution, turned out to be terrible.

Josh:

Geraldo Rivera brought his cameras into the institution and showed the world what was

Josh:

going on when my mom was protesting outside.

Josh:

As soon as Geraldo put it on television, at that point, you know, in that point

Josh:

in time, if you put something on tv, most of the United States of America saw it.

Josh:

my father,

Brian:

you mentioning that Just because I brought up her Geraldo Rivera

Josh:

no.

Josh:

It was a huge coincidence.

Josh:

I thought maybe you saw the history of our company and that's why you said it.

Josh:

but you know, long story short, my father filed a class action lawsuit.

Josh:

Institutions became group homes and day programs.

Josh:

A lot of people, have been impacted by that across the country.

Josh:

'cause now there are day programs with people with autism or people with mental disabilities.

Josh:

But that stuck with my mom.

Josh:

She was a school teacher and she saw the power of the press and she literally

Josh:

decided to start a community newspaper in Little Neck, Whitestone, Queens.

Josh:

little by little, you know, she grew it.

Josh:

I, at a college as an investment banker, I never interned.

Josh:

When I started Investment Bank, I realized I hated it.

Josh:

and after just a little while, I went to go work for my mom.

Josh:

And, you know, it was a great opportunity because it was such a

Josh:

small business that I did everything.

Josh:

I did photography, I did writing, I did door to door sales and a suit and tie.

Josh:

My mom made me wear a suit and tie every day.

Josh:

and I got to really understand local journalism.

Josh:

I think one of the things that differentiates us from everybody, and I'll get to where

Josh:

we are today, but is that, my mom always treated the business as almost like I, I

Josh:

call us a chamber of commerce on steroids.

Josh:

Meaning that we have roots that go so deep into each of the communities that we serve

Josh:

because we attend everything and we host things.

Josh:

So we bring together people and we cover people.

Josh:

And I think that that's one of like the key powers of successful local media.

Josh:

And I think anybody that's successful local media is probably doing some shape or form of that.

Josh:

Solely over time, believe it or not, NewsCorp, my sister worked for News America Marketing, which

Josh:

was part of NewsCorp, and the New York Post said, we're gonna go around and buy every community

Josh:

newspaper that's family owned in New York City.

Josh:

So they told my mom they'd give her a one year contract and she told them to get lost.

Josh:

They ended up buying all the other family owned or the majority of the family owned media.

Josh:

A few years later, we ended up buying them all back and we owned a majority of.

Josh:

Local news, let's say in in New York City.

Josh:

And then we ended up buying AM New York from the owner of Newsday.

Josh:

And then we ended up buying its competitor Metro.

Josh:

They were side by side in the

Brian:

Oh, I remember.

Brian:

I mean, I was, you know, they were outside my stop on 96th Street in Broadway.

Brian:

you know, it was like dueling.

Josh:

yeah.

Josh:

And you know, that gave us actually more heft online.

Josh:

'cause it's really hard to gain a lot of traffic when you have these local websites.

Josh:

So we have q and s for Queens.

Josh:

We have Brooklyn Paper for Brooklyn.

Josh:

We have B BX Times for the Bronx.

Josh:

But am n y.com really gave us more heft in terms of just getting scale

Josh:

and traffic in, in our geographic area.

Josh:

and slowly but surely we just started making more acquisitions, digital and print largely.

Josh:

And then we started, My mom started doing events years ago, like 25 years ago, where she

Josh:

was like at an event they didn't honor women.

Josh:

She started Queens, top 10 women in business.

Josh:

and now we do about 50 of those events a year, almost every week.

Josh:

Like tonight, I'm honoring, labor leaders of, New York.

Josh:

We're constantly doing these kind of business to business and business to consumer facing events.

Josh:

We do everything from, like what I was saying, the labor leaders to food and

Josh:

wine events all summer in the Hamptons.

Josh:

So it's been a great extension of our business, the events, and certainly, you know, something

Josh:

that differentiates us from everyone around.

Josh:

But I think, you know, we really focused on being excellent in print.

Josh:

We still print over half a million newspapers a week.

Josh:

you know, excellent in, in digital and being, you know, digital first in our newsroom

Josh:

and, events, you know, really being the best at what we do with, with these events.

Brian:

See you have like, it's, it's like a hyper-local model in some ways.

Brian:

I mean, there's, there's am New York, which is, is, is the entire, city, but like

Brian:

you're in, you're in the neighborhoods.

Josh:

Yeah.

Josh:

Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, Manhattan, Staten Island, you know, each one has its own editor.

Josh:

Each one has its own reporters, and then they, you know, support each other.

Josh:

We have other niches, Caribbean, Americans, Spanish language, L-G-B-T-Q, family Media,

Josh:

which has been a great, you know, group for us.

Josh:

So, you know, having a diverse group of media in a, you know, geographic area has

Josh:

really, I think, been very successful for us.

Brian:

Okay, so let's get into the, the sort of playbook, right?

Brian:

Because the local is the hardest of the hard, right?

Brian:

And I think just the sheer, no, you are like laughing, like knowingly.

Josh:

Right.

Brian:

It, but like, you know, I mean that's like the, the, the sort of outside perception of it.

Brian:

Right.

Brian:

and there's a lot of talk of news deserts, et cetera.

Brian:

New York City is, is, is different in that it's, it's obviously it's

Brian:

incredibly dense and the, there's a lot of opportunities, within, within New York.

Brian:

but talk to me about like what the sort of playbook is because like while you have to get.

Brian:

Very local.

Brian:

Like, I love the idea of like, what I'm like thinking of proximity media, right?

Brian:

It's like you have a real proximity to your audience and usually that involves,

Brian:

you know, physical proximity, right?

Brian:

but ultimately I believe, like, you know, you are a, a sort of pragmatic mercenary, right?

Brian:

You wanna, you wanna make this a business.

Josh:

Well read.

Josh:

Well read.

Josh:

Yeah.

Josh:

I mean, listen, at the end of the day, everybody talks about local and it's being talked on a

Josh:

national scale, which is interesting, right?

Josh:

when I look at local, like you can't, I have not been able to.

Josh:

Figure out anything that I've seen that can work literally neighborhood by neighborhood.

Josh:

Is it important to have coverage that's local for sure, but I don't know that you can really

Josh:

have a business if you're, you know, too local and not have a lot more on top of that.

Josh:

Even if you have a bunch of them, it gets really hard.

Josh:

I mean, New York City, again, is very unique in that we have massive population, but it's also

Josh:

difficult because sometimes when you get into like urban areas, it, it gets harder for advertising.

Brian:

Yeah.

Josh:

people are paying huge rents.

Josh:

You know, they're paying rents.

Josh:

They, they're, they're in those neighborhoods 'cause they know they have visibility

Josh:

or foot traffic or, you know, any one of those other, you know, scenarios.

Brian:

Yeah.

Brian:

And your advertising base is local businesses for the most part.

Josh:

Local and regional.

Josh:

Yeah, I mean, healthcare is huge for us.

Josh:

that's probably our biggest category depending on where we are.

Josh:

We have a lot of media out in the Hamptons.

Josh:

We own Dan's papers out there, which is.

Josh:

Kind of an institution and we get a lot of real estate and home improvement.

Josh:

so that's another category.

Josh:

And then definitely, you know, banks, you know, everything from JP Morgan down to JP Morgan

Josh:

Chase, down to like your local community, bank.

Josh:

Those are probably the three biggest categories,

Brian:

Okay, and print is still, is still very much a profit driver.

Brian:

I'm, I'm

Josh:

Yeah, print is definitely a viable business.

Josh:

It has to be run really well.

Josh:

And I think when we had spoken earlier, I said, you really have to have a

Josh:

bunch of 'em for it to make sense.

Josh:

otherwise it just, the, the, the numbers don't work.

Josh:

But I, I'm a very big believer of multi-platform.

Josh:

I mean, I don't have to tell you, you, you do it yourself, but I think it can't be one thing.

Josh:

You can't just have a website and local, you can't just have a website.

Josh:

You can't just have a newspaper.

Josh:

You can't just host an event.

Josh:

You have to kind of put them all together.

Josh:

To be able to, I believe, have a viable business on a, on a, on a local media company.

Brian:

Yeah, I mean there's like a vogue in newsletters for, for

Brian:

for hyperlocal newsletters, you

Josh:

Yeah.

Josh:

I mean, listen, the way I look at it is I'm, I've built a media company, I believe,

Josh:

and I'm continuing to try to do that where it's, it, it, I have a defensive moat too.

Josh:

So if somebody wants to come in with an email newsletter in a market like mine,

Josh:

I don't know how they'll be successful.

Josh:

And if they are like, I need to like follow their playbook.

Josh:

'cause if you're able to come into my market with AI, one or two, or maybe even three

Josh:

people to develop an email newsletter, you shouldn't be able to be better than me.

Brian:

Yeah,

Josh:

Now, maybe there's other markets that are so deserted that they have nothing

Brian:

yeah, I mean, if

Josh:

in with an AI email or even one or two people.

Josh:

I mean, you know, there's a lot of people in communities that.

Josh:

You know, that, that have decent, you know, let's call it blogs or websites, so coming

Josh:

in even with an email newsletter in those markets, I, I don't know, I, I don't know

Josh:

how it sounds good because everybody wants to figure out local and how to scale it, but

Josh:

how viable that will be in called five years.

Josh:

We'll see.

Brian:

Yeah.

Brian:

And so sticking on print, like, tell me about its central role, right?

Brian:

Because print is, you know, I mean, most people think it's an anachronistic, right?

Brian:

And that, it has a, you know, basically it's going in one direction.

Brian:

It's not up for the

Josh:

Listen, it's not about readership.

Josh:

You know, a lot of people are like, oh, people still read papers, you know?

Josh:

We distribute 90,000 am New York's, when we come out, every day, right, 90,000

Josh:

copies, we have less than like 2% return.

Josh:

So people are willing to read a, a product, especially if it's quality.

Josh:

You know, it has strong graphics, it has great content, it has stories

Josh:

they can't necessarily get everywhere.

Josh:

I don't think that that's the issue.

Josh:

The issue, of course, is advertising where the advertisers are choosing.

Josh:

To put their ads.

Josh:

and, and some categories have completely gone away, but I think if you have really good

Josh:

penetration in communities, you put out a quality product, and you understand who your

Josh:

demographic is, you can still sell advertising.

Brian:

Yeah, but I mean, did the advertisers still want print?

Brian:

I mean, others, you wouldn't be doing

Josh:

think, I think certainly like those categories I told you about

Josh:

those top three, no question about it.

Josh:

I think when it gets into, you know, classified automotive, even restaurants now, right?

Josh:

Because they have to be on some of those delivery apps, even though they

Josh:

sometimes feel they're getting raped by the margins, they have to give up.

Josh:

But, you know, there are certain categories that I won't say completely have gone

Josh:

away, but will not be the future of print.

Josh:

But I think that there's plenty of others that, you know, if you can

Josh:

show them that they have enough reach.

Josh:

And that they're going to get responses.

Josh:

'cause you know, one thing about small business owners, they know when they get a

Josh:

response, you know, when you, when you're selling an ad to somebody who, and which

Josh:

is not always the case for us, thankfully we deal with larger regional businesses.

Josh:

But when you're dealing with a local business, like they know what works 'cause

Josh:

they're the ones that are like picking up the phone or you know, you know, executing

Josh:

the orders that are coming through their website or whatever else it might be.

Josh:

So I think as long as you can give people a product that's worth the investment.

Josh:

Give them enough reach that you can be successful.

Josh:

Because sometimes it's also not about mass reach, it's just about the quality of the audience.

Josh:

Like we have some media that just goes door to door to very specific communities, and we can

Josh:

get the same rate, for that as, you know, media that we have that has, you know, 20, 30,000, sir.

Brian:

Yeah.

Brian:

And so is events a are, are they like a big growth area that you're seeing?

Brian:

I mean, you do a lot of them.

Brian:

I mean, if you're doing hyperlocal, you're gonna be doing a lot of everything.

Brian:

And I remember when we were talking, when you were at the soccer game, like I, the sheer

Brian:

number, I was like, wow, this is stressful.

Josh:

Well, you know, we have different teams and we have a team that just does events,

Josh:

and I think one of our successes with events is, you make enough mistakes and you fix

Josh:

those mistakes, you start to get good at 'em.

Josh:

So we've been

Brian:

I used to say that, you know, the, the last, the last time I had a job at a

Brian:

company, you know, we did like a ton of events and I, I used to say to our team, like,

Brian:

that was our biggest competitive advantage.

Brian:

I said, everyone else, they're doing an event and they won't do another one for six months.

Brian:

We got one the next week.

Brian:

We can do, we can screw up way more than they can.

Josh:

Yeah.

Josh:

Yeah, I mean, listen also makes you really good because you improve, you

Josh:

know, each time that you're hosting these.

Josh:

but again, I think it's really a combination because I don't fool myself.

Josh:

I think that a lot of people love to participate in our events because they like

Josh:

the publicity they get from our other media.

Josh:

So, you know, I think it's all of it combined is my point.

Josh:

That really helps drive our business and I think that is like, the key to being, you know, a

Josh:

successful local media company from my experience.

Brian:

Right.

Brian:

so how do you end up thinking about, 'cause we talked about the origins, right?

Brian:

With your mom, like, and how do you think about balancing the civic impact,

Brian:

which is always sort of front and center?

Brian:

I feel like when we talk about local, with.

Brian:

The business, right?

Brian:

I mean like, you know, you have to build sustainable, profitable businesses

Brian:

and you know, sometimes I think people focus on the civic impact almost.

Brian:

Too much in some ways because you know, you've gotta be, that's why I sort of joked

Brian:

like, you gotta be a little bit, you know, ruthless, like we're in a capitalistic system.

Brian:

And I personally, I think that there is a role for non-profit models and being

Brian:

funded through philanthropy and whatnot.

Brian:

But I'm also a realist when it comes to America and how it operates.

Josh:

Sure.

Josh:

Well, listen, I think some of the downfalls of the nonprofit newsrooms that I've seen

Josh:

is that they're not run by business people.

Brian:

Yeah.

Josh:

I'm not saying that journalists shouldn't play a major role, especially in, you know, the

Josh:

coverage, but should they be running a business?

Josh:

If nonprofit is a nonprofit, it's still business.

Josh:

You know, you still have to cover your expenses.

Josh:

So I think that I've seen a lot of newsrooms that may not be run by business people to

Josh:

say, all right, how are we thinking about this From the revenue side, not just the

Josh:

journalistic, you know, impact that it's gonna have because you kind of need both to

Josh:

have a sustainable model, I think worth us.

Josh:

You know, we try to be, Covering as much as we can in the community.

Josh:

I think one of the things that we're definitely aware of is the, you know, the political divide.

Josh:

You know, the, you know, sometimes we do a story.

Josh:

It's like a no win situation.

Josh:

You are right.

Josh:

You know, one story, the Republicans aren't happy, right?

Josh:

Another story.

Josh:

The Democrats aren't happy.

Josh:

Readers aren't happy, you know, that's definitely something that you have to be aware of.

Josh:

And I think, you know, make sure that your coverage is balanced.

Josh:

or like you've seen a lot of media, which is not local.

Josh:

That just skew in one direction completely.

Josh:

so I think with local, like we want to be that balance where, you know, we're not looked at

Josh:

as, you know, serving one side or another.

Josh:

And I think that's just something to be aware of.

Josh:

And I also think, you know, as a local media company, we have to cover the businesses.

Josh:

You kind of talked about like, you know, being a business because, you know,

Josh:

business, small business particularly I think in America, has great stories.

Josh:

They're not really covered, like we're probably the ones covering them.

Josh:

Unless something really bad happens or something really amazing happens,

Josh:

maybe other media will pick up on it.

Josh:

So I think we do have to play a part in covering businesses, both for our readership and as

Josh:

well as just, you know, positive outcome on the business side, developing relationships.

Brian:

Yeah.

Brian:

And I also think when it comes to the civic impact, it's, it's balancing the, the coin of

Brian:

impact work, which is, is, is usually about the government and how the government is operating.

Brian:

And that's very important.

Brian:

and then with, you know, the other stuff, what to do this weekend, food.

Brian:

You know, like

Josh:

I mean,

Brian:

in life.

Josh:

it's, it's scary.

Josh:

It's like every media, you know, something like, you know, someone runs down Main Street,

Josh:

naked, you know, will get much more traffic than covering a community board meeting.

Josh:

So sometimes it's the sad reality of the world in which we live in.

Josh:

and I think you have to find that balance and have editors that really understand

Josh:

it and understand like, Hey, how do we create something that's really high

Josh:

quality, respected, and, and, and balanced.

Josh:

So I think there's always like judgment, you know, in there in terms of how much

Josh:

you're gonna do one thing versus another.

Josh:

But I think one of the things we're trying to become is much more sophisticated in terms of

Josh:

not just what's gonna drive a ton of traffic.

Josh:

'cause we're not never gonna be that mass traffic audience.

Josh:

What I think we're trying to become more sophisticated at, which I assume most media

Josh:

companies would want, is how do we find out what our most loyal readers are interested in?

Brian:

Yeah.

Josh:

I think that at the end of the day that's really gonna be the future for us is how do we

Josh:

put our arms around our most loyal audience, not just, you know, trying to get as many

Josh:

people as possible to, to read us in our market.

Brian:

Yeah.

Brian:

And that seems like, I mean, that's to me like the overall direction for pretty much all

Brian:

media businesses, you know, the, the audience, you know, just having traffic models that,

Brian:

that, first of all, it doesn't work, anymore.

Brian:

And, and now everything is about how do you dev, develop, how do you develop

Brian:

a, a deep tie with specific audiences?

Brian:

And I think that in that way.

Brian:

Local should be, fairly well positioned.

Brian:

I think the, the flip ha, the flip side of that is developing, you know, trust, and,

Brian:

you know, trust is talked about a lot.

Brian:

I think there's just more, you know, every, every single study that sort of

Brian:

comes out, like, you know, axials will write about, it's like consumer trust.

Brian:

The media is that are the lowest it's been since the last, like, the last study on this.

Brian:

And, how do you end up.

Brian:

Thinking about that, like on the local level?

Josh:

Well, I think one of the things that we have, which is an

Josh:

advantage to print are, are brands.

Josh:

Brands that people kind of have recognized over the years that have

Josh:

been around for a really long time.

Josh:

And I think there's something to that if you can evolve them properly.

Josh:

You know, if people all of a sudden, you know, realize that hey, that, you know, newspaper,

Josh:

we own like the Ridgewood Times in Queens, that goes back to like, you know, 105 years,

Josh:

but all of a sudden they're like, wait a minute, they're really good at like Instagram.

Josh:

You know, to make sure that we're relevant, I think is critically important to

Josh:

maintaining that kind of brand loyalty.

Josh:

you know, especially as we try to like, you know, skew a little bit younger, I don't think we're

Josh:

ever gonna be, you know, getting a lot of 20 somethings interested in like, hyperlocal news.

Josh:

But I do think, we have to be aware of like the, you know, the next generation of reader and how

Josh:

they're gonna consume us and making sure that, you know, we are, more relevant than maybe, you

Josh:

know, an upstart that, that runs a social channel or that, starts just covering the community.

Brian:

So how do you think about that demographic challenge?

Brian:

Because I mean, that's one that like sort of all local has to deal with and, and I, I just think

Brian:

every business has to operate the current business while thinking about like, and, and working

Brian:

towards rebuilding the sort of next business.

Brian:

Right.

Brian:

And I, I assume that your.

Brian:

You're, I don't know what is the sort of subscriber demographic?

Brian:

I wanna assume

Josh:

Well listen, you know, I mean on the print side, we know we skew older there.

Josh:

There's no question about it.

Josh:

We kind of embrace it.

Josh:

I think that's why, you know, I

Brian:

how older though.

Brian:

I mean like the ultimate involuntary churn or

Josh:

You know, it really, it depends.

Josh:

I mean, listen, when it gets really local, I mean, one of the things that you know you can do is make

Josh:

sure that you put kids' pictures in the paper.

Josh:

Like we own some, you know, neighborhoods in Nassau County, you call it the Gold

Josh:

Coast 'cause it's so wealthy there.

Josh:

but we own newspapers that are literally neighborhood by neighborhood.

Josh:

Great Neck, m Hasset Roslyn, except Port Washington.

Josh:

And those neighborhoods like.

Josh:

We, we definitely get involved in local sports and making sure that we put, you know,

Josh:

those kids that if they score a touchdown, like they're like the front cover, so

Josh:

that's the way to get like a younger parents definitely reading some of the print product.

Josh:

But I think the other part is just being very relevant digitally.

Josh:

You know, making sure that, you know, we have a product that's better than anyone else's

Josh:

when it comes to local news in those areas.

Josh:

And that's why, you know, New York City, again, it's very unique.

Josh:

We have both a citywide website and then like borough specific websites and all of

Josh:

those have content that's being published, you know, throughout the day, every day.

Josh:

And I think that that is where we're capturing definitely a younger audience where to go, what

Josh:

to do things that are, appealing to people.

Josh:

And then, you know, we're very big into email newsletters.

Josh:

Of course, you know, all of our content we have about.

Josh:

I think we have over 600,000 now, emails that go out every day to all

Josh:

different segments of our audience.

Josh:

and then, you know, social is definitely a big part of how people are consuming news.

Josh:

Even though most people don't read anything, they just look at the headline.

Josh:

'cause you could just look at the comments and realize, like, you didn't,

Josh:

you did not click on that story.

Josh:

You simply saw the picture in the headline.

Josh:

But I think it's becoming, you know, very relevant.

Josh:

You know, I mean, listen, I think a lot of publishers still get like, you know,

Josh:

Worried about what happened with Facebook.

Josh:

Could it happen with Instagram?

Josh:

Maybe Instagram and TikTok both competing, has created this new environment, that

Josh:

just has been, you know, maintaining and growing reach for a lot of people.

Brian:

Yeah, the short, the, the, the, the shift to short video is something that, you

Brian:

know, I've certainly been tracking and I think it's filtering down to how particularly younger

Brian:

demographics, you know, get their information.

Brian:

They're, you know, you see the studies and are getting more information from

Brian:

Instagram and TikTok than, than ever before.

Brian:

And I know, you know, I avoid TikTok just 'cause I don't need, I don't need another

Josh:

To go down that rabbit hole.

Brian:

No, I just don't, I know myself, I know my weaknesses.

Brian:

but you know, even with Instagram, which I try to avoid as much as possible, you

Brian:

know, there's a lot, particularly on the local level like that I get served.

Brian:

and a lot of times, you know, they're, they're kind of new style aggregation,

Brian:

you know, to me, other people are doing the reporting, but I do think that there

Brian:

is probably some kind of user behavior that is shifting there, and I think, look.

Brian:

I don't think words as as, as a word sell myself.

Brian:

Like I don't think words are necessarily going away, but at the same time, it's pretty

Brian:

clear when you look at where a lot of these AI companies are going, that the interface

Brian:

is gonna shift increasingly to video.

Brian:

As video becomes more easier.

Brian:

Like you know it, they made it so easy to produce, like text content.

Brian:

It's gonna be the same with video.

Brian:

They're gonna

Josh:

A hundred percent.

Josh:

Yeah, no, that evolution's gonna happen really quick, and I think that's why I look at local,

Josh:

probably the same way as any mass media is.

Josh:

We need to like, be really thoughtful in terms of developing that connection with our loyal readers.

Brian:

Yeah.

Brian:

So how do you break down, revenue?

Brian:

Is it like print, digital event?

Josh:

it actually more or less is Yeah, that, that's about right.

Josh:

you know, revenue, we're still over 50% of our revenue is from print.

Josh:

and then I would say it's, it's not even, but digital events are pretty close.

Josh:

In terms of making up the, the rest of it, you know, we have a lot of print products

Josh:

though, you know, I mean, a few dozen.

Josh:

but it still is a viable model.

Josh:

You know, I'll say that to people, you know, it just has to be run very

Josh:

efficiently it's something that's not easy.

Josh:

But I will tell you that I think digital on a local level is gonna get

Josh:

exponentially harder to, to monetize.

Josh:

Because of all this, everything that you're talking about with ai, you know, at the end

Josh:

of the day, like are people buying banner and tile ads, like on a local news site?

Josh:

And even if they are, is that gonna pay for a journalist salary?

Josh:

So, okay, you can't do that.

Josh:

I mean, sponsor content is definitely something that people are interested in.

Josh:

They want a safe haven for their, you know, stories and they want them

Josh:

in, you know, a relevant market.

Josh:

So definitely that's.

Josh:

A, a good part of our business, no question about it, but you know, I mean, how much can you do?

Josh:

So then you start to ask yourself.

Josh:

Obviously there's email, but that's why when we look at our, you know, the cycles that all

Josh:

this media goes through, having the balance of still having print there is important.

Josh:

And I think just today, I, I picked up a copy, you know, some digital media

Josh:

companies are coming out with magazines.

Josh:

So maybe they have different reasons for doing it.

Josh:

Maybe it's a, a revenue, maybe it's just publicity.

Josh:

Maybe it's a little bit of both, but I think listen, if you do it well, people will pick it up

Josh:

and read it, especially if you don't charge them.

Josh:

The majority of our media outlets, are free.

Josh:

So we have exclusive distribution in the New York City subway stations with AM New York,

Josh:

and then we distribute like thousands of locations locally for these local media outlets.

Josh:

So we don't charge people.

Josh:

So I think, you know, the access that people can have to them pick it up is,

Josh:

is something that I think is important.

Josh:

And then, you know, one of the things I'll tell you is like Dan's papers out

Josh:

in the Hamptons, like that print is not going away like during the summer months.

Josh:

Like we have like 400 page issues filled with ads.

Josh:

So, you know, I think people will look for a reason to disconnect.

Josh:

I'm not saying that this is like everyday habit, but I

Brian:

well, the Hamptons is a little, the, the Hamptons is a little bit of a unique,

Josh:

It's, it's an

Brian:

uh, local quote unquote local market.

Brian:

I

Josh:

definitely amazing.

Josh:

But I think people have realized that, listen, you can have a, a, a quality, financially stable

Josh:

print product if you think about it the right way.

Josh:

You know, like we have dailies and weeklies and monthlies and quarterlies, but some

Josh:

people, you know, have built models that it just, you know, on special events or

Josh:

around, you know, marketing packages.

Josh:

I think if it's done well, people are still very much interested in it.

Brian:

like near me Ball Harbor in, in, I guess part of Miami Beach, but like

Brian:

they have a population of like 3000.

Brian:

They have, they have a big, they have a glossy magazine, right?

Brian:

Because the big luxury mall there, is, is or the big, there's a big luxury mall that's there.

Brian:

And so they create an entire ball, Harbor magazine.

Brian:

so there, there's, there's definitely gonna be opportunities there.

Brian:

Tell me about running it, right?

Brian:

You've mentioned that a few times, g get me into the details about how you end up getting.

Brian:

print to work because it's more expensive for a bunch of different reasons to print.

Brian:

I mean, there's simply, there are fewer places that literally can do it.

Brian:

Like, I mean, we've almost, we've almost lost, we talk a lot about like losing a

Brian:

lot of expertise in America right now.

Brian:

Like I feel like we're losing a lot of print expertise.

Josh:

Yeah, I mean, listen, the majority of daily newspapers are owned by like a couple of companies

Josh:

and you know, they, they're certainly looking at their bottom lines and they've merged printing

Josh:

plants and closed plants, across the country.

Josh:

So there's very few options actually for us to print.

Josh:

I went to go look maybe in the past of like changing printers.

Josh:

Like yeah, we could print you like you.

Josh:

You'd have to get us the, the daily paper like two days before, you know, I'm

Josh:

like, I don't think that's gonna work,

Brian:

Yeah, there's the new part of news that's

Josh:

but yeah, listen, print definitely has its challenges.

Josh:

There's no doubt about it.

Josh:

I think, listen, from my perspective, local has to be very hands-on.

Josh:

I mean, I'm, maybe there's people that have figured out like a local model.

Josh:

And when I say local, I'm talking about like my local, I'm not talking about like regional,

Josh:

media outlets, like really like local.

Josh:

I don't know how you can run them from afar or.

Josh:

Do them really well, you know, in an automated fashion.

Josh:

I, I really think it's like, like we're very involved, like with all the chambers

Josh:

of commerce's, you know, covering their events, going to business openings.

Josh:

You know, it's, it's very much having a team that's, engaged in the community, both from

Josh:

a journalistic point of view to get stories and, and just from an advertising perspective.

Brian:

Yeah.

Brian:

what do, what are your thoughts on, on ai, right?

Brian:

Like, there are, there are people who are trying to.

Brian:

We're trying to use ai.

Brian:

Do, do you know this like Good Daily Network?

Brian:

They have like 350, AI generated local newsletters.

Brian:

6:00 AM City recently purchased them.

Josh:

Listen, I think it's great that people are trying different models.

Josh:

I think AI is gonna change, you know, things exponentially very fast.

Josh:

and I, I think it's great that people are trying things.

Josh:

I just, again, I don't know if doing one, you know, thing per market is gonna work.

Josh:

I, I'm, I'm certainly gonna watch and see what comes of it, but again, I want to be able

Josh:

to, you know, stay true to what I'm doing.

Josh:

Say to myself that if somebody comes into my market that, they're not gonna

Josh:

be successful over me by doing something that's, you know, quote unquote automated.

Josh:

so I think we just have to stay true and really focus, I think all the media companies on

Josh:

like, what can you do better than anybody else?

Josh:

And how do you do that no matter, you know, the technology.

Josh:

So, you know, we are trying to invest in making sure that we continually connect

Josh:

with our readers across all those platforms.

Josh:

And I think that that's.

Josh:

For us, the differentiator.

Brian:

Yeah, so I, I had, I'd just given some presentation last week on, on like

Brian:

things that the Jeff Bezos thing about like, rather than focus on what's gonna change,

Brian:

focus on things that won't change Right.

Brian:

In five years.

Brian:

'cause it's so much uncertainty.

Brian:

Right.

Brian:

I mean is one of like, what are your bets on things that won't change like in five years?

Josh:

Oof.

Josh:

I mean, I love the face-to-face events.

Josh:

I don't think that that will change.

Josh:

I think, you know, people are hungry for information, you know, and there always will be.

Josh:

And I think they always wanna meet new people.

Josh:

So, I mean, the event business I think, again, will always be a very integral

Josh:

part of our media company because again, I look at it as it feeds both ways.

Josh:

That certainly is not gonna go away.

Josh:

can I say for sure that, you know, print and websites and even email

Josh:

isn't gonna change dramatically?

Josh:

Sure.

Josh:

It will.

Josh:

It will, I think that, you know, for, for, for a lot of our stuff, listen, I worried

Josh:

for, I, I've been working with my mom now in this business for 24 years and I think I've

Josh:

worried about print going away for 24 years.

Josh:

So, you know, so I do think that there is a future.

Josh:

'cause now I'm looking backwards, right?

Josh:

And I'm saying to myself, listen, yes, things have changed.

Josh:

Yes, it's not gonna be what it was.

Josh:

But can it play a part in differentiating yourself and, and creating.

Josh:

What is a very strong ecosystem in my market.

Josh:

Yeah, I think so.

Josh:

I think it's around for quite some time.

Brian:

Yeah, and I, I, I don't know, I, I think print will will be around, in

Brian:

five years it'll be different, I'm sure.

Brian:

But, I think, you know, ultimately, like people are going to look for a

Brian:

counterpoint to, to all this AI mediated, you know, content that's all video.

Brian:

And, and I'm still, I'm still a believer that words

Josh:

Listen, there'll still be billboards.

Josh:

I bet.

Josh:

So, you know, I mean, if there can be, you know, if, if you can be some form of a way to get in

Josh:

front of a lot of people or, you know, I mean, we do stuff that's creative too, like Gorilla

Josh:

Marketing combined with handing out the paper.

Josh:

People wrap the paper, they set up like a, you know, a news stand and you know, so there's like

Josh:

creative ways that you can incorporate print into, you know, a gorilla campaign in a way that.

Josh:

You know your market really well and can support brands with too.

Josh:

So I think, you know, the creativity is gonna be very important.

Josh:

I think today, even with print, you know, what, what are you putting in it?

Josh:

What's on the front cover?

Josh:

How are you distributing it?

Josh:

How can you, you know, distribute it?

Josh:

how do you come up with a package that's also digital?

Josh:

So, I think, you know, it, it's, it's like everything else.

Josh:

I think you have to figure out what's gonna work for clients.

Brian:

So Schneps had been in Philadelphia, as someone from the area, I, I took note of that.

Brian:

but then you sold those and you decided to focus on New York.

Brian:

Talk about that.

Josh:

Yeah.

Josh:

So, I had mentioned to you that when we bought AM New York, we also bought Metro.

Josh:

So the owner of Metro came to us when we bought AM New York, and they're

Josh:

like, we're either buying you or you're buying us, but we don't wanna compete.

Josh:

So we ended up buying them and it also included Philadelphia.

Josh:

So we merged New York City into one newspaper, but we also own Philadelphia.

Josh:

and I bought it like right before the pandemic started.

Josh:

and we had looked at a lot of different ways of how do we grow that business.

Josh:

And again, like that kind of mentality that I have of having a cluster of media outlets across print,

Josh:

digital and events, I think was really important.

Josh:

And I kind of made the decision.

Josh:

In Philadelphia, either I have to scale and get, you know, more reach.

Josh:

And that would really only be done, I think through acquisitions.

Josh:

I think it's really hard to start something from scratch, even digitally.

Josh:

and I was approached at one point by someone to, to, to sell the company, to buy the company.

Josh:

And, that fell through.

Josh:

So when that fell through, I kind of like opened my mind to like selling it.

Josh:

I said to myself, I think it's the right thing if I could find somebody

Josh:

who has media already in that market.

Josh:

And that's what happened.

Josh:

And I think for me it was also like, you know, there's gonna be a lot of change happening and I

Josh:

feel like New York City's, you know, long Island's greatest market in the US as far as I'm concerned.

Josh:

Sorry if anybody else feels differently.

Josh:

But, it is very unique and definitely the biggest.

Josh:

Right?

Josh:

So I think there's a lot more that we need, we can do and have to focus on over these

Josh:

next, you know, call couple years even.

Josh:

As AI, I think is gonna be having a huge impact on our, our business.

Brian:

Okay,

Josh:

I think, I think the point is, is that a, you have to diversify.

Josh:

I realize that I couldn't do that without really investing a lot of time and energy in that.

Josh:

And that would probably take away from New York.

Josh:

And I think, you know, being focused and having that focus on, on my business

Josh:

here, I think is, is the main point of it.

Brian:

Yeah.

Brian:

What do, what do you make of models like what Axios is doing on the local level?

Brian:

It's, it's very different, you know, I mean, you're talking about, you know,

Brian:

getting, you know, dirt under the, under the nails of being like completely in

Brian:

it, like on a very hyper-local level.

Brian:

You

Josh:

Listen,

Josh:

I,

Brian:

play is more.

Brian:

Okay, we're gonna take our national brand relationships.

Brian:

Yes.

Brian:

They have, you know, bank of America or whatnot, and they're gonna say,

Brian:

Hey, we can also add a local component.

Josh:

So what I'll say is I love when anybody invests in local.

Josh:

I think that's always a positive.

Josh:

You can't, you know, there's no reason to hate on that.

Josh:

I will tell you that I watched it because it started in Philadelphia, while I own the business

Josh:

in Philadelphia, and it was a good email.

Josh:

But I'm saying to myself, can you build a business on that email?

Josh:

It's a bunch of aggregation.

Josh:

Three stories, the way they do their, you know, short bullet, you know, probably original.

Josh:

And then it was like, you know, like Bank of brought to you by Bank of America.

Josh:

I'm like, well, somebody at Axios obviously has those relationships because if they really

Josh:

wanted to pay attention to Philadelphia, why wouldn't they advertise with us?

Josh:

But we had probably had three times as many, four times as many email

Josh:

subscribers, plus print, plus other things.

Josh:

So I just, I don't know how viable the email newsletter model will be financially.

Josh:

If you look under the hood and say, are these financially profitable businesses?

Josh:

I don't know the answer.

Josh:

And if they are, that's great, but I think that they're gonna have to evolve

Josh:

in order to be truly like relevant or a real business that they can build.

Brian:

And, and that's because you have to do much more than ads in the, in these kinds of.

Brian:

Businesses, I mean, most media businesses I feel like these days.

Brian:

But I mean, there was like a moment, particularly with email newsletters and you know, I don't know.

Brian:

I, I talk with, with Ryan Hefe regularly from, from 6:00 AM and he's, he's pretty

Brian:

hardnosed about like how he runs businesses.

Brian:

he is been, he's been on this podcast before.

Josh:

I think, you know, they're also probably in the weeds a lot more than a corporation would be.

Josh:

I assume they're, you know, very much entrepreneurs, like really in there paying

Josh:

attention to small details, you know, trying to improve, you know, relationships in the city.

Josh:

I know they've worked with some cities from what I've read, so, you know, I

Josh:

think they're being very creative and, and trying to figure out how to really get.

Josh:

Grassroots.

Josh:

I mean, one of the things I'd be very curious with Axios, I know they started

Josh:

by acquiring, I think maybe Charlotte,

Brian:

Yeah.

Josh:

what I'd be curious is how did it do before when somebody was like all in and how's

Josh:

it doing now under Axios from both a readership and and revenue perspective, I'd be curious

Josh:

that to know, because all of a sudden you took something that was run by, if I'm not

Josh:

mistaken, an individual that was really involved and engaged in that community and now it's

Brian:

Ted Williams, who got name checked on a, on a, on a previous podcast on this,

Josh:

I like that name Ted Williams Triple Crown winner.

Josh:

Um, but I, I, you know, I'd be curious.

Josh:

That would be interesting to, to to see.

Josh:

I don't know if they'll tell you, but I mean, you know

Brian:

Well, yeah, I mean, on an individual market, I mean, you know

Brian:

that they, they use that to then scale

Josh:

yeah, but I guess my other question would be, have they been able to get any other market?

Josh:

'cause they're in a lot.

Josh:

Has come anywhere close to what that was at its peak from readership and revenue.

Josh:

That would be interesting to know.

Josh:

'cause if they were that, that would be, you know, terrific.

Josh:

But I don't know if that's possible and that that really took one person.

Josh:

I bet you putting a lot of blood, sweat, and tears into it.

Brian:

So if, if you were to like wrap it up in the, the, the, the sort of

Brian:

Schneps, like local media playbook, like the five points, give it to me.

Josh:

think it's being.

Josh:

Involved in the communities that you're serving if you really are local.

Josh:

I think it's being a diversified media company and I think it's, doing each one of

Josh:

those better than anyone else in your market.

Josh:

I think that's really, you know, my key focus.

Brian:

Okay.

Brian:

That's three.

Brian:

That's good.

Brian:

I like that you boil it down to three, you know, the rule of three.

Josh:

Listen, I, if I keep talking, I'm gonna shoot myself in the foot probably.

Josh:

But no, I mean, I think, I don't think it's anything, you know, there's no rocket

Josh:

science on Brian in a lot of this, you know, I mean, I think you have to be a

Brian:

this is an execution business.

Brian:

You

Brian:

know, people like me try to make it

Josh:

listen, we acquired a lot of newspapers, that have become very

Josh:

successful businesses, of ours.

Josh:

And I think a big part of it is also is, you know, people have to be willing

Josh:

to reinvest in their businesses.

Josh:

I think that that's probably been the downfall of big media companies and small media companies.

Josh:

Either they suck cash out, they had to pay down a ton of debt, and they just, or

Josh:

they didn't have the leadership to say, let's take that and reinvest in the future.

Josh:

So I think it's always kind of like, I would say like we're able to do a lot of r and d

Josh:

research and development just by doing so.

Josh:

I think, you know, that's how, like I would say on the local level is like you just have

Josh:

to try new things before other people and try to do 'em really well and see if it sticks.

Brian:

Yeah.

Brian:

And so are your plans just to get back to the expansion, to stay focused on New York or just

Brian:

like expand incrementally around the New York?

Brian:

I mean, obviously the New York.

Brian:

Area.

Brian:

I mean, you can, you could, you could eventually go back, reach to Philadelphia, really?

Brian:

I mean, you could go both north and south and, and, and take up, a, a

Brian:

large, geography and, and popula.

Josh:

We did take our Dan's papers.

Josh:

You know the one I was telling you about that serves the Hamptons.

Josh:

We did start a Dan's papers for Palm Beach, Florida,

Brian:

Okay.

Josh:

uh, three years ago, and that's been good for us.

Josh:

'cause what we realized is we owned a very cyclical business in the Hamptons, the

Josh:

summertime's, obviously when we crushed it.

Josh:

The winter time was slow.

Josh:

and we realized that the top 1% of the 1%, you know, were down in Palm Beach, you know,

Josh:

you know, you're at the top 1% of the 1% when you have to stop your car and yourself.

Josh:

Is that a house or is that a museum?

Josh:

And I had to Google, by the way, and it was a house.

Josh:

but we've been very successful in that market.

Josh:

It's just a monthly, it's just during the winter.

Josh:

but it, that, that showed promise to me in terms of, you know.

Josh:

Those wealthy, you know, call it markets.

Josh:

And I think Florida obviously has a lot of connections to New York.

Brian:

Yeah, totally.

Brian:

do you know, like modern luxury?

Brian:

Like they just like focus on the, i i, I have to get them on this podcast.

Brian:

They just, they just focus on, on the, the richest areas and

Josh:

Well, listen, they're a good example of how print can survive and thrive.

Josh:

Sure.

Josh:

And you know, they, they, they do a lot of other things, but yes, they're, they're in

Josh:

almost every major, you know, metro market.

Josh:

That has money

Brian:

Yeah, I mean that's, it's a good lens.

Brian:

you know, you gotta balance it with the sort of, you know, the civic impact, versus

Brian:

the, the, the business opportunities.

Brian:

you know, rich areas are always gonna be far better served with media,

Brian:

with everything, than less rich.

Brian:

That's just

Josh:

Well, listen, sometimes you have those kind of media outlets where you

Josh:

don't have to worry about that stuff.

Josh:

Like with Dan's papers like we do, we barely do hard news.

Josh:

And sometimes it's like a luxury because, you know, it's hard and expensive to do that.

Josh:

So sometimes when you can just focus on events and lifestyle and culture and things

Josh:

of that nature, it can be, you know, easier because you also have just a, a, a focus a.

Brian:

Right?

Brian:

But you're just, you're not like looking at like.

Brian:

You know, taking, replicating the model in other entirely different other

Josh:

I think the only way to replicate it honestly is if there was another company

Josh:

that was, you know, had diversified media in a given market that, you know, we felt

Josh:

we could go in there and and do it better.

Josh:

That would probably be the only way that I would think that it would make sense.

Brian:

Okay, cool.

Brian:

Awesome.

Brian:

Well, thanks so much, Josh.

Brian:

This was, lot of fun.

Josh:

Yeah.

Josh:

Brian, I really appreciate the opportunity to tell our story.

Josh:

Thank you so much.

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