
A pop star who was born on the patch dies and the news operation goes into overdrive.
Liam Payne was born and grew up in Wolverhampton and died in Argentina.
In three days, the Facebook page pumps out 81 posts in 36 hours and in a 24-hour period three days after the death still nets 846 reactions and comments.
High fives around the newsroom and living proof that the old print adage ‘if it bleeds, it leads’ is alive and well.
On the face of it, this is a solid result for Reach plc’s Black Country Live, an offshoot of Birmingham Live, which is in itself the online inheritance of the mighty Birmingham Post & Mail.
Scratch the surface, and you can tell a whole lot more about where local journalism is in 2024. For starters, of the more than six dozen posts, there was almost nothing from the people of Wolverhampton. No vox pop in the street, no statement from Wolverhampton College where he was a student.
Reach would probably say the no death knock at his parents’ and family house showed they were respecting their privacy. Old hacks would probably point out that there are no staff left who know how to execute such awkward tasks. In the olden days they may have even dispatched to South America their own photographer and reporter.
Secondly, their coverage showed an extreme example of a local title’s online presence milking a story. In this, the story is nudged on inch by inch with fresh coverage. I’ve seen this tactic many times before and it especially gets used by Reach plc with celebrity stories. If you’re invested in the story it’s great. If you’re not, it gets irritating fast. It also squeezes out other news coverage.
Here’s a selection posted to Black Country Live’s Facebook page on Saturday October 19, three days after the news broke:
Heartfelt tribute to Liam Payne from his father
Heartfelt tribute to Liam Payne from Cheryl
Heartfelt tribute to Liam Payne from Cheryl
Tragic loss of Liam Payne in Buenos Aires
Heartbreaking loss of Liam Payne at 31
Heartfelt tribute to Liam Payne from Zayn Malik
Heartbreaking loss for Liam Payne’s family
Liam Payne’s tragic final moments revealed
Liam Payne’s phone could unlock tragic mystery
Liam Payne’s final moments revealed in tragic incident
Remembering Liam Payne’s joyful moments with fans
Disturbing behaviour from Liam Payne before tragic incident
Liam Payne’s final moments revealed by shocked fan
The singer, from Wolverhampton, was in Argentina when he died
Tragic end for Liam Payne at Argentinian hotel
But thirdly, and maybe most importantly is the backlash from readers.
Of the 158 comments attached to the Black Country Live’s Facebook page on Saturday October 19, a weighty 42 per cent of comments were criticising the milking of the story.
Kathryn Lane: I’m annoyed with myself for writing this and giving this page what they want which is interaction. The more they annoy people the more they comment and react and build their page. As others have said there are family and friends who have to see this bombardment. 84 posts and counting is just disrespectful.
Chris Way: Give it a rest Black Country Live?! How many stories more you going to milk out of this?!
Jenny Thomas: Enough is enough! Please just let the family, friends and fans grieve in peace.
Natalie Carrol: Give his family some respect and let him rest in peace. A seven year old got killed yesterday in an explosion, nothing really even mentioned about that. Every life is precious, not just a famous one.
Philip Alexander:That’s gotta be the 4th article today at least and it’s only 11am.
Full disclosure, I was a reporter for 12 years and nine of those I was up against the Black Country Evening Mail who had five reporters based in the West Bromwich office a mile away from the Express & Star where I worked. I got to know several of them. Some I speak to and others I wouldn’t have trusted an inch.
I’ve no criticism of the Reach plc employees pumping out content on the Black Country Live Facebook page and its 71,000 followers. They have a hard job and I don’t envy them. It’s a local story of a boy made good with a sad ending.
On the face of it, hey, all engagement is good engagement, right?
In reality, if you annoy your readers so much they talk about blocking you this can’t be a long term strategy.
Then there is also Black Country Live being accused of stealing an image of a young Liam with his Mum around X Factor time. A former colleague and Express & Star photographer Tim Thursfield accused them of the theft. He should probably know because he took the pic.
What does this mean for public sector comms?
Please learn this. Reach titles have long stopped considering themselves as newspapers. They are not alone in this.They are news brands. The paper of record from a few decades ago has long gone. Those days won’t return.
Reach in the Liam Payne coverage are following a 2024 web strategy to maximise clicks. But as Facebook navigates away from news and makes it harder for titles to reach an audience this strategy itself may soon seem as archaic as publishing a Football Final on a Saturday night to get the football scores out. The reach of Facebook content in news has already fallen by a third, the UK Press Gazette reported. Meanwhile, on Reach titles, reporters are being asked to write eight pieces of content per shift.
News and how we consume it is very much changing. But in a crisis we still turn to the local paper, or rather brand. The Liverpool Echo, a Reach title whose brand is strong enough to resist the company-wide ‘Live’ rebranding, led some vital reporting in the summer of the Southport murders and subsequent rioting.
The Live brand does have an audience in the Black Country with 78 per cent of adults living in the Black Country weekly see some form of content, JICREG shows
We are told that local titles play an important role in the health of local democracy. They used to, anyway.
The milking strategy for stories does no-one any good in the long term. It iritaes people. It underlines the importance for the public sector of having their own channels. It also undermines confidence in people in their trust in the ability of a title to cover their patch’s news.
The Liam Payne story could be dismissed as a one off. But it taps into regular observation of the scarcity of local news reporting I’ve heard elsewhere.
As the trust in local titles dwindles day-to-day, what happens next?