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  • What Happens When Digital Advertising Collapses?

    What Happens When Digital Advertising Collapses?

    📬 Note from the Publisher

    The Attention Economy Is a Lemon. Here’s Why We’re Not Selling It.
    By Peter Cellino | July 2025

    Tim Hwang’s Subprime Attention Crisis is not your typical “tech is scary” beach read. It’s more like an economic crime thriller set inside a Google server farm. His central claim is simple and devastating: the digital advertising industry—the engine that underwrites most of the modern internet—is built on garbage data, fake impressions, click fraud, and the fantasy that targeting is effective. The result? An attention marketplace that looks a lot like the mortgage market circa 2007: bloated, broken, and primed to crash.

    If you run a media company that relies on programmatic ads, this book is a funeral bell. If you run Mercury Local, it’s confirmation you bet the farm on the right thing.

    We built Charlotte Mercury, Strolling Ballantyne, and The Farmington Mercury on the belief that the real value of journalism comes from depth, privacy, and actual human trust—not CPM arbitrage or shady retargeting. That’s why:

    • We don’t run Google Ads.
    • We don’t track your clicks or follow you across the web.
    • Our advertisers are real businesses in your ZIP code.
    • And our revenue model is simple: be useful, be honest, and never sell out your audience.

    We aren’t trying to sell your attention. We’re trying to earn it.

    🛒 If you want to read Subprime Attention Crisis;💡It would be even better if you bought it from your local independent bookseller—assuming you’re lucky enough to have one still. There are too few of them, and we need more bookstores, not more UX designers at Facebook.

    The adtech crash is coming. We’ll be here when it does. And we won’t sell you out for an extra tenth of a clickthrough rate.

    Peter Cellino is the founder of Mercury Local and publisher of CLTMercury.com, StrollingBallantyne.com, and WeAreFarmington.com. He drinks iced cold brew from Einstein Bros. in Ballantyne and tries very hard not to read the comments. Follow him on Bluesky at @pc51.bsky.social.

    🪪 License: CC BY-ND 4.0

  • Local News Revenue Fix: AEO, SEO & LEO

    Local News Revenue Fix: AEO, SEO & LEO


    The Money Hole

    Google and Facebook now take 63 percent of U.S. digital ad spend (IAB 2024); local publishers split the rest. Classifieds vanished when Craigslist turned free in 2000. Clickbait drove CPMs down; civic coverage followed Ghosting the News, p. 23.

    Subscription Sticker-Shock

    A paywall props up elite nationals. For local outlets, first-year churn averages 40 percent; revenue rarely covers lost ads Democracy without Journalism, p. 112. Walls also block essential information from residents who cannot pay.

    Failed Pivots

    Three Levers That Pay

    AcronymWhat It DoesWhy It Pays
    AEOFormats facts so AI assistants surface them.Captures zero-click queries. Example: “When is Charlotte bulk trash day?”—Mercury snippet answers; link follows.
    SEOTechnical and editorial discipline.Yields evergreen traffic; converts to events, data products.
    LEOLocal-Engine Optimization: schema, proximity terms, directories Local SEO Playbook.Matches neighborhood sellers with intent-driven readers; revenue readers welcome.

    Service, Not Impressions

    Mercury Local sells outcomes. Business listings, ticketed events and contextual sponsorships ride AEO, SEO and LEO; no third-party trackers. Members pay for usable tools; readers get facts without surveillance; local owners see measurable returns.

    Next Moves for Charlotte Mercury & Strolling Ballantyne

    1. Mark up every story with structured data for voice answers.
    2. Launch LEO landing pages for each ZIP we cover.
    3. Publish short explainers that answer civic questions before rivals arrive.

    About the Author

    Fueled by cold-brew pragmatism, Peter Cellino codes headlines between sips; send your spiciest rebuttals to @pc51.bsky.social. Explore the Mercury Local galaxy: blog, case studies, resources, full Local SEO Playbook, and privacy-first advertising for Charlotte Mercury and Strolling Ballantyne.


    Creative Commons License

    © 2025 Mercury Local / Mercury Local
    This article, “Local News Revenue Fix: AEO, SEO & LEO,” by Peter Cellino is licensed under CC BY-ND 4.0.

    “Local News Revenue Fix: AEO, SEO & LEO”
    by Peter Cellino, Mercury Local (CC BY-ND 4.0)


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  • Charlotte Mercury Launches Today, Building Local News in Public

    Charlotte Mercury Launches Today, Building Local News in Public


    We Open the Doors Today

    Charlotte Mercury hits send this morning. No paywall, no tracking pixels, only the essential civic homework every resident deserves. Last year 127 U.S. newspapers closed, stranding nearly 55 million people in news deserts (Medill State of Local News 2024). At the same time only 22 percent of adults follow local news very closely, down fifteen points since 2016 (Pew Research Center). Charlotte is not exempt.

    Why the Old Model Collapsed

    Ad Dollars Fled to Platforms

    Classifieds vanished into Craigslist; display budgets now orbit Google and Meta. Newsrooms shrank to invoices and obits.

    Chains Cut Muscle, Not Fat

    Debt‑heavy chains slashed beats then bragged about “synergies.” Residents lost watchdogs; hedge funds banked fees.

    Metrics Reward Outrage

    Algorithms count clicks, not zoning motions. Public meetings go uncovered; misinformation fills the gap.

    Our Counter‑Plan

    Build in Full View

    Every Friday, we’ll publish a Newsroom Scorecard: stories shipped, stories spiked, revenue earned, mistakes logged.

    Local First, Always

    Council votes, school bonds, sidewalk petitions—nothing “too small” if it shapes a block or tax bill.

    Clear Math for Advertisers

    Sponsors will see open dashboards: impressions, reads, redemptions. No black‑box “reach.”

    Rights You Can Use

    All articles carry a Creative Commons license so neighborhood newsletters can reprint watchdog work without begging.

    What “Building in Public” Means

    • Live Roadmap — product updates, CMS bugs, SEO experiments, all pushed to Blog.
    • AMA Sessions — reporters answer reader criticism in comment threads.
    • Transparent Budgets — spending categories posted quarterly.
    • Source Credit — if a tip comes from a PTA bulletin, we link it.

    How Readers Can Move the Needle

    1. Subscribe at charlottemercury.com for inbox delivery.
    2. Send Tips to tips@mercurylocal.com.
    3. Advertise if you run a business that values proof over puffery.
    4. Hold Us Accountable—publicly, loudly.

    We are here because empty beats cost real money in taxes, trust, and talent. Let’s plug the holes together.


    About the Author

    Fueled by a double‑shot cold brew, Peter Cellino lurks on @pc51.bsky.social and answers every DM. Explore more at Blog, run numbers in Case Studies, raid the Resource Library (start with the Local SEO Playbook), or find ethical ad spots under Advertising for Charlotte Mercury and Strolling Ballantyne.


    Footnotes & Fine Print

    Enjoy the read? Peruse our policies or ping us anytime:
    Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | About Us | Contact | Media Kit


    Creative Commons License

    © 2025 Mercury Local / Mercury Local
    This article, “Charlotte Mercury Launches Today, Building Local News in Public,” by Peter Cellino is licensed under CC BY‑ND 4.0.

    “Charlotte Mercury Launches Today, Building Local News in Public”
    by Peter Cellino, Mercury Local (CC BY‑ND 4.0)


    Recently on Mercury Local

    • How Private Equity Gutted Local Newspapers — hedge‑fund math meets empty newsrooms.
    • How the Attention‑Merchant Ad Model Bankrupted Local Newspapers — when clicks replace community.
    • Ghost Papers: How Hedge Funds Hollowed Out Local Newsrooms — lights on, reporters gone.

    Catch them all on the Blog before someone adds another zero to the buyout fund.


  • Understanding Web Cookies and Why Mercury Local Avoids Them

    Understanding Web Cookies and Why Mercury Local Avoids Them

    Friction Everywhere—Except Here

    Every hour I hop between half a dozen news sites—and each one makes me agree to cookies before I see a headline. At Mercury Local, you land on the story instantly. No nagging banner, no delay. That seamless first click isn’t luck; it reflects our belief that your time and privacy matter more than another tracker.

    What Is a Cookie?

    A cookie is a tiny text file your browser stores when a site asks. It holds an identifier so the site “remembers” you. Session cookies die when you close the tab. Persistent cookies stick around until they expire or you clear them.

    Why Sites Lean on Cookies

    • Basic Functionality: Stay logged in, save your shopping cart.
    • Preferences & Performance: Recall your language or layout choice.
    • Analytics & Advertising: Track which pages you visit—and show you ads elsewhere.

    The Privacy Trade-Off

    News sites pack in more trackers than most websites—averaging 19 third-party trackers versus eight on non-news sites . First-party cookies come from the site you’re on; third-party cookies come from ad networks embedded everywhere. Those follow-you-around crumbs fuel profiling, price tweaks and, sometimes, data leaks.

    How Server Logs Save Privacy and Deliver Insight

    We use server logs instead of cookie-based analytics. Logs record page requests, timestamps, and anonymized IP ranges—no cross-site profiles, no stranger breadcrumbs. This approach counts real visits without introducing sampling biases.

    Common Objections, Addressed

    “Won’t I see the banner every time?” Yes, unless you bookmark our consent-free URL.
    “Don’t you hurt ad partners?” Not at all—our opt-in newsletters outperform stale ad-tracker campaigns, and local shops love the clarity.

    What You Gain—and What You Trade

    You gain faster pages and no hidden tracking. You trade automatic preference storage—you might log in more often. We think that swap is fair: you stay in control.

    Take Control Everywhere

    Clear cookies in your browser’s privacy settings. Flip on “Do Not Track.” Install a privacy extension. Or just visit a publisher that skips the stalk-and-sell model entirely.

    Conclusion & Strong Invite

    Cookies aren’t inherently evil—they can power good features. But they’re too often abused. Next time a banner blocks your view, know what’s at stake. Tell us about your worst cookie-banner nightmare in our one-question survey.


    Learn More


    About the Author

    Fueled by cold brew and stubborn curiosity, I’m Peter Cellino. Ping me on Bluesky at @pc51.bsky.social to debate privacy, local news or where to find the town’s best roaster. Explore our ecosystem at Blog, Case Studies, Resources, the Local SEO Playbook, or learn how we connect audiences at Advertising, Charlotte Mercury Ads and Strolling Ballantyne Ads.

    Enjoy the read? Peruse our policies and ping us anytime:
    Terms of ServicePrivacy PolicyAbout UsContact


    Creative Commons License

    © 2025 Mercury Local / Mercury Local
    This article, “Understanding Web Cookies and Why Mercury Local Avoids Them,” by Peter Cellino is licensed under CC BY-ND 4.0.

  • How Private Equity Gutted Local Newspapers: A Data-Driven Autopsy

    How Private Equity Gutted Local Newspapers: A Data-Driven Autopsy

    The Deal Playbook

    Private-equity firms do not buy newspapers for journalism. They buy distressed cash flow, pile on debt, harvest fees, and exit before the presses seize. In 2024 hedge funds and PE groups controlled an estimated one-third of U.S. daily circulation, according to the State of Local News report from Northwestern’s Medill School State of Local News 2024.

    Step 1: Leverage the Balance Sheet

    A fund forms a shell company, borrows against future cash flow, and acquires a cluster of papers. Alden Global Capital used this tactic to pick up Tribune Publishing in 2021, adding 9 metros to a portfolio that already held 68 dailies and 300+ weeklies What Works News Coverage. The debt sits on the newspapers; the fund collects a management fee.

    Step 2: Consolidate, Cut, Centralize

    Costs fall fastest where citizens feel it most: reporters. Median newsroom headcount at Alden papers dropped 55 percent between 2012 and 2022, versus a 33 percent industry drop Hedged. Printing plants close, customer service moves offshore, copyediting shifts to a hub two time zones away.

    Step 3: Milk the Margin

    With debt serviced and payroll slashed, cash still flows—until it doesn’t. Funds dividend out what remains. A 2023 Boston Globe review found Alden siphoned $300 million from MediaNews Group through “consulting fees” and real-estate deals over ten years.

    Charlotte Case Study: The Chatham Pivot

    McClatchy’s 2020 bankruptcy put The Charlotte Observer on the block. Chatham Asset Management, a New Jersey hedge fund, won the auction and converted $263 million of debt into ownership Axios Charlotte. Newsroom jobs fell from 210 (2009) to about 65 (2024); print home delivery shrank to three days per week. The city of 880,000 now relies on a skeleton daily and a patchwork of niche sites.

    The Civic Ledger

    • 2,500 U.S. newspapers have closed since 2005, a quarter of the market Washington Post.
    • 279 counties now have zero or one local outlet, classified as “high-risk news deserts” AP News.
    • Municipal borrowing costs rise 5–10 basis points in counties losing a daily, evidence that less scrutiny equals pricier bonds (Brookings, 2023).

    Why Advertisers Should Care

    When reporting disappears, so do engaged readers. Page views sink, ad impressions decline, and brands chase eyeballs elsewhere. A 2024 Poynter survey of regional businesses found 61 percent cut spending with chain papers after seeing local beats eliminated by Poynter. PE owns the asset; you own the wasted budget.

    The Exit—and the Wreckage

    Funds flip real estate, merge titles, or liquidate mastheads. Communities inherit a “ghost paper”—a familiar logo carrying wire copy and sponsored obituaries. Trust erodes; civic turnout falls; corruption climbs. PE profits are internalized, public costs externalized. Classic tragedy of the commons, played out on newsprint.

    Opening for Public-Benefit Models

    The gap is large, but so is the opportunity. Independent, privacy-first outlets—yes, we have skin in that game—can reclaim beats abandoned by leveraged chains. Clean balance sheets, diversified revenue, and open licensing keep cash in the newsroom, not the Caymans.


    About the Author

    Fueled by an espresso that might qualify as a controlled substance, Peter Cellino scribbles about journalism’s money trail. Ping him on Bluesky @pc51.bsky.social and wander the Mercury Local rabbit hole: Blog | Case Studies | Resources | Local SEO Playbook | Advertising | Charlotte Mercury | Strolling Ballantyne.


    Footnotes & Fine Print

    Enjoy the read? Peruse our policies and ping us anytime: Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | About Us | Contact


    Creative Commons License

    © 2025 Mercury Local / Mercury Local
    This article, “How Private Equity Gutted Local Newspapers: A Data-Driven Autopsy,” by Peter Cellino is licensed under CC BY-ND 4.0.

    “How Private Equity Gutted Local Newspapers: A Data-Driven Autopsy”
    by Peter Cellino, Mercury Local (CC BY-ND 4.0)

  • How the Attention-Merchant Ad Model Bankrupted Local Newspapers

    How the Attention-Merchant Ad Model Bankrupted Local Newspapers

    A Penny Bought Attention, Not News

    Benjamin Day launched the New York Sun in 1833 at one cent, selling readers’ attention to advertisers instead of selling the paper for profit. It worked—and it turned audiences into inventory¹.

    The Model Scales—and Splinters

    Steam presses and rising literacy pushed the penny-press template nationwide, locking newspapers into an ad-subsidy loop that lasted well into the 21st century². But once ads moved online, platforms perfected an industrial harvest of micro-moments. Google’s AdWords auction in 2001 sold intent by the click; Facebook sold identity by the slice³.

    The Duopoly’s Drain on Local Cash

    By the mid-2010s Google and Facebook were taking roughly 60 percent of all U.S. digital ad spend, leaving publishers with scraps⁴. Print ads—still the biggest revenue column for locals—fell 71 percent from 2000 to 2012⁵.

    When Revenues Fall, Reporters Go First

    Gannett’s cost-cutting playbook produced repeated “bloodbaths”—hundreds dismissed after each quarterly earnings stutter⁶. Nationwide newsroom employment fell 26 percent between 2008 and 2020, creating today’s “ghost papers” that recycle wire copy and skip zoning-board votes⁷.

    The Ad-Blocking Revolt

    Apple’s 2015 iOS 9 update let users nuke trackers and pop-ups. Millions installed blockers overnight. Industry lobbyists called it “robbery” and “a threat to democracy,” but users preferred speed and privacy⁸. The old bargain—free news for forced eyeballs—shattered.

    First-Party Trust or Bust

    Surveillance ads proved fragile. First-party email lists and sponsor narratives anchored in community are slower but sturdier. Mercury Local opts for minutes read, replies sent, and coupons redeemed—metrics Big Tech can’t steal.


    Endnotes

    1. Day’s penny-press gamble and attention-as-product Attention Merchants, Th…
    2. Penny-press dominance through early 2000s advertising cycle Revolutions in Communic…
    3. Programmatic micro-moment auction, Google & Facebook rise Attention Merchants, Th…
    4. Duopoly’s 60 % share of U.S. digital ads Ghosting the News – Mar…
    5. 71 % collapse in print ad revenue 2000-2012 Ghosting the News – Mar…
    6. Repeated Gannett layoff “bloodbaths” and executive payouts Hedged (The History of …
    7. 26 % newsroom job loss 2008-2020; rise of ghost papers Hedged (The History of …
    8. Apple iOS 9 content-blocking and publisher backlash Attention Merchants, Th…

    About the Author

    Running on a double cold-brew drip, Peter Cellino trades tweets for Bluesky—drop a note at @pc51.bsky.social. Dig deeper on the Blog, crunch the numbers in Case Studies, scout the Resource Library (grab the free Local SEO Playbook), or explore ad spots with Mercury Local, the Charlotte Mercury, and Strolling Ballantyne.


    Footnotes & Fine Print
    Enjoy the read? Peruse our policies and ping us anytime:
    Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | About Us | Contact


    Creative Commons License

    © 2025 Mercury Local / Mercury Local
    This article, “Attention Merchants: How Ad Auctions Bankrupted Local News,” by Peter Cellino is licensed under CC BY-ND 4.0.

    “Attention Merchants: How Ad Auctions Bankrupted Local News”
    by Peter Cellino, Mercury Local (CC BY-ND 4.0)

  • Ghost Papers: How Hedge Funds Hollowed Out Local Newsrooms

    Ghost Papers: How Hedge Funds Hollowed Out Local Newsrooms

    The Lights Are On, but Nobody’s Home

    Walk into the Hartford Courant newsroom and you’ll hear more echoes than phone rings. Staff cuts since 2008 top 60 percent—standard for papers bought, stripped, and flipped by private-investment funds [1].

    What Counts as a Ghost Paper?

    Researchers call a title a “ghost” when it still prints but has lost most of its reporters. Margaret Sullivan notes that U.S. newspapers shed nearly half their newsroom jobs between 2008 and 2018 [2]. Penelope Abernathy’s UNC team maps hundreds of counties now served only by such phantoms [3].

    How We Got Here: Debt, Roll-Ups, and the 45-Percent Guillotine

    Hedge funds chased double-digit margins in classifieds, borrowed cheap, bought chains, layered fees, and harvested real estate. Alden Global Capital cleared a 17 percent operating margin while closing bureaus and selling buildings [4]. The 2019 GateHouse-Gannett merger created a 250-daily megachain run from McLean, Virginia—not from local pressrooms [5]. Former New York Times editor Dean Baquet warned that most local papers would “die within five years” without new ownership models [6].

    Civic Consequences: No One Left to Read the Zoning Agenda

    Less reporting means higher borrowing costs and lower turnout. A Journal of Politics study found municipal bond yields rise after newsroom cuts [7]. Ken Doctor tracked similar spreads in counties that lost watchdog reporters [8]. The result: taxpayers pay more, officials face fewer questions, and polarized social feeds fill the vacuum.

    Why Mercury Local Bets on Depth, Not Strip-Mining

    We hire locally, publish weekly, and license content under Creative Commons to widen reach. The model trades page-view quotas for engagement with readers who catch a planning-board loophole faster than any AI summary. Debt service: zero. Accountability reporters: growing.


    Endnotes

    1. Susca, Margot. Hedged: How Private Equity Dismantled American Journalism (2024).
    2. Sullivan, Margaret. Ghosting the News (2020), p. 18.
    3. Abernathy, Penelope. The Expanding News Desert (UNC Hussman, 2022 update).
    4. NewsGuild-CWA, “Alden Capital’s Hidden Profits,” April 2023.
    5. Securities and Exchange Commission filings, New Media Investment Group, 2019.
    6. Dean Baquet interview, Columbia Journalism Review, Oct. 7 2020.
    7. Gao, Lee & Murphy, “Financing Dies in Darkness? The Impact of Newspaper Closures on Public Finance,” Journal of Politics 82(2), 2020.
    8. Doctor, Ken. Newsonomics column, March 15 2021.

    About the Author

    Fueled by a mug of dark roast that’s probably one refill too many, Peter Cellino lurks on Bluesky as @pc51.bsky.social—slide into the DMs. Browse the Blog, crunch the Case Studies, raid the Resources hub (start with the Local SEO Playbook), or see ad slots that respect readers at Advertising, including Charlotte Mercury and Strolling Ballantyne.


    Footnotes & Fine Print

    Enjoy the read? Peruse our policies and ping us anytime:
    Terms of Service | Privacy | About | Contact


    Creative Commons License

    © 2025 Mercury Local / Mercury Local
    This article, “Ghost Papers: How Hedge Funds Hollowed Out Local Newsrooms,” by Peter Cellino is licensed under CC BY-ND 4.0.

    “Ghost Papers: How Hedge Funds Hollowed Out Local Newsrooms”
    by Peter Cellino, Mercury Local (CC BY-ND 4.0)

  • What Is a News Desert and Why It Matters

    What Is a News Desert and Why It Matters

    The Map Keeps Getting Emptier

    “News desert” sounds abstract until you read the latest Medill numbers: 208 U.S. counties now have zero local news outlets, up from 204 a year earlier, while another 1,563 limp along with exactly one source. Together, those counties hold nearly 55 million people—more than Florida and Georgia combined. medill.northwestern.edu

    Definition: News Desert in Plain Terms

    Researcher Penelope Muse Abernathy defines a news desert as a community with “significantly diminished access” to important local information. In practice, the watchdog is gone and accountability follows it out the door. usnewsdeserts.com

    One-Third of U.S. Newspapers Gone

    Since 2005, more than a third of American newspapers have vanished—over 3,200 titles. Closures still average more than two papers every week. medill.northwestern.edu

    North Carolina: Six Counties Silent, Many Whisper

    North Carolina claims six counties with no newspaper and dozens more served by a single weekly. The state’s population growth masks an information drought outside metro cores. medill.northwestern.edu

    Charlotte’s Shrinking Paper Trail

    Mecklenburg County keeps The Charlotte Observer, but the Saturday print edition went digital-only in 2020, and as of July 2024 the paper prints just three days a week, mailed by the USPS. en.wikipedia.org

    The cutbacks didn’t stop there. Pulitzer-winning cartoonist Kevin Siers was laid off in 2023, part of parent company McClatchy’s plan to drop daily opinion cartoons. wfae.orgaxios.com

    Why It Matters

    Empirical studies tie disappearing local coverage to higher municipal borrowing costs, lower voter turnout, and sharper partisan divides. When no one sits through the zoning meeting, officials spend more and explain less.

    Where Mercury Local Fits

    Mercury Local enters with two blunt promises:

    • Cover Charlotte and its suburbs at street level using reporters, not wire copy.
    • Fund the work with privacy-first ads and reader services—no paywalls, no third-party trackers.

    We won’t fix 208 desert counties overnight, but we can make sure Ballantyne’s school board and Charlotte’s Historic District Commission stay on the public record.


    About the Author

    Fueled by a double cold-brew, Peter Cellino plies his trade at the intersection of caffeine and civic duty. Find him on Bluesky @pc51.bsky.social and roam the Mercury Local ecosystem: the Blog, live Case Studies, deep-dive Resources like our Local SEO Playbook, plus privacy-forward Advertising options for Charlotte Mercury and Strolling Ballantyne.


    Footnotes & Fine Print
    Enjoy the read? Peruse our policies and ping us anytime:
    Terms of Service | Privacy | About | Contact

    Creative Commons License

    © 2025 Mercury Local / Mercury Local
    This article, “What Is a News Desert? 55 Million Americans Live Without Local News,” by Peter Cellino is licensed under CC BY-ND 4.0.

    “What Is a News Desert? 55 Million Americans Live Without Local News”
    by Peter Cellino, Mercury Local (CC BY-ND 4.0)

  • Google AI Destroys Search Traffic: Mercury Local Thrives

    Google AI Destroys Search Traffic: Mercury Local Thrives

    Google Isn’t a Search Engine Anymore

    “AI Armageddon” Arrives

    Isabella Simonetti and Katherine Blunt opened Today’s Wall Street Journal report with a blunt verdict: the “AI armageddon is here for online news publishers.” Chatbots now sit atop results, answering questions outright, siphoning clicks from the blue links that once paid newsrooms’ bills. HuffPost’s organic search traffic “fell by just over half in the past three years,” they wrote; the Washington Post endured a similar free‑fall, according to Similarweb.

    Search Traffic Free‑Fall

    • HuffPost: desktop + mobile organic traffic down ≈50 % since 2022.
    • Washington Post: “nearly that much,” per Similarweb.
    • Business Insider: trimmed 21 % of staff in May; CEO Barbara Peng blamed “extreme traffic drops outside of our control.” Similarweb logs a 55 % slide between April 2022 and April 2025.

    Decades-long declines now occur in months.

    Publishers Admit the Well Is Dry

    At a company meeting, Nicholas Thompson told Atlantic staff to “assume traffic from Google would drop toward zero.” He doubled down in the Journal: “Google is shifting from being a search engine to an answer engine. We have to develop new strategies.”

    William Lewis of the Washington Post called click‑free search “a serious threat to journalism that should not be underestimated.” The Post, he said, is “moving with urgency” to meet overlooked readers and plan for a “post‑search era.”

    Dow Jones CMO Sherry Weiss laid out a new metric: build trust that drives readers “directly out of necessity.”

    History: The Squeeze That Never Stops

    Classifieds vaporized. Social networks pivoted. Search felt safe—until Google’s AI answers removed the last middleman between curiosity and content. Public trust keeps sliding; competition keeps multiplying.

    Survival Tactics: Events, Apps, Anything But Google

    The Atlantic is beefing up its app, printing more issues, and cashing in on events. Politico and Business Insider, under Axel Springer, voice the same mantra: cultivate direct relationships or shrink.

    Why Mercury Local Plays a Different Game

    We never banked on free clicks. Our hyper‑local outlets—The Charlotte Mercury and Strolling Ballantyne—center on newsletters, street‑level reporting, and advertiser deals rooted in zip codes, not search queries. Google’s answer box can’t tell a Charlotte resident why a budget committee shelved a sidewalk fix at 1 a.m.—but our reporter can.

    Legacy chains swap strategy decks each quarter. We keep attending zoning hearings and ribbon cuttings. That’s the moat: small, precise, impossible to scrape.

    No Middleman, No Panic

    Search‑built publishers must reinvent themselves mid‑air. Mercury Local keeps filing copy. We read inbox stats, not Google Analytics. The future looks strikingly like yesterday: neighbor‑first, data‑last. Others can fight for a shrinking slice of zero‑click traffic; we’ll be across the street, notebook in hand.


    About the Author

    Fueled by cold brew and a stubborn belief that local beats still matter, Peter Cellino riffs at @pc51.bsky.social. Explore the Mercury Local ecosystem—mercurylocal.com, the caffeine‑spiked blog, candid about, open‑door contact, revealing case studies, and our nerd‑approved local SEO playbook—then tell us what your neighborhood needs next.


    Creative Commons License

    © 2025 Mercury Local / Mercury Local
    This article, “Google Isn’t a Search Engine Anymore,” by Peter Cellino is licensed under CC BY‑ND 4.0.

    “Google Isn’t a Search Engine Anymore”
    by Peter Cellino, *Mercury Local (CC BY‑ND 4.0)

  • The Future of Local News is Here 📰✨

    The Future of Local News is Here 📰✨

    Welcome to Mercury Local, the team behind some of Charlotte’s most essential local newsletters—Strolling Ballantyne and coming soon Queen City Express. As part of the larger Charlotte Mercury ecosystem, we are redefining what local journalism looks like in the digital age.

    What We Do

    Mercury Local is more than just a publishing company—it’s a community-first news network that keeps Charlotteans informed, engaged, and connected. Our mission is to deliver high-quality, hyper-local journalism that prioritizes depth over speed and relevance over clickbait. Whether you live in Ballantyne, Uptown, South End, or beyond, Mercury Local brings you the stories that matter most.

    Our Publications

    🏡 Strolling Ballantyne

    Your weekly guide to  Ballantyne, Blakeney, Waverly, and beyond—from real estate insights to community events, business spotlights, and neighborhood trends. Whether you’re looking for the best coffee shop, school updates, or zoning news, we’ve got you covered.

    🚆 Queen City Express Launching Q3 2025

    A no-nonsense, smartly curated newsletter delivers Charlotte’s top business, politics, development, and culture news. If it’s happening in Queen City, you’ll hear about it first from QCE—without the fluff, just the facts (and maybe a little fun).

    Why Mercury Local?

    ✔ Community-Focused: We tell the stories that matter to you, not just those that drive clicks.

    ✔ Ad-Supported, Not Ad-Driven: Our model prioritizes quality journalism, not intrusive pop-ups.

    ✔ Hyper-Local Insights: Forget the national noise—our focus is Charlotte, NC, and nowhere else.

    ✔ Engaging & Accessible: No jargon, no paywalls, just real news for real people.

    ✔ Multi-Platform Reach: Get your news how you want it—newsletters, podcasts, digital, and more.

    Join the Mercury Movement 🚀

    📩 Have a tip? Got a story? Could you email Us?

    🐦 Follow us on Twix (X.com) for real-time updates.

    Mercury Local: Smart news for the Queen City—without the noise. 🚆🏙️