Telling Wichita’s Story

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Everyone likes a good story. In Wichita, enlightening and provocative voices are waiting to be heard. In the multitude of micro-communities that comprise our city, men and women are creating, inspiring, and doing. We aim to tell their stories.

But it’s not an easy time to be a storyteller. Social media is filled with vitriol. Never has it been more difficult to discuss the day’s news with an acquaintance. Pressure mounts to choose a side and stick with it, no matter what. We do not claim to have transcended bias. Only a fool would do so. But we do seek to tell the stories of this city and its people with a minimum of prejudice, partisanship, or ideological rancor. We seek the truth, knowing we cannot ever fully find it. But we’ll do our best to get as close as we can.

Kansas’ journalists have seen better days. The Kansas Leadership Center’s publication, The Journal, delves deeply into the state of local journalism in its spring 2019 issue. Contributing writer Joel Mathis notes that the number of reporters per 100,000 Kansans has fallen from 30 in 2005 to just 12 in 2017. Be it a Chance Swaim story in The Eagle or a locally produced segment on KMUW, quality journalism is created every day in this city. But as newsrooms shrink and journalists are stretched to their limits, Wichita Story aims to help tell those stories that might get lost in the gap. Along the way, we hope we entertain, enlighten, and educate.

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