1 year of E&P's "Photo of the Month"

"A Moment’s Rest Amid the Search." E&P Photo of the Month for September 2025

Searchers rest for a minute under a bridge in Hunt, Texas, while searching for missing persons from the July 4 th Texas floods in Kerrville, Texas. --  Mike Felix for The Kerrville Daily …

"Aspiring Bull Riders" E&P Photo of the Month for August 2025

Aspiring bull riders peek over the rails to catch a glimpse of their favorite riders at the Macon County Missouri TNT Rodeo during the Macon County Fair on July 12. —Megan Pullyard, editor, The Moberly Monitor-Index, Moberly, Missouri. A CherryRoad Media Publication

"Last of the old Sun Herald Building" E&P Photo of the Month for July 2025

The last of the old Sun Herald/Gulf Publishing building on Debuys Road in Gulfport, Mississippi, was torn down on May 19, 2025, leaving only the remains of the press standing. The building was built in 1970 after Hurricane Camille destroyed the paper’s offices in Downtown Gulfport. It was then known as The Daily Herald. The building was built to withstand hurricanes, and it passed that test many times, including Hurricane Katrina. The Sun Herald staff was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Community Service for their coverage of the storm, sharing the award with The New Orleans Times Picayune. The paper ceased press operations in 2018. John Fitzhugh, independent photographer. Fitzhugh was a staff photojournalist for the Sun Herald for 31 years. He now works as a producer at WLOX-TV in Biloxi, Mississippi

"Crack! " E&P Photo of the Month for June 2025

A bat splinters on impact, sending shards into the air, during a Richmond Flying —Mike Kropf, Photojournalist, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Lee Enterprises), Richmond, Virginia

"American Canyon Holi Celebration " E&P Photo of the Month for May 2025

Children throw colored powder on each other during the annual American Canyon Holi celebration on Sunday, April 6, 2025. —Nick Otto, Photographer, Napa Valley Register, Napa, California
E&P Exclusives
When The Paper debuted this week on Peacock, it promised laughs — but inside America’s newsrooms, the reaction was anything but simple. Co-created by Greg Daniels of The Office fame, the mockumentary follows a struggling local paper. For publishers and editors who’ve lived that story, the premiere raised big questions: can a sitcom capture the grit, humanity, and relentless optimism of real journalism, or will it play into tired clichés? We want to hear your take — join the conversation on our LinkedIn page and be part of the story.
Over the past decade, Donald Trump has waged a relentless campaign against the press — not just in rallies or interviews, but in the 75,000 social media posts he’s fired off since 2015. More than 3,500 of them singled out journalists and news outlets by name, catalogued in a database that shows clear patterns of attack. What emerges is not off-the-cuff bluster but a deliberate strategy, one that senior reporter Stephanie Sugars says is reshaping how millions of Americans view the press — and raising alarms about the future of democracy itself.
When the Guadalupe River rose more than 26 feet in less than an hour on July 4, it wasn’t just Kerrville, Texas, that was under siege — it was its people, homes, summer camps and way of life. National media swooped in to capture the devastation, but it was the town’s own journalists who stayed, delivering life-saving information, correcting misinformation and documenting both the tragedy and the resilience of their neighbors. From the Kerrville Daily Times’ all-hands-on-deck coverage to The Kerr County Lead’s relentless real-time updates, two small newsrooms proved that in a disaster of international scale, local press still matters most.
Industry News
“The U.S. Tennis Association’s request that broadcasters ‘refrain from showcasing any disruptions to the President's attendance in any capacity’ was an embarrassment. This is not North Korea or Russia, and it is not ABC’s, ESPN’s or any other broadcaster’s job to stroke President Donald Trump’s ego.” — Nancy Armour, sports columnist, USA TODAY
Howard Stern pranked his fans and the media Monday about leaving his longtime SiriusXM radio show.
A federal appeals court has upheld a civil jury’s finding that President Donald Trump must pay $83.3 million to E. Jean Carroll for his repeated social media attacks against the longtime advice columnist after she accused him of sexual assault.