Intrepid young reporter keeps Waterman Road the most informed street in Roslindale
As a reporter, you know you've established a beat when people start e-mailing you tips.
Joseph Zyber is getting e-mail tips, four months after he started writing and publishing Waterman News, a weekly newspaper that covers his home street of Waterman Road in Roslindale.
Zyber is 10, and a fifth grader at the nearby Haley Pilot School.
Once a week now, he writes up his one-page newspaper, with one main story, a photo or two, a puzzle and a blurb. His mom imports his work into a publishing template, sends him back the file and then he takes it up to the Roslindale BPL branch, where he prints out enough copies for every house on Waterman Road, plus some houses on a couple of intersecting streets. And one afternoon a week, he goes door to door, delivering them.
He's covered everything from the recent rain-soaked Roslindale Porchfest, which had two participating houses on the street, to a local resident who has a cool garden - and from whom he got some gardening tips to write up.
One neighbor has asked about advertising in the paper, he said in a UHUb interview at his house yesterday. He and mom Elizabeth Perry, though, said they're not yet ready for that step, because it would mean more work.
Fortunately, he added, he's yet to have to deal with the bane of newspaper publishers everywhere - printing costs. So far, the $20 monthly printing credit that BPL gives library-card holders has been enough to support the weekly publishing for the short street with a couple dozen homes on it.
Zyber said he got the idea for a neighborhood newspaper last year while reading Stella by Starlight (UHub referral link) by Sharon Draper, which is about a young Black girl in a small North Carolina town when the Klan moves in, and which features a scene in which the protagonist considers writing her own newspaper to chronicle what is happening.
Perry said the paper has brought the street closer together, and cited something that happened at the recent Porchfest, The week before, Zyber had put a blurb in the News alerting readers to the performances, including on his street. It seemed like more people came out - despite the rain - and she said one of her neighbors saw the blurb and cooked up two pans of cookies, one for each performance site.
And, "I've really improved my social skills," because being out and about reporting and distributing the news means talking to people, Zyber said. "I really like delivering the newspapers," he said.
Zyber said it's way too early to say if he wants to make journalism a career, but he did say that his favorite thing at school is writing. "I really like writing," he said.
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Comments
Awesome!
That kid will keep Waterman Street honest and virtuous.
Bravo!
Great stuff, Joseph — you're providing a genuine community service that helps people be closer to their neighbors.
Your comment about building social skills is totally in line with my journalism experience, which started in high school with something not so different from the Waterman News and continued well into my adult years. I was never especially outgoing, but the reporting process taught me how to approach people, draw them out, and earn their confidence by making sure I presented their perspectives accurately and fairly. And strong writing will serve you well in almost any line of work you pursue. Yay!
What a wonderful story!
Sounds like a great kid!
Poor kid
He's a week away from his parent's house being bought by a VC firm that pledges "No changes whatsoever" except they want him to run conservative opinion editorials.
Then, in a month his house will be sold on the basis of remote work efficiency.
A month after that he'll be laid off but offered $100 to submit his entire body of work to train the AI "reporter" who will credited in bylines going forward.
/S
At a fraction of my age,
At a fraction of my age, Zyber's resume as an established writer, publisher and printer already looks better than mine. I am jealous.
Right on!
Right on! The birth of a news beat.
FUHIA
Future Universal Hub Interns of America