Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
Monday, May 25, 2026
HomeOpinionYou get what you pay for

You get what you pay for

THE entitlement of many online users to free news content is disturbing.
For months I have kept quiet as keyboard warriors have posted comments on The Bunyip’s Facebook page demanding the end of our paywall and free access to every article.
There’s certainly no shortage of free content from mainstream newspapers, blogs and magazines online, but when we’re all drowning in an endless ocean of yarns and videos, I assure you it is worth paying for access to unbiased and carefully curated content from a trusted source.
People pay to have cell phones and to have TV and streamline services. They pay to read novels or to go see a movie. They pay for gym memberships and the food they consume.
So, why should news be any different?
No media source is immune to the way technology has changed the game and disrupted our traditional news cycle.
Financial pressures have certainly impacted the print journalism industry, hence the importance of monetarily supporting original reporting.
As the print medium becomes more and more difficult to compete in, it is made worse when readers fail to find the value in paying for news.
When profit margins start falling, management may be faced with adapting a new business model, like enforcing social media paywalls, or to start sacking staff, particularly journalists. What would you prefer?
By purchasing a local newspaper, you’re funding journalism’s role in the community and are supporting the publication’s mission to keep people informed or accountable and to facilitate important discussions.
Regional newspapers are particularly important to their local communities as they write stories overlooked by the mainstream media.
Seeing your children in the social section, reading your local sporting match results, being updated on council projects and finding inspiration from the stories of our unsung heroes are all a special part of what brings a newspaper together.
However, the future of country papers will increasingly depend on consumers paying for news directly, as social media platforms like Facebook and content distributors like Google take the lion’s share of advertising dollars.
When you shop local by subscribing to our online edition or by purchasing a hard copy of our newspaper, you support our Bunyip family. And to our already loyal readers, we thank you for that.
While our medium will undoubtedly continue to change to stay relevant in this digital age, it’s certainly worth paying for.
Or will we pay the price of a society without local journalism?

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Preece forced to drop council legal fee claim

CONTROVERSIAL Barossa councillor Bruce Preece requested funding for legal fees related to tribunal action against him following a branch of behavioural standards this month....

Shanks steps up

Parkrun pics

Rob’s History Corner: Joe Darling, the footballer

LOOK up the name Joe Darling in the sporting history of Adelaide, and captain of the Australian cricket team is the most prominent result. Darling...

Boost comes for youth sports vouchers

WITH South Australian families having claimed one million of the State Government's Sports Vouchers since the scheme was introduced, Labor has made it possible...

2027 TDU introduces new world-first

THE 2027 Santos Tour Down Under (TDU) is set to be potentially the biggest yet after the announcement that it will be the first...

Plains seeks disability feedback

ADELAIDE Plain’s Draft Disability, Access and Inclusion Plan (DAIP) is now ready for community consultation. Council is now seeking feedback on the plan, which...

STUMPY’S SHORT SHOTS: Carlton’s new coach bounce is a mirage

MICHAEL who? Michael Voss, you remember him, don't you? He's the guy who used to coach Carlton, that mob who had lost their past...

Crime series at Hillbank

POLICE are investigating a series of overnight car break-ins on Cambridge Terrace. Residents reported the incidents around 10.40am on 17 May, noting that small amounts...

Crash at Mallala

A 36-year-old Salisbury man was hospitalised with non-life-threatening injuries following a crash between his Harley Davidson motorcycle and a Holden sedan near the intersection...

Letters to the Editor

Birthday wishes To my dad, happy 90th birthday for the 22nd of May. Love and best wishes from your daughter Lisa. Lisa, Gawler Help needed Across Australia,...

Adelaide’s ‘sexiest criminal’ in trouble again

ADELAIDE’S self-proclaimed "sexiest criminal" is behind bars after he was arrested and charged with firearm, money laundering and drug trafficking offences on Murray Street...