Skip to content
Talking Wales
Talking Wales

Redefining public interest news in Wales

  • Talking Wales Project Page – Visit to learn you can support Talking Wales
Talking Wales
Talking Wales

Redefining public interest news in Wales

Indie News Week 2025: “No News is Bad News”

Posted on June 9, 2025June 9, 2025 By Huw Marshall

Huw Marshall, Founder Talking Wales

The second annual Indie News Week starts today, Monday, June 9th, and runs until Saturday, June 15th, 2025. Dedicated to celebrating and supporting the UK’s independent news sector, it was launched by the Public Interest News Foundation (PINF) in 2024. The initiative highlights the vital role that local community-led outlets play in sustaining democracy, fostering public engagement, and filling critical information gaps left by declining mainstream media.

Why does Indie News Week Matter?
Local news is facing dramatic challenges. We have written extensively about the challenges facing public interest news in Wales and further afield, from the rise of digital platforms absorbing advertising revenue to corporate consolidation and closures of local news outlets. Under the banner “No News is Bad News,” Indie News Week aims to raise awareness, foster community interaction, and amplify fundraising efforts for indie newsrooms.

Stronger Together
Collaboration is at the heart of this year’s events. For instance, South West Durham News and The Northern Eco will share a newsroom during Indie News Week, hosting podcasts, open doors, guided nature walks and market stalls.

These activities offer the public an insider view of journalism—how stories are crafted, verified, and published.


The Bylines Network are hosting a panel discussion focused on equality and diversity in indie media. Funded through coordinated community journalism, Bylines highlights how underrepresented voices can reshape newsrooms and challenge mainstream media narratives.

Across the UK
From Shetland to Eastbourne, Belfast to Bethesda, over 30 independent outlets will host local events, from quizzes and symposiums to online meet‑ups.

The Public Interest News Foundation’s director, Jonathan Heawood, told Hold the Front Page: “Communities deserve healthy news ecosystems that facilitate the free flow of information, speak truth to power and shine a light on important issues.”

More Than a Week
Indie News Week isn’t just a celebration; it’s about advocacy. The Public Interest News Foundation has launched a petition urging the UK Government to support local news infrastructure, backing Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy’s pledge for reliable news services in every town and village.


Importantly, the week also builds capacity. Outlets report increased confidence and skills after participating: better fundraising, community engagement, and collaboration that fortify their resilience against systemic challenges.

Looking Ahead
Indie News Week underscores just how much is at stake when community media thrives or dies. Successful initiatives show that indie outlets can flourish with public backing through donations, subscriptions, crowdfunding, and accessible local engagement. As the sector evolves, the campaign aims to sustain and scale support.

Talking Wales has launched a new website as part of Indie News Week, and is starting conversations around critical issues such as immigration, the Senedd elections in May 2026 and news provision in Wales as we develop our new service.

 
Indie News Week is a great starting point if you’d like to support Talking Wales. Less news means less community; as the campaign reminds us, no news is bad news.

news Talking Wales

Post navigation

Previous post
Next post

Related Posts

news

The future of news in Wales

Posted on May 28, 2025June 4, 2025

The nature of news consumption is changing, and in Wales how people interact with media is markedly different to the rest of the UK. News provision in Wales has been historically poor at a national level and our efforts to address this deficit by launching The National Wales in March…

Read More
news

Public Interest News in an Ideal World

Posted on June 4, 2025June 4, 2025

Home » News » Public Interest News in an Ideal World A plan for Wales I regularly write about the challenges public interest news faces in Wales and further afield, mainly due to legacy news publishers’ failing business models. There is a general consensus on the importance of public interest news, that is, news…

Read More
Talking Wales

Bringing you the latest news from Wales.

Posted on May 30, 2025June 4, 2025

Wales has suffered from a historical lack of national news services. The majority of the news we consume in Wales originates over the border. The Daily Mail and The Sun are the two most widely read newspapers in Wales and BBC Radio 2 is the most popular radio station.The pandemic…

Read More

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

  • Our news is broken
  • UK Audiences Shift to Video, Social Media, and AI Amid News Fatigue
  • Rail Funding for Wales Falls Short as Longstanding Inequity Persists, Critics Say
  • Local news crisis: help us regenerate independent local news 
  • Indie News Week 2025: “No News is Bad News”

Recent Comments

No comments to show.

Archives

  • August 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025

Categories

  • news
  • Politics
  • Talking Wales
©2025 Talking Wales | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes
Go to mobile version