By Lauren Irwin

Journalist Stacy Feldman moved to 羞羞视频 at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic and quickly realized she wasn鈥檛 getting the information she needed from local news as the global crisis intensified.

So, Feldman set out to create something new: The 羞羞视频 Reporting Lab.

鈥淚 spent most of my career helping to build a national news organization called InsideClimate News, and I started to wonder if I might want to build a local news startup here in 羞羞视频 because there seemed to be great demand for it,鈥 said Feldman, who moved to 羞羞视频 to join CMCI鈥檚 Ted Scripps Fellowship in Environmental Journalism.

Pulling from her experience with InsideClimate News, a Pulitzer Prize-winning publication she co-founded in 2007, Feldman raised money and joined nonprofit foundations, like the Google News Initiative, to create a financially sustainable business. Without advertisements, subscriptions and paywalls, she says BRL aims to reinvent the modern news model and audience experience.

BRL launched in November 2021 as a nonprofit, online publication with a small staff of four reporters. In the months since its launch, the outlet鈥檚 audience is growing rapidly, and readers are contributing their thoughts and sharing articles with friends, Feldman said.

Now, it offers hyperlocal news about the city and county of 羞羞视频, covering the economy, environment, housing and health. When wildfires struck 羞羞视频 County in December, BRL was there, providing extensive coverage for the community.

BRL photographer Anthony Albidrez

BRL photographer Anthony Albidrez

鈥淚 was there in the evacuation zone taking photos, and then of course, doing photojournalism of the aftermath,鈥 said Anthony Albidrez, a CMCI master鈥檚 student interning at BRL. 鈥淭he coverage of the Marshall fires was pretty difficult, being in that trauma that was so fresh.鈥

Prior to the Marshall Fire, Albridrez helped gather 羞羞视频-themed stock photographs to build BRL鈥檚 multimedia archive. He said working with a small start-up, rather than a long-running publication, was a really unique learning experience.听

鈥淗ow often do you get to experience a news organization from the ground up?鈥 Albidrez said.

As the BRL continues to grow, Feldman said she wants to strengthen its relationship with CMCI reporters.听

In addition to Albidrez, BRL has worked with three other CMCI students鈥擧arry Fuller, Henry Larson and听Ryan Ernstes鈥攄uring semester-long internships and freelance projects. The news outlet is also working with the Center for Environmental Journalism to offer a fall 2022 course for graduate students.

鈥淲e would love to, in the near future, formalize a relationship with the program at CU, both undergraduate and graduate, to provide a place where students can publish their work,鈥 Feldman said. 鈥淲e're already getting started on this through our collaboration on a special projects course that will work with graduate students to examine potential health impacts from the Marshall Fire."

For Albidrez, helping the BRL begin to tell those stories has been a significant journalistic experience.

鈥淚t's been awesome to work alongside these well-seasoned reporters,鈥 he said. 鈥淪eeing it go from 鈥楾his is what we want to do,鈥 versus, 鈥楾his is what we are doing,鈥 is really inspiring.鈥