The Cleveland Plain Dealer just crossed a line most newsrooms won’t even approach. While other papers debate whether AI should transcribe interviews, Editor Chris Quinn hired Joshua Newman as an “AI rewrite specialist” to turn reporters’ notes into publishable articles using Advance Local’s ChatGPT variant.
This isn’t some cautious pilot program. Newman’s AI-drafted pieces run four times daily, carrying “Advance Local Express Desk” bylines with full disclosure. The system transforms raw reporting on hyperlocal stories—ice carving contests, sheriff cruiser purchases, school overcrowding—into polished copy that’s reviewed by humans before publication.
The Numbers Tell a Brutal Story
Staff cuts from 400 to 71 employees forced innovation that’s generating millions of page views.
The economics driving this experiment are stark. The Plain Dealer shrank from roughly 400 staff in the late 1990s to just 71 today. Meanwhile, reporters now file four stories daily instead of struggling to produce one, freeing time for actual fieldwork like attending the mayor’s coffee hours and city council meetings.
The results? Over 10 million page views last year from AI-assisted content covering suburban beats that had been abandoned due to budget cuts.
Industry Backlash Reveals Deeper Fears
Critics aren’t just questioning technology—they’re defending journalism’s soul.
The reaction from journalism’s establishment has been swift and brutal. Former Financial Times editor Lionel Barber called Quinn’s approach “beyond dumb,” while Cleveland Scene’s Sam Allard labeled the operation an “AI content farm.” Anonymous Plain Dealer staff report morale drops and concerns about training junior reporters when AI handles the writing.
Quinn remains defiant. His February column declared artificial intelligence “the future” of newsrooms, not their enemy.
This controversy exposes journalism’s central dilemma: maintaining craft standards while newspapers continue closing at an accelerating pace. The Plain Dealer’s experiment might feel like sacrilege, but it’s also a survival strategy other newsrooms are quietly watching—and potentially copying. The real test isn’t whether readers notice the difference, but whether communities lose essential local coverage in the process.






























