Mark Maassen is a business executive specializing in selling advertising for newspapers and a 1980 Bachelor of Journalism (BJ) graduate from the Missouri School of Journalism.[1] He has been the Executive Director of the Missouri Press Association since 2015[2] after two years as Assistant Executive Director[1] and 33 years in advertising and management with the Kansas City Star.[2] He also served as president of the board of directors of the Missouri Press Association in 2013.[3]

He was elected President of Newspaper Association Managers on August 4, 2023.[4][5][6]

After Gannett sold a dozen small community newspapers in Missouri to local owners, Maassen said, "I am bullish on Missouri newspapers, especially the community newspapers."[7] In a discussion of staffing problems with people buying rural newspapers in Missouri, Maassen suggested "a scholarship program that pays students at the Missouri School of Journalism in Columbia, Mo., $10,000 per year for four years, in exchange for a commitment to work at a local newspaper for at least two years after they graduate."[8] The first two such scholarships were announced March 3, 2022.[9]

After Missouri Governor Mike Parson threatened criminal prosecution of St. Louis Post-Dispatch journalist Josh Renaud, Maassen said: "The newspaper and the reporter did nothing wrong. It's not uncommon for elected officials to blame the media" when they expose problems. In this case, Renaud found a security problem with the state's website. He privately reported the problem to state authorities while promising to withhold publishing anything about it until the problem was fixed.[10][11]

In an interview for KKFI radio in Kansas City, Maassen praised the Missouri Independent, which is an online-only news organization covering government, politics and policy. Their stories are often republished in local newspapers around the state. They have won multiple awards from the Missouri Press Association. He also noted that Missouri currently has 207 newspapers with at least one in each of Missouri's 114 counties. Other states have news deserts and ghost newspapers; Missouri does not.[12]

Notes

  1. 1 2 Mark Maassen, Assistant Executive Director at Missouri Press Association, 9 November 2011, Wikidata Q123912727
  2. 1 2 Jessica Sherwin (29 June 2015). "Missouri Press Association names new executive director". Columbia Missourian. ISSN 0747-1874. Wikidata Q123912787.
  3. "Missouri Press Association names new executive director". KMZU. 30 June 2015. Wikidata Q123912827.
  4. Julia Hunter (11 August 2023). "Missouri Press executive elected NAM president". Wisconsin Newspaper Association. Wikidata Q123912888.
  5. "Missouri Press Association executive elected NAM president". Arkansas Publisher. 10 August 2023. Wikidata Q123912919.
  6. Missouri Press executive elected NAM president, Florida Press Association, 10 August 2023, Wikidata Q123912964
  7. Rudi Keller (11 October 2021). "New owners seek to revive Missouri newspapers sold by Gannett". Missouri Independent. Wikidata Q123913641.
  8. Austin Fitzgerald (21 September 2022). "'Who's going to run it?'". RJI News. Wikidata Q123915313.
  9. Mark Maassen (3 March 2022). "Rural Missouri Newspaper Scholarship winners announced". Missouri Press Association. Wikidata Q123915430.
  10. Jason Hancock (23 February 2022). "Claim that reporter hacked state website was debunked. Parson still says he's a criminal". Missouri Independent. Wikidata Q123915565.
  11. Maria Cramer (15 October 2021). "Governor Accuses Reporter of Hacking After Flaws in State Website Are Revealed". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Wikidata Q123915879.
  12. Presenter: Spencer Graves. "Mark Maassen on newspapers in Missouri". KKFI. 2 January 2024. Wikidata Q123964155.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
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