I think “border” is very relevant, in that if you're a Windsor resident and you work in Detroit and you're dependent on local news in the morning for weather, traffic and sports going in to work and there's no local television news in Windsor, then obviously it's relevant. Those communities are directly impacted and identify with that shared community of interest that's being televised. It's the idea that people still require local news, which requires local journalists and local news offerings to be relevant and connect with the audiences. Local news remains very popular in trust surveys. It's well respected. It's held in higher regard than national news in the U.S.
It's also important to acknowledge that it's the local television stations in small and medium-sized markets that are the dominant generators and creators of local news online, so the idea that people are going to the Internet for alternative sources of local news doesn't reconcile with the fact that the providers, generators and creators of the local news are still local journalists and broadcasters who are on the scene locally.