I think it depends on what your priorities are. Clearly there is a risk that has been identified, that if local newspapers close—it's highly likely that many will over the next ten years—there will be less scrutiny, less attention to how democracy works, and less information on what matters in community life.
In terms of the specific content that we choose to produce, in our case, we believe we benefit most when we're serving up content that, for our audience, matters to them. We're not chasing clickbait. We can all do that, but we don't. We have a very specific audience in mind, and it's an audience of concerned citizens who want information that they can't get anywhere else. From my point of view, the risk is that if local papers disappear, there are less people doing that.