Podcast: Play in new window
In this episode of the Decentered Media Podcast, Rob Watson is joined by Russell Todd to explore how foundational economics intersects with community media and local development. Their conversation unfolds as a thoughtful and searching exchange that raises important questions about how communities sustain themselves in a time of economic and institutional flux. What emerges is not a neat summary of policy prescriptions or market interventions, but a reflective dialogue about the deeper social and cultural infrastructures that hold local life together—and the role media plays in either reinforcing or eroding those bonds.
At the heart of the discussion is the concept of the foundational economy, a term that may sound abstract but relates directly to the everyday services and relationships that make daily life viable. From nurseries and garages to local food outlets and cultural centres, the foundational economy concerns the parts of society often overlooked by headline economic strategies. What makes this conversation distinctive is how Russell and Rob take this economic lens and apply it to media, asking what happens when local communication becomes centralised, commodified, or rendered invisible in policy and practice.
Rather than treating media as a bolt-on or an afterthought, the conversation suggests it must be understood as an integral part of any foundational approach to community development. The tendency, they observe, has been to think of media as either a marketing tool or a platform for elite cultural output, rather than a means of building capacity, fostering deliberation, and supporting community resilience. Rob draws attention to the failure of mainstream policy to account for this, particularly in new local development frameworks that fund neighbourhood-level regeneration but omit media from their scope entirely.
This absence becomes more stark when contrasted with examples from the conversation where local connection and trust matter. Russell reflects on practical work being done in places like Monmouthshire, where foundational service providers—such as mechanics or childminders—are engaging with ideas of poverty awareness and political education. These services are not just economic transactions, but relational encounters that contribute to how people manage and make sense of their lives. Media, they argue, should be part of this ecology: rooted, relational, and responsive.
The conversation also moves into the terrain of social trust and cultural life. Drawing on Raymond Williams’ idea of culture as “a whole way of life,” Rob and Russell consider how media practices might sustain the kind of everyday conviviality that has been hollowed out by extractive economic models. The decline of locally-owned media, the consolidation of commercial radio, and the virtualisation of community interaction via global platforms all point to a media landscape that is increasingly disconnected from the places it claims to serve. Without alternative forms of media embedded in local contexts, they argue, the public sphere becomes thinner and more fragmented.
They explore how foundational media might offer a different model—one that supports local storytelling, strengthens civic identity, and recognises the social value of communication as care, rather than just content. This reorientation asks us to shift the question from what we care about to how we care for. In doing so, it foregrounds a different ethic of media production and consumption: one based not on extracting attention or maximising reach, but on nurturing shared spaces of meaning and participation.
The discussion concludes with reflections on the need to build solidarity among those already doing this work in practice, and to think more carefully about how ideas spread and gain traction. Drawing on the innovation diffusion model, Russell emphasises the importance of connecting early adopters and local innovators in a way that builds collective capacity, rather than remaining in isolated pockets. The challenge, they suggest, is not only to make media more local again, but to reimagine it as foundational in every sense—economically, socially, and democratically.
This episode does not offer quick answers, but instead invites us into a slower and more considered reflection about the systems we live within and the changes we might wish to see. In doing so, it makes space for the kinds of conversations that are often squeezed out by the noise of the attention economy. And perhaps that, in itself, is one of the most foundational acts of all.