Pros
There's enough news content in the region that you'll get good news clips: police scandals, weird politics and heart-warming features are in pretty decent abundance. Newsroom is also surprisingly diverse, including several different races, genders and sexual orientations. Company also gets several perks like free tickets to local events, which I highly recommend utilizing.
Cons
In 18 months, I watched more than 40 people enter and leave a newsroom of ~35 total staff members. When turnover is that high, you know that there is a fundamental problem in the workplace. That fundamental problem comes from the fact that management simply refuses to trust anyone with anything. Whether you're writing on a beat, designing a page or putting together web elements, management - particularly the CEO - feels an overwhelming need to be the smartest person in the room, even if that manager or CEO doesn't know how to make a solution themselves for a specific situation. One major source I witnessed was from the "digital efforts" the company claims they try. The fact of the matter is that management doesn't want anything to do with digital. Print is the primary project, and newspaper sales are the name of the game to this paper (Fun fact: we once held a company-wide party because newspaper sales went up 4% in one financial quarter). Management outsourced all digital work to the paper's sister company/ad agency, then promptly ran off not one, not two, but three different contract workers because they refused to believe someone with digital experience could possibly know a little bit more than management. This struggle of power for trust is overwhelmingly rampant, and it trickles down to every facet of the company. Few work at this company to do journalism, but many work to make sure they don't get the ire of their bosses. That ire comes in several forms, but in an effort to "keep everyone informed," there's no shortage of announcing shortcomings of workers to the company at large. Public shaming via company-wide email is a very popular form of "discipline" for editors, and managers somehow double their efforts to bombard workers via email during a manager's day off. It gets even worse when a negative or even neutral negative comment is said online or on social media by a reader/viewer/consumer, because management will do anything they can to eviscerate themselves from that comment. If you go to work at this company, expect to be publicly reamed in a Facebook comment at least twice in your tenure, solely because a reader got angry or offended at your article and management thinks publicly involving you will solve the problem. Semi-related to that, work/life balance is a complete and utter joke at this company. Management constantly needed to know what I was doing in the evenings or on weekends "because you never know when you need to help us." Getting PTO approval was a nightmare, and long hours were demanded without equal overtime compensation. Overall, I strongly recommend potential job seekers to find a different news company as a place of employment.