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    effects on society

    The coverage of the Sandy Hook shootings: Why the media handled it differentlythis time

    Karen Brooks Harper
    Dec 19, 2012 | 5:13 pm
    • Sandy Hook victims memorialized.
      Imgace.com
    • After a Sandy Hook funeral.
      Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images

    Just like you, I was glued to the TV last week, watching the horrific aftermath of Sandy Hook shootings, trying to shake the sadness and the numbness at once.

    In my head, all I could do was ask questions: Who was the shooter? Why did he do it? What does he look like? Who is his family? What was his background?

    I went to sleep unsatisfied. I didn’t hear so much as his name. The media, it seemed, was holding back.

    My reporter brain knew on some intellectual level, just as my human heart knew on a deeper one, what kind of pain and suffering the families were going through.

    Having covered scores of tragedies in my 22-year career, I was familiar with that side of the story.

    I’d interviewed women who had carried the broken bodies of their children through dark, waterlogged streets in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. I knew dads who had buried their 10-year-old sons gunned down by gangsters. I had stood by entire groups of families as police notified them that yes, their mom or brother or son was one of the six shot to death in that office shooting in Corpus Christi, and they’d crumple to the ground in sobs. I knew that story.

    Lucky enough to escape such violent tragedy in my own life, I was still disquietingly familiar with those who hadn’t been.

    In the hours after the shootings, what I wanted to know was the story that hadn’t unfolded before: the story of this particular lunatic.

    I wanted to know about this guy. I wanted to know what he had been doing before it all happened. I wanted to trace his steps, read his computer, check his DVR and walk through his house.

    But as reporters stood in the dark night in front of the churches where prayer vigils were being held, blinking into the camera lights and describing the grief unfolding behind them, I never heard his name. Anderson Cooper didn’t say it. Brian Williams didn’t say it.

    But in stark contrast with the way the national media has covered every one of the increasingly common mass murders in this country, they were approaching it differently this time around.

    Of course, by then, it was out there. Everyone knew his name, his age. Everyone had seen one snapshot, grainy and strange.

    But in stark contrast with the way the national media has covered every one of the increasingly common mass murders in this country, they were approaching it differently this time around.

    They didn’t make the story about him. They instantly — instantly — made it about the victims.

    The media, it seemed, were loath to reward the violence with infamy.

    For once, they didn’t want to be accused of paying too much attention to evil and not enough attention to its victims.

    And to my utter shock, as someone who has traced the steps of many lunatics in the hours before they went off the deep end, I agreed with that.

    Still reeling from the crazy dyed-hair mugshot of James Holmes after the Aurora shootings, freshly bombarded with Jared Lee Loughner’s face leering at us from the courtroom coverage of Gabby Giffords attack, the media was obviously declining to go there again.

    Maybe they didn’t have the staff, but I find that impossible to believe. They find the reporters when they need them.

    Maybe they didn’t have the stomach for it. Wrong again. Believe me, it’s a lot harder to cover the crying parents than it is to cover the dead guy who hurt them.

    The media made a decision, simple and clear. They didn’t glorify the shooter. They chose not to tell his story. As a former cops reporter and a lifer in the news business, I can’t overstate how big this is.

    Now in the days since, details of Adam Lanza’s life is trickling out, alongside theories about how to prevent this from happening again.

    He played lots of Call of Duty (as does my husband) and is thought to have had Asperger Syndrome (as do many), and his mom liked guns (I have a photo of my mom firing an AR-15).

    The media made a decision, simple and clear. They didn’t glorify the shooter. They chose not to tell his story.

    It tells us a little, but not much. I’m sure there will be more. The media, which has no shortage of reporters when the chips are down, is just now getting around to that story. And you can bet that they haven’t forgotten.

    But.

    Remember how much we knew about Holmes in the first day after his attack? Remember Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris, the Columbine shooters? The incredible journalists in Colorado had their story told before the week ended.

    But the taste for the attacker’s story has soured this time around. In fact, with the exception of us who are trained to ask those questions, all of society seems to want to silence the violence in the wake of Sandy Hook.

    I’m not talking about gun control. I’m talking about violence in the media and its effect on our society. It’s an idea I once scoffed at, back when I was making straight A's in high school while listening to Metallica and, later, writing about police chases and gang shootings and murders all the time.

    We, I told myself, were not to blame for this. But even I am now forced to listen to the silence, as rings out across our never-quite-peaceful country.

    The preview for Quentin Tarantino’s new shoot-em-up was cancelled after Sandy Hook. Ke$ha’s song, "Die Young," has been yanked from the airwaves. Facebook and Twitter are filled with calls for parents to return the violent video games they’ve bought for their kids and bypass bloody movies.

    But while the decrying of violence in the media is nothing new, what seems new this time is that the media is agreeing with it.

    It seems counterintuitive, at first, to decline to tell any part of the story. Like it or not, the media has a job, and that’s to tell the story. To make sense of the shooting. To tell us, the public, who this guy was and what on earth he was thinking when he shot up an elementary school and killed 20 little kids.

    But while the decrying of violence in the media is nothing new, what seems new this time is that the media is agreeing with it.

    We’ve spent decades listening to readers hate us for doing that, while consuming with ravenous appetites every last detail. But this time, maybe because there’s just been so many of them, we were able to leave it alone for a while.

    In another time, I might have raged at the TV and decried the softening of the media. Back when I was young and stupid and this nation didn’t have as many unthinkable episodes under its belt.

    Now, I see nothing wrong with letting it lie while we all absorbed the heartbreak and grieved alongside all those parents.

    How could we do that, you ask? That’s the easiest question of all.

    The shooter was dead. His story could wait.

    The stories of the families, and the children, and the outrage of a nation, was happening right now. It was the story that needed to be told.

    I can live with that.

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    news/city-life

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    Growth report

    Houston leads America in population growth for 2025, Census states

    John Egan
    Mar 30, 2026 | 12:30 pm
    Houston skyline
    Houston skyline
    undefined

    Imagine that the Houston metro area swallowed a city the size of Pearland in just one year. That’s essentially what happened from 2024 to 2025, with the Houston metro ranking first in the U.S. for population growth based on the number of people.

    New estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau show the 10-county Houston metro added 126,720 residents from July 1, 2024, to July 1, 2025. That’s just shy of Pearland’s roughly 133,000-resident tally.

    To calculate population, the Census Bureau counts births, deaths, new residents, and moved-away residents.

    Region’s population approaches eight million

    On July 1, 2025, the Houston metro’s population hovered slightly above 7.9 million, up 1.6 percent from the same time in 2024. In the very near future, the region’s population should break the eight million mark.

    This follows massive growth in the past 20 years. From 2005 to 2025, the region’s population soared by 39 percent. By comparison, the growth rate from 2021 to 2025 sat at nine percent.

    A forecast from the Texas Demographics Center indicates that under a middle-of-the-road scenario, the Houston metro’s population will reach nearly 8.5 million in mid-2030 and more than 9.5 million in mid-2040.

    Dan Potter, director of Rice University’s Houston Population Research Center, attributes much of the region’s population surge to people moving to the area from outside the U.S. In Harris County, this means a combination of military personnel returning home, people living or working overseas coming back to the U.S., and immigrants relocating to the U.S., he tells CultureMap.

    But Harris County fell short from 2024 to 2025 when it comes to people moving here from elsewhere in the U.S., according to Potter. Counties surrounding Harris County benefited from that trend, drawing new residents who preferred to settle in the suburbs.

    “The incredible pull and attraction of the Houston area is its economy, its people, and its affordability, and the significant growth that was observed in 2024 and again in 2025 speaks to the magnetism of the region,” Potter says. “That pull to Houston is too strong to be turned off overnight.”

    Cooling economy and immigration shifts slow down growth

    Whether looking at urban or suburban places, population growth in the Houston area slowed in 2025 and appears to be slowing even more this year, Potter says.

    “A cooling economy and changes to immigration policy are a one-two combination that could knock out the region’s population growth,” says Potter, citing the region’s addition of a less-than-expected 14,800 jobs in 2025 as an example.

    Weaker population growth may not be felt evenly across the metro area, according to Potter.

    A continuing influx of people from Houston to outlying counties such as Brazoria, Fort Bend, Liberty, Montgomery, and Waller could curb growth in Harris County, Potter said. Why? If the number of people arriving from other other countries flattens or even drops, then there could be “doughnut-style population growth for the next few years, where Harris County and Houston see declines while the suburban counties see an increase.”

    Harris County represents 40 percent of region’s population lift

    Houston-anchored Harris County accounted for almost 40 percent of the region’s population spike from 2024 to 2025. In one year, Harris County grew by 48,695 residents, or 1 percent, pushing its population past five million. That increase put Harris County in first place for numeric growth (rather than percentage growth) among all U.S. counties.

    From 2020 to 2025, Harris County’s growth rate was 6.6 percent. It remains the country’s third largest county based on population, behind Southern California’s Los Angeles County and Illinois’ Chicago-anchored Cook County.

    Harris County is on track to surpass Cook County in size in the near future. As of July 1, 2025, a nearly 150,000-resident gap separated population-losing Cook County and fast-growing Harris County.

    The Texas Demographics Center predicts Harris County’s population will be 5.37 million in mid-2030 and just short of six million in mid-2040.

    Suburban counties see significant population gains

    Harris County isn’t the only county in the area that experienced a growth spurt from 2024 to 2025:

    • Waller County’s population climbed 5.69 percent, winding up at 69,858. Its growth rate ranked second among U.S. counties.
    • Liberty County’s population rose 4.4 percent to 121,364, putting its growth rate in eighth place among U.S. counties.
    • Montgomery County gained 30,011 residents, with its population landing at 781,194. That placed it at No. 4 among U.S. counties for numeric growth.
    • Fort Bend County picked up 24,163 residents, arriving at a total of 975,191 and positioning it at No. 8 among U.S. counties for numeric growth. Fort Bend County, the region’s second largest county based on population, is projected to break the one million-resident mark by July 2030, according to the Texas Demographics Center.

    “Lower mortgage rates from 2009 to 2022 and the rise of remote work have made suburban housing more attractive, especially for families seeking affordability,” Pramod Sambidi, the Houston-Galveston Area Council’s assistant director of data analytics and research, said last year. “Additionally, suburban areas are seeing more multifamily developments than before the pandemic.”

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