Keep in mind that the population votes in elections for political persons and ballot propositions based on what they know (or think they know) about a given person or issue. If the only way to get truthful, factually accurate information is if one pays for that information upfront, you can bet that a whole lot more people will be voting in the future than are voting now on people and issues on which they have no access to truthful and factually accurate information because it is behind a pay wall. One of the U.S. founding Fathers (I think it was Thomas Jefferson but I may well be wrong) once said that (and I'm paraphraising) if you expect to hold on to a democratic republic when citizens of that republic do not have true and accurate facts before entering the voting booth, you are seeking something that has never been, is not now, and will never be.
This is why I'm so concerned about some of @The BigA's responses on this thread. The idea that saving current media by turning it into a mouthpiece for the current federal Administration without fact-checking his statements and criticizing his decisions (such as invading another country) will pull us away from the philosophical thinking expressed by the founders of this nation, especially with regard to the separation of political power and the role of the citizenship.
Or, so it seems to me, (to copy an ending I've seen from another poster.)...