Posted on 01/24/2019 8:04:39 AM PST by Zuben Elgenubi
Another brutal day for journalism.
Gannett began slashing jobs all across the country Wednesday in a cost-cutting move that was anticipated even before the recent news that a hedge-fund company was planning to buy the chain.
The cuts were not minor.
At the Indianapolis Star, three journalists were laid off, including well-known columnist Tim Swarens. At the Knoxville (Tennessee) News Sentinel, University of Tennessee womens basketball reporter Dan Fleser is out after more than 30 years in sports. The Tennessean cut three positions, including high school sports reporter Michael Murphy. Traci Bauer, executive editor of LoHud (New York), was let go.
Six were laid off at The Record in North Jersey after nine took an early retirement buyout earlier this month.
On and on it continued.
Four were let go at the Westchester (New York) Journal News. Four were let go at the Ventura County (California) Star. Five were let go at The Citizen Times in Asheville, North Carolina.
The Arizona Republic laid off two, including cartoonist Steve Benson, the 1993 Pulitzer Prize winner for cartooning and a finalist for the award four other times.
News of the layoffs leaked out on Twitter and across newsrooms on Wednesday afternoon and continued well into the night, with reports of cuts at the Corpus Christi (Texas) Caller-Times, the Argus Leader in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, the Fort Myers (Florida) News-Press and USA Todays travel section. Its still unclear how many journalists and how many news outlets were impacted. Gannett did not respond to a request for comment.
So, do Wednesdays cuts have anything to do with the a possible sale of Gannett to Digital First Media? Probably not.
I dont know how many newsroom jobs Gannett is cutting, but the move it is hardly surprising with a bad fourth quarter financially to be reported soon and more of the same expected for the first part of 2019, said Rick Edmonds, media business analyst for Poynter. These cost reductions are typically planned at the end of the year, then carried out in January. So I doubt the layoffs and buyouts have anything to do with the Digital First takeover bid.
However, Bernie Lunzer, president of The NewsGuild-CWA, laid the blame partly on Digital First Media.
In a statement to Poynter, Lunzer wrote, Gannett is choosing the low road here a direct result of the hostile efforts at a takeover by Digital First Media. DFM is once again causing grievous harm to an industry it pretends to be a steward of. Both companies have lost sight of the critical product they are meant to provide journalism. Newsrooms that could be preserved are being decimated for Wall Street when there are productive paths forward. Lets find a way to sell these properties to the communities they serve before its too late.
Whom to blame didnt make the news any less depressing for those in the business and, particularly, those impacted.
Jaci Smith, who worked at the News Journal Media Group in Delaware, tweeted:
25 years in the industry and its over after a 10-minute chat in a sterile conference room. My heart aches for journalism and all my fellow #gannett colleagues who were laid off today. #journalismmatters
Kristi Nelson, president of the Knoxville Newspaper Guild, told the State of Newspapers, Its distressing to once again be mourning staff cuts in our newsroom. Not only do our hearts go out to our colleagues, we acknowledge that the loss of any trained, professional journalist is a loss to our readers as well; one less voice speaking on behalf of the community we cover.
Nelson said the News Sentinel has lost more than 45 journalists and editors through layoffs and early retirement buyouts since 2007. Also included in Wednesdays cuts were content strategist Amy McDaniel and Charlie Daniel, a cartoonist who had been at the paper since 1982 and has been writing and drawing cartoons in Knoxville for 50 years.
There is no way to overstate the impact of these Gannett-wide cuts on our ability to cover the community with the depth and breadth we expect and that our readers deserved, Nelson said. While those of us still in the newsroom remain committed to cover this region the very best we can with the resources we have left, we have to ask: How many more?
In Indianapolis, Swarens tweeted out:
I was told a few minutes ago that @indystar has laid me off. Im in shock. Not how I wanted 35 year journalism career to end.
Another big name is out at the IndyStar: writer and editor Amanda Kingsbury, a 10-year veteran of the paper, according to the Indianapolis Business Journal. Just a few weeks ago, six longtime IndyStar employees took buyouts.
On her Facebook page, Kingsbury wrote a lengthy touching post despite being laid off. In it, she wrote:
I know it sounds cliche, but please support your local journalists by subscribing. Try to overlook the typos. And all the ads that slow down your reading experience.
She went on to write that without the work of the IndyStar, former USA Gymnastics doctor Larry Nassar would still be molesting young women. She concluded by urging people to subscribe to the paper, with a link to how to subscribe.
Dont tell me you cant afford it, she wrote.
The layoffs also reached the Democrat and Chronicle in Rochester, New York. Reporter Sean Lahman tweeted out:
Layoffs at Gannett papers across the county today, including here in Rochester.
Wednesdays news comes just two weeks after Gannett received an unsolicited proposal to be bought by MNG Enterprises, better known as Digital First Media. Gannett owns USA Today and 109 other local media companies. Digital First, which owns the Denver Post and Boston Herald among other papers, wants to buy Gannett for $1.36 billion.
Correction: An earlier version of this story included information about buyouts at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, which is not a Gannett property.
Gannett has not had journalists in years. They’ve had lots of leftist advocates playing journalist.
Propaganda doesn’t pay like it use to.
What’s a socialist with a undergrad in English, another undergrad in ethnic studies, and a masters in medieval woman’s literature and $500K in student loans going to do?
Youve got that right. Here in Cincinnati, the Equierer actually supported Hillary, the first time in its history that they didn't support a Republican candidate. Now it anti-Trump every day. I stopped subscription 10 years ago.
My local newspaper is a liberal rag.
I hear 7/11 is hiring.
I know the pain of working almost 20 years for a company and then get laid off without so much as a ‘thank you’. It does hurt.
However, I don’t understand how much denial these people are in. Can a town seriously survive without a newspaper cartoonist? Or a womens sports reporter?
The industry is dying because it failed to adapt. I haven’t picked up a newspaper to read in a long, long time. I, frankly, was glad to no longer be hostage to one-sided liberal reporting when I quit my subscription back in the 1990s.
My career has been a bumpy one since my 2010 layoff but the good news is retirement is not far away, likely another 18 months or so. I just have to find one more job and hang onto it until then.
Not true. Me too.
The audience for these papers are the people who do not have cable but watch tv over public airwaves. In otherwords, poor dependent citizens who they try to influence their vote every single day.
I didn’t even try. Today’s “Journalists” are Satan’s minions.
Syracuse University has the Newhouse School of Journalism, founded by Newhouse who owned the Gannett chain. They graduate hundreds of kids every year into an industry that is collapsing into itself. What a scam.
Gannett has JOURNALISTS to lay off?
You would think journalists on the take being used to do the government’s illegal dirty work would be story priority #1 among journalists? But apparently not?
Makes one wonder why anyone would want to invest in the newspaper business?
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If the purchase includes the buildings and land that might be valuable enough. But yeah, newspapers are not a 21st century investment.
I hope these people like working at Burger King or as baristas because there isn’t a whole lot else they are qualified for.
I know a guy like this. Went to high school with him. Over thirty years with a large daily paper that ceased publication. No idea what he’s doing now but I’m sure his situation isn’t pretty.
You know, I used to like reading David Ignatius. He seemed to be really in the know and reported on serious issues involving national relationships. Now I believe he's a mouthpiece for the CIA.
Michael Issakoff is clearly a mouthpiece for the FBI, with his Yahoo report that the FBI cited to initiate the FISA warrant.
Newspapers are a great investment if your other businesses depend on you molding public opinion.
The old saw about picking a fight with someone who buys ink by the tanker-load is gone.
The new material is electrons and EVERYBODY has them...even blog-pimps [spit!].
Good luck to you, FRiend.
Bingo
Good question.
I bet no journalists will be laid off...........................................
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