Posted on 04/15/2007 9:46:22 AM PDT by LdSentinal
The now-infamous Names in boxes memo at the AJC came out Thursday and, in the words of one staffer, it so emotionally devastated the newsroom that its a miracle an edition of the paper was printed that evening.
Essentially, the memo lays out which jobs are going to be kept under the papers re-structuring. More importantly, it also conveys which jobs arent going to be kept. About half the staff had their names in the box. The rest are going to have to apply for new jobs within the newsroom and the fear is, of course, that if you dont receive a job, youll be fired.
Staffers and former staffers say it was like being hit by a shock and awe mission. One person e-mailed: I had a friend that gathered a bunch of ppl and they all drank in her apartment, versus going to [a] 6pm meeting to explain the changes. No one that I know felt like feeling the sting further - they wanted to drink it off.
Another e-mailed: Got lots of depressed drunken txts from colleagues last night. Its really awful in the newsroom this week.
The word is the AJC will now depend on wire services for the bulk of its movie reviews (you prefer Curt Holman and Felicia Feaster anyway, right?) and will retain the services of just one music writer. The health/science coverage will be cut back to one reporter.
Heres what were hearing in terms of the breakdown on some of the jobs that will be kept and those that wont:
The metro and sports departments are largely intact. So is design and photo. However, the paper will no longer have a NASCAR reporter or a golf writer. The theory is that despite the Masters and the PGAs THE TOUR Championship at East Lake, plus the two NASCAR races here, there isnt enough news on those beats to justify having reporters assigned to them.
The science/medicine team will be disbanded and one reporting position will now cover that beat. From that team, Mike Toner, the only AJC reporter with a Pulitzer on his mantle, took the buyout. Gayle White, Alison Young, Bill Hendrick and Andy Miller could all compete for that beat.
Ironically, Youngs last story on the CDC, published last week, was about how the agency hired ombudsmen to address poor employee morale, complaints about a massive reorganization and an exodus of key staff that sparked concern among members of Congress and five former CDC directors.
The papers features and business departments will be most affected by the re-organization and, in the words of one staffer, will be playing 52-card pick-up for jobs. For example, there will be only one music writer when the dust settles. The two writers currently on the music beat, Sonia Murray and Nick Marino, will apparently compete for that one job.
The movie section comes out even worse. The papers highly respected lead critic, Eleanor Ringel Gillespie, took the buyout. The plan now is to rely primarily on wire services for movie reviews with remaining critic Bob Longino filling in the gaps. Steve Murray must apply for another position.
The Peach Buzzs Rich Eldridge is safe. However, his cohorts Rodney Ho (who covers radio) and Jill Vejnoska (who covers television) must compete for a single job. Two reporters with very specialized beats are also without set jobs: Cathy Fox, who covers visual arts, and Pierre Ruhe, who covers classical music.
Others now without a set job include business writers Tammy Joyner, Mike Kanell and Carrie Teegardin.
Word is there was much angst in the newsroom when the list was handed out: reporters hunting down senior editors to yell at them, others finding a corner in which to go and cry.
The turmoil will continue for at least six more weeks. The job re-application process isnt over until June 1.
When they catch their breath it’ll be Bush’ fault.
Did they really need a total of 9 reporters to cover Entertainment and the Arts? (2 pop music, 1 classical music, 3 movie, 1 radio, 1 TV, 1 visual arts)
It’s time these folks went out and worked for a living. We can share opinions about these topics on the Internet, for free!
They still have time to flush l'il Luckovich...
The objective/unbiased immature crayon scribbler...
Who is ADMITTEDLY the direct cause of many a cancelled home subscription...
Hey Mikey... don't the the screen door hit you in the ka-toosh on the way out...
And good riddance to the rest....
You abandoned your journalistic principles and the major mass of your subscribed audience to hold to liberal bias... extraordinary political partisanship, immaturity, race-baiting, Christian-bashing, and a non-stop overt promotion of the socialist/secular nanny-state...
Go tell your trubs to the Dim-Dhimmi-Dems...
Maybe they will find a handout...
I doubt they will care....
I certainly do not...
Congressman Billybob
Pinging the Dinosaur Media DeathWatch list with Sunday Good News!!
smart...
” Eleanor Ringel Gillespie took the buyout...”
Damn that’s some good schadenfreude.
Screw whitey!
What great way to end my day.....
Are they keeping that luntic Cynthia Tucker (editor of the opinion section of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution)?
In her capacity as editorial page editor, Tucker is responsible for guiding the development of the Journal-Constitution's opinion policies on everything from foreign policy issues to local school board races.
So how much does she get paid to call the Democrat National Committee and ask them what to print?
When I go grocery shopping there is always someone from the Arizona Republic who asks me if I would be interested in taking the paper. I just laugh and then they say "yes, I know"
Not trying to be a smart aleck, but since you know what a piece of crap that newspaper is, why buy even one copy? I know what The Washington Post is and when working in that fair city in the 1970’s I quit buying it even when there was no other Washington paper to buy.
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