Posted on 05/01/2007 7:28:05 AM PDT by Valin
James Lileks and Hugh discuss why newspapers are broken and bleeding, and provide a little free advice on how to fix it
HH: Joining me early this week because Ill be in Simi Valley for the big debate on Thursday is James Lileks, he of the Minneapolis Star Tribune and of www.lileks.com. He got mad at me. I read that web entry about your dog. I mean, thats terrible, James.
JL: What did I say? I read that. I couldnt figure out if you thought that I was describing your world
HH: Thats what I thought. I mean, thats
JL: Yes, well, that was a little unfortunate pronoun problem there.
HH: Pronoun trouble.
JL: I did not mean to say you or any of your associates mark your territory in the same fashion as the canine.
HH: It was terrible, awful. Was it the Hummels?
JL: Yes, of course.
HH: Okay, listen, Ive got two journalism stories that I really want to go over with you. The first is ABC News decision to follow its occasionally, well see some sheriff somewhere publish the list of the johns, and it lasts about a month, because then, everyone in town gets creeped out, and hates it, and doesnt want to know. ABC News is going to do this with who knows how many of 12,000 phone numbers. What do you think?
JL: Well, it does shake your faith in the Madame-American community, doesnt it?
HH: Yes, it does (laughing).
JL: You know, hell, its been led to believe this sort of thing would be kept between consenting adults, but apparently not. I can see why shes doing what shes doing. And is it germane generally? No. But a couple of issues do surface. One, if we dont get all of the names, then we can just assume that theyre cherry-picking.
HH: Yes.
JL: And I dont see why we would be stupid to realize otherwise. But two, there I dont think the names should be released, except, and I hate to say this, but it has to be said, if somebody, a politician, was engaged in a 30 year career against legalization of prostitution, I think it would be germane to know whether or not that person actually
HH: I actually broader. I will go to public figures.
JL: And I will go to public figures, too, especially if somebodys been out there preaching abstinence, for example, and drawing down a hefty salary, and spending $500 million dollars of government money to promote it here and abroad, and that person shows themselves incapable of having demonstrated restraint in their own life on a regular basis. Thats germane.
HH: And because when you ask for someones vote, youre making an implied contract about character.
JL: Right.
HH: And my guess is that everyone whos an elected official, or wanted to be one, or in the government, probably has a problem here. But what about ABC News?
JL: Well, hold on a second. But it is a slippery slope, because then you can say that anybody who has held themselves up as a moral character, or even said that we need to have certain set of morals to be prominent in the society, now is that person going to be
HH: Well, no, heres how I have a firewall there. A) if youre elected, youve asked for votes, and B) if youre a senior political official at any time, you have signed a statement saying theres nothing else in your background to embarrass the president who appointed you.
JL: And I generally agree.
HH: And so that
JL: The unfortunate thing, however, is that this will be used by people who will attempt to discredit the very notion of there being moral standards
HH: Right.
JL: by showing the feet of clay of the people who proclaim these ideas, as if somehow the hypocrisy and the crooked timber of which men are made somehow invalidates the general idea itself.
HH: But heres the issue. These are not necessarily crimes, and I dont know if theyve checked it out yet with everyone whos on this list. And I, the idea that ABC has turned into kind of a Stasi, and thats what it is. Have you seen the movie yet, The Lives of Others?
JL: No, but its more of a yeah, I know what you mean. Its the be caught in an Increase Mather approach to public life.
HH: Exactly, and I just think its creepy as can be. Now, does ABC
JL: Well, as I was telling your screener, and I love to say that, because its the thing people love to here on talk radio, as I was telling Duane, I think its entirely possible that a lot of these people actually just ponied up a hundred dollars an hour to talk about their jobs, because theyre so self-obsessed with the things, and nobody else wants to hear about the particulars of the policy. You might actually have to pay some guy to listen, and ooh and ah, and pretend to be bothered and hot by the fact that youre talking about marginal tax rate tables.
HH: You know, theres a movie somewhere with that device in it. I cant remember what it is. Hey, now, tell me about the second story, the Armenian genocide story.
JL: Yeah, that interests me a lot, because its like listening to, its like listening to the cardinals of Rome debate a high, moral issue, the self-seriousness and the importance is just choking.
HH: Wait a second. Adam corrected me. I have to find out if you are Armenian before I invite your opinion on it.
JL: (laughing) I am not its Lileks, not Lileksian.
HH: Okay, it could have been. Many of those are shortened.
JL: Yeah, but I had Armenian friends, you know, and I learned I knew nothing about the genocide until they told me about it. And the idea that youd have to disbar somebody because they have an actual knowledge of a historical fact, I find amusing. But again, as you were saying, its the self-satisfied nature and the importance of it, that our calling is somehow going to be called into account when anybody who reads the paper with a mindset that is outside the bubble in which they live, is able to detect the ways in which they are unaware of their biases on a regular, daily basis. So its just, the idea that theyre Simon pure, and that the tincture of taint into their precious waters cannot go unchecked, I think is ridiculous.
HH: Well now, there is another story over at L.A. Observed, that people are calling into question whether or not, I think its from L.A. Observed, the editor who killed it had lived in Turkey.
JL: Uh-huh.
HH: And that therefore was pro-Turk.
JL: Yeah.
HH: And its possible, but again, it doesnt really matter. Its just so silly. Everyone should answer every question. Let me ask you, James, about these circulation numbers that are out today. Your newspaper took another hit, the Dallas Morning News went down 15%.
JL: I know, I know.
HH: What is that 14.3, I want to be accurate, the Minneapolis Star Tribune down 4.9, the L.A. Times, 4.2, the Washington Post 3.5, Newsday 6.9. Only the New York Post went up. What are they running around the newsroom trying to figure out what to do?
JL: Well, I was there today, and people were not curled up in a little fetal ball. They were just worried about getting the paper out for the next day. But if I was to intuit anything from what I feel, and Im not sitting around in the high level meetings, I think theres a certain amount of inability to grasp exactly how to stanch the bleeding. I dont think they know. I dont think they know how to do it, because its what theyre up against is demographic its a double whammy. Theyre up against a demographic loss, and theyre up against a competing technology. So you either have to come up with a way to fix the demographic gap, and our paper is doing that by coming out with a tabloid thats designed specifically in a particular market, and weve got a pretty popular website that makes money, so theyve got that going for them. And the more they try to shift to the website, the happier, frankly, I am, because thats going to be the future, period.
HH: And they cant keep doing, though, what they have been doing, can they?
JL: Well, the thing is, they dont know what it is that theyre doing thats driving people away, and Im not exactly sure that it is. I mean, there are things in my daily paper that drive me nuts, too, but the idea of not subscribing would be like the idea of sawing off my hand. Im still going to subscribe to the daily paper, because I need to know what goes on in my town.
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HH: All right, James, number one, I want to hear your three big fixes for newspapers which are bleeding out.
JL: Number one is to go intensely local, and Ive said this before and before again. When I want to know whats going on in the world, for example, in the Middle East, Im going to go read the Michaels Im going to read Michael Yon, Im going to read Michael Ledeen, Im going to read Michael Totten. And if you go to our editorial page in our paper, you know, weve got Garrison Keillor talking about how much he hates the current occupant. A little more heat than light, exactly.
HH: Yup.
JL: So I would just stop trying to be a lesser edited down version of the New York Times, and assume that canny news consumers know where to get it. And frankly, if youre going to lose a certain portion of the demographic that does know how to get news on the web, youre just going to have to cut them loose. And youre going to get far more people to stick with the paper if you go intensely local. In the old days, and I hate to hold up the 30s as a model for anything, but in the 1930s, the Minneapolis Star was a tabloid, and it was hard hitting, and it had big, huge, screaming headlines, and it was a joy to read. What they did was they just simply blanketed the city. They sent a lot of people out, and guys came back with a couple of stories every day, and banged them out. They werent worried about journalism as art. They werent worried about the first draft of history. They were worried about telling the story of the town, of the people who lived there. And theres no real other media organization that has that ability. A television cant do it. Television is sensational, and they dont have the time. Bloggers can do it, but they have too diffuse an audience. Weve got newspapers, people who can write, people who know how to put stories together, and photographers and vehicles, and all the infrastructure to disseminate this story of the city. So why try to be the New York Times and tell us exactly whats going on elsewhere? Put a little page of national and world briefs if you like, but flip the A and the B section, and make the front part of the paper the front part of the town. Thats the first thing. The second thing I would do, and its just purely personal, I would eliminate the unsigned editorial positions.
HH: Amen.
JL: Because even though people can say that well, theyre, they dont represent the paper, of course they represent the paper. And its almost impossible for the opinions that they have not to bleed into every single, into the reputation of everybody else who works there, because otherwise, people safely assume you hired them, you print them, you must agree with them. It just doesnt work. And the day has come, and its so Olympian, the idea of this brain trust set off somewhere in some rarified room, where they steeple their fingers together and cogitate on the great matters, and then come down from the mount with their tablets. Thats never mind. Have a bunch of syndicated columnists, run as many as you like, balance them, make sure that youve got one of one, and one of the other side, but eliminate the unsigned editorial position.
- - - -
HH: I want to throw a few at you now, James.
JL: All right, shoot.
HH: One, these newspapers have archives. They charge for them.
JL: Yes.
HH: In fact, its a secret weapon to bring readers to their website, but theyve got to learn how to use them, not only making them easily available for people who stay on the website to peruse them, thus adding page views for advertisers, but organizing them in a way that makes it fun for people to live in the past when they want to, not paying three bucks a throw to get to a particular story. Your thoughts?
JL: Its an amazing historical artifact, our archives. As a matter of fact, Ive done a little bit about that myself. Ive for many years now, have been taking some photographs of the old Minneapolis downtown for my website, with their permission, mind you, and putting together a historical record. Nobody else has though to do that. As a matter of fact, back in the 80s, I believe, a huge amount of old, historical photographs were thrown out for space considerations, and it just makes you weep. But theres still so much of the history of the city back in those things. I would love to see that stuff. Of course, its incredibly labor intensive, because the morgues, the clips downstairs, would have to be scanned and filed. But you know, thats a heck of a job that you can get a college intern to do for pennies on the dollar.
HH: Yes, number two so A) I was telling my friend who works at the L.A. Times that if they really want to capture high repeat usage, theyll put every story every written about USC football in one place, and make it easy to manipulate, so that all the USC nutters will go there. My other I said, you know, I would love to be able to see the contemporaneous reviews of every movie ever done, so that if I want to see what they thought of the Godfather when it came out, Id go to L.A. Times.com, and click on the original Godfather review. Theres stuff like that in every newspaper archive, which is unique to it, that no ones exploiting to bring people and eyes, and keep them there for long periods of time.
JL: Well, youd have to break peoples right now, peoples patterns take them to IMDB or to Amazon to see reviews. I mean, thats where I go sometimes when I want to see what people are saying about movies. But I would love to see, youre right, what somebody had said about the movie when it first came out, if only for historical interest, to hear somebody panning 2001 as long and bloated and boring. You know, you could have a good chuckle over that. Theres just so much good stuff back there. Thats just it. And every time that I take out the microfiche reels at the paper, and thread them through the machine, and I have to cut off another inch because theyve chipped, and they cant quite fit in the machinery, I feel this small, little piece of history in my hand thats flaking away, literally, and wondering exactly whether or not anyones going to get to it and save it and digitize it, and put it all online. Now those are good value added things. But theres something else fundamental, since you forced me to come up with three reasons, as opposed to my usual two. I thought what might that be, and unfortunately, its something I dont think theyll ever do. But, I would take either anonymously or otherwise, a comprehensive survey of the attitudes of people who work in newspapers, in every single aspect of newspaper production, from the editors to the writers to the people who lay it out, etc. And I would learn exactly what they thought almost about everything.
HH: Yup.
JL: And then I would compare that to what we know about the community in which we live, and find out whether or not we have a mindset that accurately reflects the community were trying to serve, because I talk to people all the time, and they detect an anti-suburban bias. They detect an anti-car bias, an anti-sprawl. I mean, the very fact that the world sprawl is now a pejorative, as opposed to growth, how do these things affect what we say? Because its not what Ive said this time and again, its not as though anyone ever sits down and says how do we do Lenins bidding today? Thats not now it works. Its just as Rumsfeld put it, there are the knowns, and there are the unknowns that they dont know. And when you dont know, sometimes, the assumptions that other people have, you make mistakes. You say things that betray a position which may not be as widely held as you believe. And Im sure the left and the right can hammer the paper for the same reason. And as a publication put together by fallible human beings, thats only wise and fair. But I would still like to see whether or not its true that the actual ideology that dominates the newsroom is that of the city. And by the city, I mean not just the important core city, but the far flung sprawl, which is actually the market that weve got to be nailing down.
HH: Let me ask you about a couple of other I agree with that. This goes to it. At the Festival of Books, I also argued that every single article online should have a counter with it, because the data of who reads what would tell you an enormous amount, and maybe theyve got that inside the newsroom, and theyre hiding it to keep their bad and terrible stories from being written, but customers would respond to it as well. Now we see the most e-mailed lists all over the place.
JL: Yeah.
HH: But I think all of that data matters.
JL: Yeah, I do, too. Most e-mailed, Im convinced that people e-mail stories to other people to tweak them, that most of it consists of mailing, youre e-mailing your brother-in-law, and saying see? See?
HH: Yeah. Now I want to get to my most important one, see what you think about this. Theres a bell curve in every organization, including a newsroom, correct?
JL: Right.
HH: Would you, if you were the managing editor, or the editor of the Strib, identify your top ten percent, and assign them to write on the web exclusively?
JL: Thats interesting. No, because that would diminish the core brand, and the brand right now is still the newspaper. And that, unfortunately, is going to be the case until they are forced to do things that they dont want to do, because newspapers right now have these legacy things that they cant dump. They take out huge amounts of space, like television grids. Explain to me why, for example, a newspaper is obligated to run the television grid, but you know, you take that thing out, and the phones will ring more than if you had dumped Cathy, for example. And its the same thing with the movie grid. These things are so instantly available online
HH: Right.
JL: youd think that we could just say you know what, folks? Were in an era of diminishing resources. We would like to take this huge amount of space and devote it to something thats a little bit more useful. Youre going to have to get it elsewhere, because were no longer the sole provider of this information. Those days are over. But unfortunately, theres so much legacy built into the newspapers of what were obligated to provide by social contract, that its hard to do that. So if they take 10% of the top then writers, and stick them on the web, then A) those writers might not want to go, B) the paper might feel well, okay, what does that make us then, the bottom 90, I guess. And you would just be diminishing what is still
HH: You could repurpose, you can repurpose a lot of their content, though. If youre writing something for the web, it doesnt mean it doesnt show up in the newspaper. It might show up in the newspaper. But I also think, James, if it was the car industry in the 70s, when it was dying, the last thing you do is take your best engineers and design artists, and put them on tweaking the Dodge Dart sport. You have them go out and create new products to save your market share while you get, you know, all the good, solid engineers to tweak the existing products. But if youre not, if the futures the web, and it is, theyve got to put their best people there, or youll never get the chance again.
JL: Or at least incentivize it, to use a horrible word, for them to go there. I agree. I mean, shock therapy is whats needed, incremental steps arent going to do it. Incremental steps will just slow the bleeding, and the newspaper is still stuck in an old idea of what it was, partially because that image is valid. We are the major producer of detailed news about the community to the community. But the means of transmission of information have changed so much, and its like I say, theyre sort of caught between having to do what theyve always done, and knowing theyve got to adjust to this new thing. But if you look at any newspaper website, is it a pleasant thing to behold?
HH: No. Its horrible.
JL: No, and none of them are. And even though ours is very clean and very nice and has a unified graphic look thats the product of many talented people, I still find most newspaper websites to be an eye-bleeding, unpleasant experience, as opposed to the average blog, which for some reason, is just simply much more easy to read. Why is that?
HH: Have you been following Homicide Blog of the L.A. Times?
JL: No, I havent. I will now.
HH: They have assigned a reporter, an experienced homicide reporter, to write about every single homicide that occurs.
JL: And thats brilliant.
HH: It is brilliant.
JL: Thats absolutely brilliant.
HH: It will spread all over the country. Shes already had calls from like Houston, et cetera, because its something that no one has ever been able to do, but now they have the space to do it, and people are obsessing over it. Its very sad.
JL: When people get their local newspaper around here, the little community paper, everybody, you know, will check to see whats on the front cover, maybe look at the letters, but the real meat is the crime reports.
HH: Yup.
JL: And theres no reason why we just cant put every single piece of crime report up on the web.
HH: Agreed.
JL: I mean, theres all these things that we can do, and theres eyeballs waiting to go to them, and theres advertisers waiting to go for those pages.
HH: And theres no reason why every city council meeting in every city that a paper touches, doesnt have a stringer, who will probably do it for free
JL: Right.
HH: and could be trained to do it the right way.
JL: But youre also taking resources away from the main product, and people will tell you that when you do that, then what happens when your circulation goes down another five, six, seven percent? Then you have to pull people off, and put them back into the main product. I mean, it literally, its like trying to put out a car and a horse. I mean, they both get you someplace, but theyre completely different creatures.
HH: Yeah, but let me ask you. Has anyone at your paper talked to you about what to do?
JL: (laughing) No, Ive been sort of trying to get some sort of cross-brand synergy going for about ten years or so, and one of these days, maybe we will. But www.lileks.com has worked out so well for me. It spun off four books, now, and the readership and all the other joys of it, that Im sort of wondering exactly why I would want to move.
HH: No, Im just thinking to myself that here in their midst, that part of the problem is they dont know the questions to ask, and they dont know who to ask them of. And if I mean, youre a very successful presence on the internet. I cant believe they havent asked you. Now I have two more quick questions that have nothing to do with anything. Do you read Bill Bryson?
JL: Time and again, yes. Ive read some of his stuff. I know the book youre referring to, the memoir of growing up in the 50s.
HH: Yeah, do you think hell be good on the radio?
JL: I have no idea.
HH: All right, number two. Who should replace Rosie ODonnell?
JL: Who should oh, well, not Roseanne Barr, actually.
HH: No, I agree with that.
JL: Although they wont have to no, Im going to stop. Nobody. No, I take that back. Michelle Malkin would actually flay these people alive. To see her in a cage match with Joy Behar would end up with Behar chunks scattered about the room, because I think that Michelle Malkin is enough of a firebrand and a smart, quick wit
HH: I agree completely.
JL: that she could have a great time on the show.
HH: And shes on OReilly as we speak. Thank you very much, James Lileks. www.lileks.com.
End of interview.
The Los Angeles Times and The Minneapolis Star Tribune Bleeding Out
Townhall ^ | 4/20/07 | Hugh Hewitt
http://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1826353/posts
Posted on 04/30/2007 11:38:47 PM CDT by Valin
Here are the most recent circulation numbers. Notable:
Los Angeles Times, 815,723, down 4.2 percent
The Washington Post, 699,130, down 3.5 percent
Chicago Tribune, 566,827, down 2.1 percent
Dallas Morning News, 411,919, down 14.3 percent
Newsday, Long Island, 398,231, down 6.9 percent
Star Tribune of Minneapolis-St. Paul, 345,252, down 4.9 percent
(snip)
- to them, there is no such thing as a bad Democrat or a good Republican
- American forces are bad, bad, bad!
- diversity trumps news
- they don't report news any more, just editorialize
- with alternatives such as talk radio and the internet, those who do pay attention to the news no longer will buy their BS!
I would ove to see that!
Maybe I should pitch to the networks a daily talk show with Michelle and Ann Coulter co-hosting. See the exec heads explode!
The people I work with won’t let me read the paper anymore...they will allow me to read the sports and comics page. I don’t understand why they’d do this, at first I thought it might have something to do with my 2 hour rants, but that couldn’t have anything to do with it....could it?
Lileks Bump!
Thanks so much for the ping! I’m not sure I understand the references in the first part of the interview, but it was entertaining nonetheless.
Lileks RULES!
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