Communications Industry News
How can Hollywood Reporter afford $1M a year for a gossip writer?
Sharon Waxman asks the question after reading about the Hollywood Reporter's offer to Page Six editor Richard Johnson. "I've left several messages and emails for [THR editor] Janice Min about this and other articles in the works. She is apparently not speaking to me."
Twitter breaks story on Discovery Channel gunman
TV can offer live pictures of an event like Wednesday's hostage situation, notes Paul Farhi, "but for raw speed and real-time eyewitness accounts, it's now virtually impossible for the mainstream media to keep pace with the likes of Twitter." || David Heyman: CNN was first with its suspect-in-custody e-mail.
> Bloggers scold WP for covering TBD logo on live feed
Media Lunch: Richard Hillgrove, founder, Hillgrove PR
The venue: The Thomas Cubitt, in Elizabeth Street, Belgravia. It was recommended to me by a diary editor, who told me that everyone was going there. It's much better than a typical gastro-pub.
Stig wins court fight to reveal his identity
The name of Top Gear's stunt driver has been revealed to the world after Ben Collins – known on the television show as The Stig – won a High Court ruling against the BBC yesterday. Mr Collins, 35, Top Gear's incognito racing driver for the past seven years, has written an autobiography that the BBC tried to prevent being published, claiming Collins signed a confidentiality contract when he joined the show.
BP's media spend attacked in House
BP said it has spent more than $5m (£3.3m) a week on advertising since the Gulf Coast oil spill – more than three times the amount it spent during the same period last year.
Stig wins court fight to reveal his identity
The name of Top Gear's stunt driver has been revealed to the world after Ben Collins – known on the television show as The Stig – won a High Court ruling against the BBC yesterday. Mr Collins, 35, Top Gear's incognito racing driver for the past seven years, has written an autobiography that the BBC tried to prevent being published, claiming Collins signed a confidentiality contract when he joined the show.
Has Rupert Murdoch's paywall gamble paid off?
As the fugitive businessman Asil Nadir flew back to Britain from his North Cyprus bolt-hole last week, Sean O'Neill, the crime editor of The Times, scooped Fleet Street by being the only print journalist on the plane. Yet those searching Google for the latest on the breaking story that morning would have found no sign of O'Neill's exclusive – only follow-up stories by rival news organisations such as The Guardian and ITN.
Ryder Cup coverage in doubt over BBC strike
The BBC's plans for covering the political party conference season were thrown into chaos yesterday when staff voted emphatically to strike over proposed changes to their pensions. The planned industrial action is also set to disrupt coverage of next month's Ryder Cup golf tournament.
Media Lunch: Richard Hillgrove, founder, Hillgrove PR
The venue: The Thomas Cubitt, in Elizabeth Street, Belgravia. It was recommended to me by a diary editor, who told me that everyone was going there. It's much better than a typical gastro-pub.
Annie Nightingale: The first lady of Radio 1
Radio 1, your boys took one hell of a beating. Emperor Rosko, Tony Blackburn, Fluff Freeman, Ed Stewart, Pete Murray and the rest of the all-male presenting team that launched Radio 1 in 1967, have one-by-one parted company with the network. But Annie Nightingale is still there.
Figuring out who is placed where on VF's power list and why is mind-boggling
How can Charlie Rose (left) be rated (#62) as more powerful than CBS CEO Leslie Moonves (#64) and Viacom boss Philippe Dauman (#67)? "Let's see," writes Joe Flint, "Rose has a highbrow TV show that few watch, while Moonves and Dauman operate major media conglomerates whose influence is felt worldwide." || Peter Lattman "Pooh-pooh these rankings all you want, but...
Hall to retire as Orlando Sentinel editor on Oct. 1
Charlotte Hall, who turns 65 on Sept. 30, became editor of the Tribune-owned Sentinel in March 2004, replacing Tim Franklin. Before joining the Orlando paper, she worked at Newsday for 22 years at Newsday and departed as managing editor.
AP issues new crediting and attribution guidelines
AP's rule on attributing facts its reporters haven't gathered or confirmed on their own is this: "We should provide attribution whether the other organization is a newspaper, website, broadcaster or blog; whether or not it's U.S. based; and whether or not it's an AP member or subscriber." PLUS: More rules.
Philly union says Tierney-could-return rumor is false
Date: Wed, Sep 1, 2010 at 12:41 PM
Subject: An update on closing, an attempt at rumor control, and an invitation to the Labor Day Parade
Dear Guild member,
As you should have read by now, the closing date for the sale of the Daily News, Inquirer and Philly.com to Philadelphia Media Network, Inc. has been postponed to Sept. 14 in order to give the new company additional time to come to terms with several unions that have yet to ratify their agreements. Our contract will not take effect until the sale is completed and we will be certain to update the membership with any pertinent developments.
Let us take this opportunity to try and clear up a rumor that Brian Tierney started when he told employees at the Schuylkill Printing Plant that if a union fails to sign a contract with the new owners, he returns. While this has spread like wildfire, it is not true.
Guild members have asked us if Mr. Tierney was behind local philanthropist Ray Perelman being paraded through 400 N. Broad Street on the day of our ratification vote last week. The answer is not clear although Inquirer Editor Bill Marimow told his staff in a news meeting that Perelman, who had partnered with Tierney and other insiders as the so-called Stalking Horse bidder during the auction, was looking at financial data in case the lenders didnt close and he had to step up to bid.
Bankruptcy Court Judge Stephen Raslavich, who according to a KYW Radio report warned against "gamesmanship" so late in the process, called a private conference in his chambers the following day after which Philadelphia Media Holdings CEO Joe Bondi gave a statement to the radio station that there was no Perelman bid.
But wait, you might say, I thought Tierney pledged to make this a smooth transition. Isn't he supposed to go away, stay quiet and collect his $300,000 "consulting" fee? Yes, that is what he agreed to. We can't say for certain that Tierney is working to delay and derail the closing process. However, as his departure settlement stipulates that he is to be paid through closing, and six months beyond, certainly there would be a financial motivation for him to do so. That fact coupled with his misleading workers into believing he magically returns if anything goes wrong with the sale, seem to suggest there could be gamesmanship at play.
Several other senior management officials, whom the new owners have pledged to pay for two months beyond closing, and who are involved in the contract and bankruptcy process, also potentially have a reason to sabotage negotiations and delay closing.
But enough about those who are standing in our way. Our members stepped up and voted overwhelmingly in support of a concessionary contract because we are committed to helping the new company and these newspapers succeed. We sincerely hope that after 18 months, this bankruptcy is coming to an end and we can all move forward into the future. Stay tuned for any updates.
While we have your attention, the Guild is looking for volunteers to march in Monday's Labor Day Parade along Columbus Boulevard. If you are interested in participating in the parade, which includes lunch and a t-shirt, please reply to this e-mail with your t-shirt size.
In solidarity,
Dan Gross, President,
Bill Ross, Executive Director, The Newspaper Guild of Greater Philadelphia/Communications Workers of America Local 38010
BP spent over $93 million on corporate advertising between April and July
That's three times the amount the company spent on ads during the same period last year. The Telegraph reported on Aug. 28 that BP spent at least $1 million a week on ads; the actual amount is over $5 million per week.
A journalist laughs at the thought that his layoff anniversary is worth a story, but...
London - For Michael Goldfarb each day begins as it always did up until July 2005. He wakes up an hour before his family, goes into his home office and reads his way through a minimum of five papers online making notes about possible stories to follow-up.
In other ways it is different. There is rarely a daily deadline to gear up for and no travel to a war zone to set up. There is work to do but it must be conjured up out of discipline or as the former public radio reporter puts it, "Routine is what gets people through prison, kidnapping, and rehabilitation from life threatening illness," he said in an interview with himself for this article. "It is the only thing that can get a person through being laid off."
We are walking in Springfield Park at the eastern edge of inner London near where he has made his home for almost twenty years. The park slopes steeply down to the River Lee, a narrow, embanked tributary of the Thames. Canal boats, canoes and sculls vie for space along the placid surface with a staggering variety of waterfowl. It is a slice of the English countryside that somehow has survived in the heart of the city.
The setting takes the edge off some painful reminiscences of what happened late one Friday evening exactly five years ago. Fifth anniversary look backs are a trope of journalism. The last one Michael Goldfarb did was in 2008 when he returned to northern Iraq to mark the fifth anniversary of the start of the war there. He laughs at the thought that his own anniversary is worth a story. But he is willing to tell it if it helps any of the thousands of other journalists who have been forced out of the business during the last few years.
The phone call came on a Friday, at the end of a grueling 24 hours when the reporter had been on the air at WBUR, the Boston NPR station, almost non-stop. A coordinated series of suicide bombing attacks on London's public transport system had left more than 50 people dead. Goldfarb covered the breaking news. A prescient documentary on Britain's jihadist groups he had done the year before - for which he won an Overseas Press Club Award - was being re-aired around the public radio system and he was doing interviews for other member stations.
When WBUR's news director got on the phone, Goldfarb admits he thought he was going to give him a pat on the back for a good day's work. Instead it was to tell him that after five years his position was being eliminated. That his job was under threat was not a surprise. The station had run up a $13 million dollar deficit, consultants Grant Thornton had been called in. But the announcement still provoked a visceral outburst.
"Blind rage. After more than a decade of miscarriages and IVF treatments my wife was two weeks from carrying our first baby to full term. The guys in Boston knew that. I was enraged that they would jeopardize the prospect of a healthy delivery with the kind of shock to the system that losing a job entails."
Goldfarb adds that other emotions that come with job loss - fear and bitterness - came later. "I imagine my story in outline is similar to thousands of others: I hired a lawyer, got a decent settlement and didn't think I had to rush into another situation. I wanted to consider other options. I got offered a job in LA, but the situation there wasn't quite what it seemed and it didn't pan out."
He spent time looking for teaching work. "I got asked whether I have a masters degree. I don't. When I suggested that in lieu of an MA they substitute 20 years of experience in which my work had won most of the major broadcast awards, plus a book that had just been named a New York Times Notable Book in lieu of an MA, I found that was not good enough."
By the time, the settlement money ran out he found himself in the riptide of journalism's Great Depression. "One by one foreign desks shut down. Today you can't get a minyan together for lunch at the American Association of Correspondents in London."
He rebuilt the freelance existence he had before going to work full-time with NPR in 1992. A contract to write a book titled "Emancipation" about the Jews coming out of the ghetto in 19th century Europe came with a decent advance and that provided a foundation. Making radio documentaries plus writing and reading essays for the BBC, work for Globalpost.com and the occasional voice-over filled in the rest.
"Emancipation" came out last autumn to good reviews but New York publishers are cutting back on serious non-fiction and no one has made an offer for his next proposal. "I feel like a cavalry officer who has had two horses shot out from under him in the same battle. Serious reporting, serious writing: where is the audience for it in America anymore? I know It's there, but the people who manage the news and book business have given up trying to serve it."
He writes every morning, regardless of having a book contract, but admits that there's a bit too much time to think about his career choice. The journalist confesses to occasionally second-guessing himself about whether he stayed in the business too long. He refers to two colleagues, "women I got to know covering the Balkans," who moved on from observation of events to participation in them one works for the Obama Administration. The other set up a kind of NGO.
"I understand what motivated them. Anyone who has covered our new world of war in which civilians, not enemy soldiers, are the main target has to be frustrated by the professional requirements of objective reporting. You often want to do something to help rather than just bear witness. I stayed with the job because I believe firmly in the educational function of journalism. I thought there was a profound social value in the work I did."
Goldfarb adds, "The questions Americans have had about the world since September 11th can't be answered by leaving the world uncovered."
He signed up with Globalpost.com before it launched because even if it didn't offer full-time employment, it offered an online platform to continue to educate Americans about the world.
Like everyone else connected to journalism Goldfarb spends a lot of time thinking about the changes brought by the Web. The reporter believes that on balance papers should be free online. "I do a BBC TV news discussion show once a month. If I know we're talking about Pakistan, which we do frequently, I can google 'Pakistan Newspapers' and up comes a page with links to 70 odd newspapers in that country and a note on which ones are written in English. They are all free. I read them to prepare for the show. Second example: while researching Emancipation I wanted to find out about Marcel Proust's role in the Dreyfus Affair - significant, by the way - and I came across something in the New York Times archive from, I think, 1897, which is almost certainly the earliest mention of Proust in America. This makes me a devotee of free and open access."
But that sort of thing does cost someone something. Surely, free is unsustainable. Goldfarb reminds a reporter that he spent most of his career in public radio. "Home of the free," as he calls it. Only about 15 percent of NPR's regular listeners actually answer the pledge drive call and it hasn't stopped NPR growing. He wonders why newspapers didn't implement a strategy years ago to make advertisers carry the freight for expansion onto the web.
"15 years ago, if the head of NBC had told the network's advertisers, new technology has created a platform that will increase our audience by a factor of ten and we will be adjusting our rate card appropriately, do you think he would have faced a rebellion? By a factor of how many has the New York Times' readership gone up? Surely, there should have been a way to increase rates and find new advertisers for on-line."
Goldfarb accepts that some form of charging is inevitable now but hopes that the powers that be remember how important archive access is. He suggests that if a paywall is put up at the New York Times it only be secure around news content for 72 hours - roughly the time it takes for a paper to go from immediacy to fish-wrapping - before free, open access to all.
Our walk has come to an end on a little pedestrian bridge arcing over the tranquil river scene. The reminiscences have stirred up feelings that are not so peaceful. "Although I try to fight it, I am bitter for all the personal reasons you can imagine. But I'm angry too, and that has nothing to do with my sense of personal loss.
"When I read about another philanthropist endowing a chair of journalism, I get very angry. The money would be better spent hiring laid off journalists to go into high schools to teach kids how to read newspapers because the big challenge to the future of journalism isn't the web, it's that more and more people reach adulthood without the habit of reading or listening to the news."
Why not do what so many others have done. Make a change in mid-career, get over it, move on. It's the American way, right?
"No, I'm stuck with it. I just believe in the redeeming social value of journalism. I am certain there are millions of people in the U.S. who are incredibly curious about the world and are underserved by existing news outlets - I mean how many full-time American foreign correspondents are left? Somewhere between one and two hundred? You can't inform American society about the world with so few. People based overseas look at the U.S. today and are simply aghast at the ignorance of the world which is displayed there daily, from the upper echelons of government down to the street. So I carry on. I commit as much journalism today as I ever did, I just earn 50 percent less doing it."
He pauses and anger, bitterness and perplexed pride bubble up. "I wonder about the consultants at McKinsey or Grant Thornton, what is their metric for that? How do they assign a numerical value to a person's profound dedication to the practice of journalism?"
The reporter intends to carry on, despite the economic absurdity. "I'm reading about Confucius for the new book I'm researching. He, too, at the age of 50 was forced out of work. Confucius told his pupils later, 'When employed, practice your way. When set aside, treasure your way.'"
The Interview over Goldfarb says to himself, "Think I'll use that for my kicker."
WP's 'highly anticipated' iPad app coming this fall
Meanwhile, "usage of the Post's iPhone app continues to accelerate," Washington Post Digital general manager Ken Babby writes in a memo. || Poynter Mobile Media: Notre Dame experiments with iPads in class.
Chicago Tribune expected to debut $5 'premium' weekly in January
Five Star will have four sections -- A Section, Culture, Focus, and Words -- printed on heavy, expensive stock, reports Michael Miner. He hears that the paper -- inspired by Dave Eggers' Panorama? -- will be offered to Sunday subscribers for an extra $5 a week. "The articles in the dummy promise intellectual firepower, but few came from the Tribune," reports Miner.
The Stig unmasked as Bond stunt double Ben Collins
The High Court today refused to ban a book which reveals that Top Gear's The Stig is racing driver Ben Collins.
BBC strike threat after pension ballot
The BBC is facing the threat of strikes after thousands of journalists, technicians and other staff voted massively in favour of industrial action in a row over pensions, it was announced today.
|
Recent comments
39 weeks 2 hours ago