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Living obituaries for journalists?

July 23rd, 2008 | No Comments | Posted by Laura Oliver in Job losses, Journalism

The Columbia Journalism Review is asking for contributions to its Parting Thoughts series – a chance for journalists on their way out of the business to share their thoughts on why and what next for the industry.

In one ‘letter’ in the series, Jim Spencer, who was ‘involuntarily separated’ from the Denver Post, recalls his reaction to the news:

“My scoop didn’t matter. Neither did the ten writing awards I won in four years and three months as a metro columnist with the Post. The late nights and occasional weekends I put in, the blog I maintained in deference to the burgeoning online audience—none of it counted.”

Spencer went on to earn ‘twice as much as my co-workers’ writing for SpencerSpeaks.com, but now works in PR for the University of Colorado.

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NYTimes: Tribune employees start protest blog against job cuts

July 22nd, 2008 | No Comments | Posted by Laura Oliver in Editors' pick, Job losses, Newspapers, USA
Journalists facing the axe at Tribune's titles are using the Tell Zell blog to protest against the publisher's owner Sam Zell. Full story...

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Reuters blogs: WSJ axes 50 jobs, creates new posts at New York ‘hub’

July 17th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted by Laura Oliver in Editors' pick, Job losses, Newspapers, USA, WSJ
A reorganisation of the Wall Street Journal's editorial and production operations will lead to around 50 jobs being lost, editor Robert Thomson has said in a memo. The paper's editing and production for print, online and mobile will be centralised around its New York 'hub', with editorial operations at its South Brunswick offices to cease. Full story...

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News&Observer.com: News&Observer reader sues title for staff cuts

July 14th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted by Laura Oliver in Editors' pick, Job losses, Newspapers, legal
One of the paper's readers is suing the News & Observer in North Carolina following a series of staff cuts and reductions in news pages. Lawyer Keith Hempstead filed the complaint stating that the changes had breached the paper's contract with him. Full story...

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Eighty newsroom jobs to go at Chicago Tribune

July 9th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted by Oliver Luft in Chicago, Job losses, Journalism, LA Times, Newspapers, USA

The Chicago Tribune is to follow the LA Times by culling newsroom jobs and reducing the number of pages in its printed editions.

Around 80 of its 578 newsroom posts are expected to be culled with further cuts appearing in non-journalistic positions.

The printed edition of the Tribune is expected to reduce the number of pages it publishes by 13 or 14 per cent each week.

Management began informing staff of the changes late on Tuesady, the Tribune itself reported.

This is the fourth round of staff cuts since 2005, when the paper had nearly 700 newsroom staff on its books. In real terms the paper expects to lose around 55 people as positions made vacant in recent months have remained unfilled.

Last week, The Los Angeles Times, another Tribune Company newspaper, announced that it would reduce the number of pages it published each week by 15 per cent anddo away with 250 staff roles, 150 of them from the newsroom.

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BBC annual report: executive bonuses remain despite job cuts and calls for management restructure

July 8th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted by Laura Oliver in BBC, Job losses, Recruitment, Uncategorized

The BBC’s executive directors’ pay rose by £708,000 in 2007/8 with pay for the 10 directors totalling £4,960,000, according to figures from the corporation’s annual report.

Jana Bennett, director of BBC Vision, received a bonus of £41,000, while outgoing director of Future Media & Technology Ashley Highfield received £34,000. Director general Mark Thompson rejected the offer of an annual bonus.

Both the National Union of Journalists (NUJ) and BECTU have challenged the rises in light of 2,500 proposed job cuts at the corporation announced in October.

“Management should have the decency to show restraint at a time when so many BBC staff are under huge pressures following major cutbacks. This announcement will only serve to disillusion staff further,” Paul McLaughlin, NUJ broadcasting organiser, said in a statement from the union.

Michael Lyons, chairman of the BBC Trust, reiterated the need to improve the management structure of bbc.co.uk before approving further investment. In May the site’s management was blamed for losing ‘effective control’ after a £36 million overspend.

More figures from the report:

  • average monthly page impressions for bbc.co.uk are more than 3.6 billion, while weekly unique users average more than 33 million;
  • BBC Mobile is the ‘most accessed’ mobile browser for news, sport and weather in the UK;
  • levels of audience trust in the BBC have remained steady year-on-year with 75 per cent of viewers rating BBC news programming as ‘fair, informed and balanced

BBC Worldwide

Analysis of BBC Worldwide (part of the annual report and separate reviews released) emphasised the importance of online in growing its global audience. The service’s online audience rose 34 per cent year-on-year. However, the review highlighted the failure of Spanish-language site BBC Mundo to meet the demands of increased internet access.

The launch of BBC Arabic came in for particular praise in the review, creating ‘trimedia’ BBC coverage in Arabic:

“With the launch of BBC Arabic television, our multimedia strategy took a giant step forward. That moment in March 2008 marked the successful culmination of a four-year journey to secure funding and deliver a high-quality television service in a vital region of the world.”

Online revenues accounted for 2.7 per cent of total sales for BBC Worldwide in 2007/8 - rising from 1.1 per cent previously, the report said. The creation of bbc.com and syndication deals with YouTube and iTunes were cited as key revenue drivers for the service.

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After 250 job cuts, LA Times leading reporters head to ProPublica

Last week LA Times, one of the biggest employers of journalists in the US, announced that it would be dispensing with the services of 150 of them as part of a total 250 job losses at the paper.

Yesterday afternoon it emerged that two more journalists would likely be leaving the LA Times, but not as a direct result of the editorial cuts.

According to LA Observed, Pulitzer Prize winning investigative reporters Charles Ornstein and Tracy Weber will be leaving the paper later in the summer to join the not-for-profit investigative start up ProPublica.

“It’s another big morale blow in the newsroom, which used to be a place where journalists aspired to reach and stay to do their best work. With new deep cutbacks coming and [LA Times owner] Sam Zell’s outbursts making many of the best journalists feel the Times’ commitment to serious news is precarious, it’s no longer surprising to see stars like Ornstein and Weber flee,” wrote Kevin Roderick.

Last week’s editorial staff cuts, which amounts to roughly 17 per cent of the employees, will be spread between the print newsroom and The Times’ web operations.

Those cuts led to this fascinating quote from Times editor Russ Stanton:

“You all know the paradox we find ourselves in,” he wrote said in a memo to the staff. “Thanks to the Internet, we have more readers for our great journalism than at any time in our history. But also thanks to the Internet, our advertisers have more choices, and we have less money.”

One hundred and fifty losses job losses against two hires doesn’t really make a great case for the internet as a growth medium for the employment of journalists, but nonetheless the growth of ProPublica and its journalistic modus operandi online marks a neat stab at Stanton’s paradox.

The ProPublica site will be fully operational later this year and plans to have almost 30 investigative reporters working on in-depth stories (it helps that self-made billionaire Herb Sandler has set up the site with a donation of $10m a year from his foundation and that it’s under the watchful eye of former WSJ editor Paul Steiger).

ProPublica will conduct investigations, largely online, in areas of significant public interest. It will also use TV documentaries to reveal on that large canvas issues that will be followed up extensively online.

It’s first major project, an investigation into US-backed Arabic language TV network Alhurra, ran on 60 Minutes two weeks ago.

Zell say that newspapers have to slim down and become more economically viable. Newspaper’s are about money, not news, that’s fairly self-evident. Little wonder then that Charles Ornstein and Tracy Weber decided to walk and pursue their investigations elsewhere.

What awaits them at ProPublica?

A philanthropic backer claiming no editorial interference. No desire for profits. No ads on the site. Where almost all resources will be poured into journalism (what no free CD give away?).

The journalistic equivalent to Willy Wonka’s ‘golden ticket’, it seems.

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LA Times: Los Angeles Times to cut 250 jobs

July 3rd, 2008 | No Comments | Posted by Laura Oliver in Editors' pick, Job losses, Journalism, Newspapers, USA
The LA Times announced yesterday that it will cut 250 jobs - 150 editorial positions - across the company in a latest effort to curb spending as reveunes plummet. In a further cost-cutting step, the newspaper will reduce the number of pages it publishes each week by 15 per cent. "You all know the paradox we find ourselves in," Times Editor Russ Stanton said in a memo to the staff. "Thanks to the internet, we have more readers for our great journalism than at any time in our history. But also thanks to the internet, our advertisers have more choices, and we have less money." Full story...

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Paper Cuts blog maps journalism job losses in US

May 27th, 2008 | 1 Comment | Posted by Laura Oliver in Job losses, Mapping, Newspapers, USA

Erica Smith, blogger at Paper Cuts and newspaper and multimedia designer at the St Louis Post-Dispatch, has mapped the job losses across the US newspaper industry this year.

Pins in the Google map are colour-coded to show how many jobs lost in each instance and can be clicked for more details of the redundancies.

The total so far for 2008 is 3,020 and rising, the blog states.

Depressing viewing, but the map gives a good snapshot of the state of the industry.

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Guardian: Thomson Reuters axes 140 journalist jobs

May 19th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted by Oliver Luft in Editors' pick, Job losses, Journalism, mergers, reuters
News and information company Thomson Reuters has confirmed that it is cutting 140 journalist posts by the end of the year. According to the Guardian, head of news David Schlesinger wrote an internal email which explained that areas of "natural overlap and duplication in coverage" existed between the two companies and that as a result jobs would go. The cuts, which will take place later in the year, are expected mostly to be of editorial staff in Europe. Full story...

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