Posts Tagged ‘newspaper layoffs’
Posted by Mediascaper on May 22, 2009
For the unemployed journalist thrown out on his or her keester, Jim Gold, a former senior editor for the Arizona Republic, and his wife Sue have created Jilted Journalists.
It’s nothing much to look at design-wise, and the content is rather thin so far. But it has a cheeky tone, and at least endeavors to offer some helpful advice for those recently reacquainted with the ranks of the unemployed. A couple of highlights:
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Posted in Newspaper industry, newspaper cutbacks, newspapers, newsroom layoffs | Tagged: interview questions, interview tips, Jilted Journalist, Jim Gold, Newspaper industry, newspaper layoffs, newsroom cutbacks, unemployment | 3 Comments »
Posted by Mediascaper on May 5, 2009
Laid off in 2007. Relying on an early pension, unemployment benefits and occasional substitute teaching gigs to get by. Followed by a loss of benefits for a month because of an oversight by the county. Former Minnesota Star Tribune employee Delma J. Francis thought she would finally qualify for food stamps. She was wrong:
With that change in my circumstances, I went back to the county, sure that I would now qualify for EBT, formerly known as food stamps, or medical assistance. (Being on the far side of 40 with no health insurance is not a comfortable place to be.) But no. The $508 a month in early pension and what I had earned substitute teaching the previous pay period rendered me still ineligible for help.
“Wait a minute,” I said to the county worker. “Let me get this straight. Because I’m working when I can, trying to help myself — and by doing so, paying taxes to help all those people out in the waiting room feed their kids and keep themselves healthy — I can’t get any help?”
She just stared at me without an ounce of remorse for the news she’d just delivered.
Posted in Newspaper industry, newspaper cutbacks, newsroom layoffs | Tagged: Delma Francis, Minnesota Star Tribune, MinnPost, newspaper layoffs, unemployment | 3 Comments »
Posted by Mediascaper on April 23, 2009
Lou Carlozo was covering the recession for the Chicago Tribune. Then he got laid off.
Writing for True/Slant, Carlozo expresses his discontent at being forced by Trib management to write for a blog — “The Recession Diaries” — that, in his words, “involved me telling very tough stories about my own family finances–stories that led me and my wife to squabble many times over which details to withhold, which to print, and which ones looked inappropriate in print after the fact.”
Then, to add insult to the injury of being laid off, the Trib censored Carlozo’s attempt to let his readers know he was joining the ranks of the unemployed:
I wanted to post a final blog Wednesday to readers explaining that I had lost my job, a victim of the very recession I covered. I posted this without management’s approval. I then informed management. Management took it down.
Oh, by the way: On the same day that Carlozo and over 50 newsroom staffers who were laid off by the Tribune, the company petitioned bankruptcy court to dole out $13.3 million in bonuses to over 700 workers.
Posted in Newspaper industry, blogging, news industry, newspaper bankruptcy, newspaper cutbacks, newsroom layoffs | Tagged: Chicago Tribune, Lou Carlozo, Newspaper industry, newspaper layoffs, newsroom cutbacks, recession, True/Slant, unemployment | 1 Comment »
Posted by Mediascaper on April 2, 2009
You’ve read the statistics. Now we have visual confirmation that newspapers are in a death spiral:

“That’s just a whirlpool,” you say? Maybe to someone without a taste for visual metaphor. But trust me — that’s a death spiral, and newspapers are floundering just below the surface.
And this stock photo? Just a pile of newspapers burning? Au contraire — it’s the symbolic loss of revenue from classified ads. There goes your main source of revenue, up in smoke. Craigslist says it smells great.
Still not convinced, given the irrefutable stock photo evidence?
Well, perhaps THIS will change your mind …
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Posted in Newspaper industry, Out of print, Print Journalism, news industry, newspaper cutbacks, newsroom layoffs, paid content, print advertising | Tagged: Boston Globe, Calbuzz, classified as, death spiral, Jerry Roberts, Los Angeles Times, Minnesota Star Tribune, New York Times, Newspaper industry, newspaper layoffs, newsroom cutbacks, Phil Trounstine, Tampa Tribune | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Mediascaper on March 25, 2009
More doom and gloom in the newspaper industry, with reports coming today that the Atlanta Journal-Constitution is eliminating 30 percent of its news staff and the Houston Chronicle is cutting 12 percent of its staff. But there is a bright side amidst the bad news.
A couple of institutions of higher education are putting together programs that should give both new students and unemployed journalists the skills and knowledge to attain greater self-sufficiency as entrepreneurs:
Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism is expanding its curriculum to include the business of journalism:
[Columbia School of Journalism Dean of Academic Affairs Bill] Grueskin advocates adding to the law, history and ethics courses one in business — which would be a first for the school’s traditional curriculum. Though he acknowledged that the course would bridge the longstanding gap between the business and editorial sides of the journalism world, he did not think this would present an ethical problem for students. If anything, he said, it might help them in a market where some journalists have had to become entrepreneurs to find an audience for their work online.
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Posted in Online journalism, journalism education, news industry | Tagged: Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Birmingham City University, Columbia School of Journalism, Houston Chronicle, journalism education, Newspaper industry, newspaper layoffs, newsroom layoffs, Paul Bradshaw | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Mediascaper on February 16, 2009
So the publisher of the Houston Chronicle sent out the dreaded memo. You know, the one that, if you’re a Chron staffer, makes you want to kick yourself in the ass for not starting your job search six months earlier:
As our newspaper continues to report the condition of the economy, we read about companies in all business categories adjusting their size to match current and projected revenues. The Houston Chronicle must do the same in spite of your diligent efforts.
I believe this is what’s known in literary circles as “foreshadowing.”
Consequently, over the next 60 days, we will be reorganizing our employee base in all divisions around a reduction in force of at least 10 percent.
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Posted in Newspaper industry, news industry, newspaper cutbacks, newsroom layoffs | Tagged: Broadcast News, Houston Chronicle, newspaper cutbacks, Newspaper industry, newspaper layoffs | 1 Comment »
Posted by Mediascaper on February 2, 2009
The Capital cuts over 100 jobs, has a smaller news hole, admits there’s little money to be made from Internet users, but other than that, everything’s fine.
Posted in Newspaper industry, Print Journalism, newspaper cutbacks, newsroom layoffs, outsourcing, print advertising | Tagged: HometownAnnapolis, newspaper layoffs, The Capital, Tom Marquardt | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Mediascaper on January 27, 2009
A good piece of advice from Joe Grimm, former recruiter for the Detroit Free Press (as quoted in the article “Is there life after newspapers?“):
“I would use my working hours to prepare myself” for the uncertain future that lies ahead. And, he suggests, devote nights and weekends to learning new skills – database management, say, or PhotoShop.
Posted in Newspaper industry, newspaper cutbacks, newsroom layoffs | Tagged: Detroit Free Press, Joe Grimm, life after newspapers, newspaper layoffs | Leave a Comment »