3 N.J. Gannett Papers to Lay Off Nearly Half Editorial Staff
Native Journalists End Year With Another “Slight Deficit”
Public Was Interested in Haiti Longer Than Media Were
Hispanic Group Wants Study of Hate Speech, Violent Crimes
Boehner Gets Cover Treatment Denied Pelosi
3 N.J. Gannett Papers to Lay Off Nearly Half Editorial Staff
“Gannett Co. will lay off nearly half its editorial staff at three New Jersey community newspapers by next month and will restructure the remaining positions, according to several staffers,” Beth DeFalco reported Tuesday for the Associated Press.
“The affected newspapers are the Courier News of Bridgewater, Daily Record of Parsippany and Home News Tribune of East Brunswick, where a combined 99 staff members will have to apply for 53 remaining positions. Those not kept will be cut loose by Feb. 4.
“The company offered to pay staff the difference between their salary and unemployment insurance, a week for every year of service up to 26 weeks, but no less than four, according to a staff member.
“The staff members spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the layoffs. They said reporters at the community papers will be assigned to teams to focus on particular topics and more content may be used from the Asbury Park Press.
“A memo by Thomas M. Donovan, president and publisher of New Jersey Press Media Solutions — a consortium of Gannett’s four northern New Jersey newspapers — was made available to staff Monday explaining the process.
“In an e-mailed statement to the Associated Press on Tuesday, Donovan said the changes would help the company ‘better focus’ its resources on local and breaking news coverage.”
In 2009, Rhonda Juanita Levaldo, right, then vice president of the Native American Journalists Association, was interviewed with NAJA Executive Director Jeff Harjo at the Washington-based Newseum on the state of Indian-focused journalism. Levaldo is now NAJA president. (Credit: Courtesy Rhonda Juanita Levaldo)
Native Journalists End Year With Another “Slight Deficit”
The Native American Journalists Association ended the year with “a slight deficit,” Executive Director Jeff Harjo acknowledged, but he would not say how much the deficit was. He said the shortfall was “about the same in 2010 as 2009,” but also would not provide the 2009 figure.
“NAJA did have a slight deficit last year because our normal funders are appropriating less than what they used to send,” he told Journal-isms by e-mail. “We have continued to make profits from our last two conventions and look forward to another profit making convention. Once our registrations, entries for our awards competition and memberships start coming in, we will be in a better financial condition.”
NAJA is the smallest of the journalist-of-color organizations in the umbrella group Unity: Journalists of Color. For most of those organizaitons, the annual conference is the primary revenue raiser.
In 2009, NAJA’s 25th anniversary convention in Albuquerque, N.M., drew 140 registrants, NAJA president Ronnie Washines told Journal-isms at the time. He said then that NAJA membership grew to around 740 members, an increase of over 100 since the previous conference.
The National Association of Black Journalists announced last week it had turned a $338,901 deficit at the end of 2009 to a surplus of more than $191,000, and late last month, AAJA announced that it turned a $207,000 deficit to a $399,000 surplus.
Leaders of the American Society of News Editors, Unity: Journalists of Color, the Society of Professional Journalists, the National Conference of Editorial Writers and the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association also said they ended the year financially healthy.
However, the National Association of Hispanic Journalists has projected a $240,000 deficit for the year, and the National Association of Multicultural Media Executives, dormant for at least a year, now plans to dissolve.
Jeff Johnson of theGrio.com talks with Sam Dixon of the aid group Oxfam International in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, for a video posted on theGrio.com.
Public Was Interested in Haiti Longer Than Media Were
In the weeks following three major news events last year — the Haiti earthquake, the passage of health care legislation, and the capping of the Gulf oil spill — “public interest remained high long after the news media’s focus had turned elsewhere. And while public interest in the 2010 midterm elections was on par with press coverage in the final stages of the campaign season, coverage far exceeded public interest earlier in the campaign cycle,” the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press reported on Tuesday.
The study also showed “how CNN proved to be an ‘outlier’ in the cable news coverage when it came to three major stories: the 2010 midterms, BP oil spill and Haiti earthquake,” Michael Calderone reported for Yahoo News.
“CNN’s Anderson Cooper won critical praise for exhaustively covering those two disaster stories, but the network continued losing prime-time viewers. On the other hand, ratings leader Fox News and second-place MSNBC kept turning up the partisan volume this past year, with their stables of conservative and liberal commentators, respectively. That strategy has proven more successful at getting viewers to return nightly rather than only when a major news story, like an earthquake, takes place.’
The reports coincided with Wednesday’s one-year anniversary of Haiti’s earthquake, “as well as the anniversary of one of the largest ever humanitarian responses to a natural disaster, with almost $3.8 billion in aid given or pledged for Haiti relief,” as the Knight Foundation noted in a report on lessons learned.
“Three innovative practices in particular, the report says, were put to the test: broadcasting crisis information with SMS, crowdsourcing data into actionable information, and using open mapping tools to meet humanitarian needs,” Michael Morisy reported for Nieman Lab.
“The report found that none of them, however, would have been as effective without one very low-tech tool: radio.”
- Joel Dreyfuss, theRoot.com: Haiti’s Yearlong Aftershock
- Jordan Flaherty, MRzine: One Year after Haiti Earthquake, Corporations Profit While People Suffer
- Garry Pierre-Pierre, Mara Schiavocampo, Jeff Johnson, theGrio.com: Haiti: One Year Later
- Kevin Powell, Daily Kos: Haiti, one year later
Hispanic Group Wants Study of Hate Speech, Violent Crimes
“Prompted by the shootings in Arizona over the weekends and ensuing national conversation about the role of violent rhetoric in politics and the media, the National Hispanic Media Coalition plans to press the Federal Communications Commission to act on its longstanding petition on hate speech,” John Eggerton reported Monday for Multichannel News.
“That is according to NHMC president Alex Nogales, who said the group would also push the National Telecommunications & Information Administration to update an almost two-decades old its report on the effects of hate speech, and press Congress to make sure NTIA got the money to do so.
“The FCC has not yet acted on the petition, according to an aide to one of the commissioners.”
“. . . NHMC has been urging the FCC to investigate what it sees as the link between extreme rhetoric and hate speech on radio and cable TV and real world violence and hate crimes. Nogales sees the Arizona shootings as an outgrowth of that hateful speech. ‘We can’t stand there with our arms crossed and make like there isn’t a reason why this is happening,’ he told Multichannel News in an interview.
” ‘We started this dialog in the last immigration debate four years ago. We could see that it was just out of control. It started with just an issue of immigration, then every pundit on radio and TV who wanted an audience started talking about it and started using the worst of language, and now it has spilled out into mainstream,’ he said.”
- Roy Peter Clark, Poynter Institute: Blood libel and the ethics of metaphor in the rhetorical aftermath of Arizona shooting
- Joel Dreyfuss, theRoot.com: Remember John Lewis’ Warning About Violent Talk?
- Editorial, La Opinion, Los Angeles: What We Can Learn from Tucson Tragedy
- Ben Grossman and Andrea Morabito, Broadcasting & Cable: TV News Chiefs Say Don’t Blame Media For Tucson
- Joel Meares, Columbia Journalism Review: Q&A: Randy Lovely, Editor and Vice President of The Arizona Republic
- Radio Ink: Rush To Fellow Talk Hosts: ‘Hold Your Heads High’
- Mark Trahant, indianz.com: Finding a way to a more civil discourse in America
Boehner Gets Cover Treatment Denied Pelosi
“On Wednesday, Nancy Pelosi handed over the speaker’s gavel to John Boehner, who is charged with leading the ‘Tea Party Congress’ in their efforts to repeal health care reform, disband the Select Committee on Global Warming, defund Planned Parenthood and do a bunch of other things that people who have never held elected office think are good ideas,” Annie Shields wrote Friday for Ms. magazine.
“So it’s no wonder Boehner has gotten so much media attention: Within a few weeks of the midterm elections, Boehner graced the covers of Time, Newsweek, The New Yorker and The Economist. Not to mention his mug on the October 30th issue of the National Journal’s cover. Five major magazine covers in less than a month might seem like a lot for an incoming Speaker who hadn’t even been sworn in yet, but hey, being the Speaker of the House, in the words of Joe Biden, is a ‘big fucking deal!’
“. . . And the snubbing doesn’t end with Time‘s postage-stamp Speaker. The New Yorker? Never put Pelosi on the cover. Newsweek? Never. The Economist? Never. Vanity Fair? Never. Harpers? Never. I could go on, but you get the idea.
“So one would assume that she’s been featured on the covers of many a major U.S. magazine. Well, one would be wrong. . . . Time never devoted a single one of the 208 or so covers it put out during her 4-year tenure to the most powerful woman in American history.
“. . . And the snubbing doesn’t end with Time‘s postage-stamp Speaker. The New Yorker? Never put Pelosi on the cover. Newsweek? Never. The Economist? Never. Vanity Fair? Never. Harpers? Never. I could go on, but you get the idea.”
Short Takes
- “Movieline has added a prominent, not to mention impressive trio to its burgeoning ranks, including former New York Times critic Elvis Mitchell and reputable film writers Jen Yamato and Alonso Duralde,” Jeff Sneider reported Wednesday for theWrap.com “Mitchell will serve as Chief Film Critic for Movieline, along with Stephanie Zacharek, who shares the same title. Michelle Orange is also on staff as a critic.” Last week, Ignatiy Vishnevetsky, a Russian-born 24-year-old Chicago-based online film critic for mubi.com, was named to replace Mitchell as co-host of public television’s “Ebert Presents at the Movies.”
- “The consumer magazine media industry capped a strong 2010 by generating an increase of 3.1% in rate-card-reported revenue for the year, according to Publishers Information Bureau (PIB). It was the first time the industry had a full-year revenue increase since 2007,” the bureau reported Monday. “The Automotive category generated the biggest percentage increases in revenue (21.9%) and pages (16.9%) vs. 2009. General Motors Corp. led all automotive advertising in magazines, spending $385,380,000 in 2010, up 56% compared to 2009’s magazine ad spend of $246,456,000.”
- “Earlier this morning noted journalist and author Danyel Smith announced that she had taken on the role of Editor-in-Chief of Billboard magazine,” Anslem Samuel reported Monday for Black Enterprise. ” ‘[On the move] excited!,’ she tweeted. ‘Today is my first as editor of Billboard magazine.’ “This is not Smith’s first turn with the music industry trade publication or as EIC of a major magazine. In 1993 she served as R&B Editor for Billboard, and ran Vibe magazine from 1997-1999 and again from 2006-2009. Over the course of her career, Smith has written for the Village Voice, Rolling Stone, Spin, The New Yorker and The New York Times, among other notable media outlets. She’s also penned two fiction novels, More Like Wrestling and Bliss.”
- “Bloomberg LP is preparing to launch a ranking of the world’s billionaires, capitalizing on the swelling numbers of wealthy individuals around the world and taking direct aim at the core franchise of Forbes magazine,” Robert Frank and Russell Adams reported Tuesday for the Wall Street Journal. “Rich lists have become big media franchises as publications compete to feed reader fascination with the money and lifestyles of the super-wealthy.” No word on comparable publications scrambling to report on the plight of the poor.
- “One of the University of Georgia’s first two black students called for a new national conversation on racial and other kinds of prejudice,” Lee Shearer reported Monday for the Athens Banner-Herald. ” ‘Let the conversation begin about ignorance and its wicked companion, intolerance,’ said Charlayne Hunter-Gault in a speech to mark the 50th anniversary of when she and the late Hamilton Holmes became the university’s first two black students, on Jan. 9, 1961. ‘Let the conversation begin about the ignorance that is threatening to engulf us here in America.’ About 250 people braved Monday’s treacherous weather and roads to hear Hunter-Gault speak in Mahler Auditorium at the Georgia Center for Continuing Education.”
- Rick Sanchez “made himself available last week for his first interview since a brief appearance on Good Morning America in the immediate aftermath of being fired by CNN for the now-famous interview on Sirius XM radio in which he labeled Jon Stewart a ‘bigot,’ ” Adam Hanft wrote for the Daily Beast. Sanchez said he finally found the courage to listen to the interview. “We heard the entire interview. I thought it would destroy me, but it actually empowered me because when I heard it, and I read what was written, they didn’t match up.”
- “The final ratings for OWN’s launch week were released Tuesday, showing that 18.5 million viewers tuned in to the new Oprah Winfrey Network Jan. 1-7, the time period for which cumulative data was available,” Andrea Morabito reported Tuesday for Broadcasting & Cable. “Compared to the former Discovery Health network, which OWN replaced, it’s up in viewers 49% in prime and 56% in total day from a year ago.”
- “Starting Tuesday night, Yahoo’s sports division and SportsFanLive.com, a social networking and blogging site, will start producing ThePostGame.com, a daily magazine that will publish lengthy articles (and 140-word rants), and reports on athlete style, sports technology, travel, fitness and betting lines,” Richard Sandomir reported Tuesday for the New York Times. “It will also be packed with blogs from its partners, Twitter messages from athletes and polls.”
- “Akilah Bolden-Monifa has been named San Francisco Bay Area Market Communications Director, CBS Local Media,” Michael Malone reported Wednesday for Broadcasting & Cable. “Bolden-Monifa, who has served as communications director at KPIX and KBCW San Francisco since December 2002, will also expand her role to manage communications at both TV and the numerous CBS radio stations in the Bay Area.”
- “ESPN will air a live town hall discussion about the current image of the black athlete as part of week-long, multiplatform initiative tied to the 25th anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr. national holiday,” R. Thomas Umstead reported Monday for Multichannel News. The weeklong initiative, dubbed “Content of Character,” was to begin Tuesday and run through the official national holiday on Jan. 17, said network officials.
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