Don't Be Next

I hate to start the week like this, but, whatever. Grab a hanky. Click play. Keep reading. (If you're in the newsroom, it might be cool to unplug your headphones and let everybody in on this one, assuming you still have folks sitting around you.)



We're shrinking. After years of mildly reassuring numbers tracking the size of newspaper newsroom staffs, the latest American Society of Newspapers Editors' annual census leads with a bombshell. Fulltime professional news staffs fell by 2,400 last year, a drop of 4.4% to a total of 52,600.

It was an even larger decrease than the 2,000 drop-off in the recession year of 2001. Since the census is completed as of the end of 2007, the tabulation does not include hundreds more buyouts and layoffs already imposed in 2008. The New York Times, the Washington Post and a host of other papers have announced news staff reductions.


San Jose Mercury News designer Martin Gee posted a photo documentary of the bloodshedding there. Watch it. Take notes.

Now, let Fred Jones Part II finish, then dry your face, you sissy. Now play this.



Now stand up, push in your chair, and go do something like this, or this, or this, or this, or this, or this, or this, or this, or this, or this, or this, or this, or this, or this, or this, or this, or this, or this, or this, or this, or this, or this, or this, or this, or this, or something, then send me the link so those of us left can read it and talk about it and be thankful. Godspeed.

Posted by ben on 04/13/08 at 23:56 | Comments (2) | Trackbacks (0)


Comments

Re: Don't Be Next

Man, I love me some Eye of the Tiger. Pump that through the newsroom every morning and this thing starts turning around.

Posted by: doyle at April 14,2008 11:45


Re: Don't Be Next

I could see you and myself shadow boxing in the newsroom, Doyle.

If anyone here has read the "State of the News Media 2008" report that was released recently, it has some interesting data. First, many of these newsroom jobs have simply shifted over to the Web desk, which is not exactly reporting and writing. Secondly, the papers that are surviving with fewer side effects are adopting a "hyper local" philosophy, where they report the local news and focus less on nation and international affairs. It reaffirms the idea that people want to know what's going on in their backyards.

Anyway, I'll keep shadow boxing and reporting and writing like hell if you all promise to do that same.

Posted by: ARB at April 14,2008 18:39


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