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Death of an Icon -- The Liberal Newspaper Butcher's Bill


By Gary Starr for The Neville Awrds
First Posted March 2, 2009

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US newspaper circulation falls 7.1 percent in Oct-March 2008 period, marking biggest decline yet
A Leninist View of the American Media


To read the Newspaper Butcher's Bill click here

Liberals and Leftists are bemoaning the fact that one of their most important propaganda organs is going by the wayside. Without newspapers democracy itself is in jeopardy say the Libs. With these newspapers obviously in the tank for the Democrats, especially in the 2008 election, it is no surprise that the public no longer trusts the mainstream liberal newspapers. News reporting begins to look like editorializing and the editorial pages have an 80% liberal bias when it comes to columnists.

The result...the traditional newspaper is slowly vanishing. You will hear every excuse in the book..."no one reads anymore", "kids don't read anymore" blah blah blah. Folks are on the net, in droves, reading and getting the information and opinions they can't get from the newspapers. Kids are still reading books...the ones they like. Perhaps the reason no one reads these leftist latter-day Pravdas anymore is because of fair and balanced coverage like this:
  • NY Times' Senior Editor Bill Keller revealing of the intelligence operations on how al Qaeda money is tracked
  • blowing the cover on the U.S. rendition programs overseas that keep terrorists locked up
  • lying about torture
  • talking down the War on Terror
  • showing sympathy for terrorists and attacking our troops
  • talking down the economy until it becomes a self-fullfilling prophecy
  • 56 front page stories on the biggest non-story of them all, Abu Ghraib
  • the embarrassing slobbering and over-the-top favorable coverage by the media of Barack Obama
  • the failure to cover Obama's past associations (Ayres, Wright, Khalidi, etal) in any meaningful way
  • the endless attacks on Sarah Palin
  • need we say more?
Democracy is not in danger because of the demise of the newspaper. In fact, the great leveler is the rise of news sources on the internet. What has happened is that the liberal elitist lock on information and how it is disseminated has been broken. Hopefully, the fall of network TV News (ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, MSNBC) won't be far behind.

We have started to notice little wet spots on Chris Matthew's and Keith Olberman's anchor seats after their particularly man-crushy "bromance" on-air op-eds. Perhaps it's time to break out the Obama news anchor diapers.

Look for an attempt by the left to regulate, not only conservative talk radio, but conservative broadband access as well. This is what fascists do.

This page is going to start chronicling the fall of these bastions of newspaper liberalism one by one. This is an ongoing page...we will update as each news icon teeters and/or falls.

Newspaper Butcher's Bill
  • Dec 10, 2009 -- Editor and Publisher closes after 125 years. Editor and Publisher, the journalist publication of record, will cease both print and online publication at the end of this year. The announcement made earlier today after its parent company The Nielsen Co. informed staffers of its decision.
  • Nov 25, 2009 -- The Washington Post will close its remaining U.S. bureaus in New York, Los Angeles and Chicago at the end of the year to save money and will focus news efforts on covering the nation's capital.
  • Oct. 19, 2009 -- The New York Times plans to eliminate 100 newsroom jobs — about 8 percent of the total — by year’s end, offering buyouts to union and nonunion employees, and resorting to layoffs if it cannot get enough people to leave voluntarily
  • Oct. 15, 2009 -- The New York Times Co. which owns the Boston Globe said that the paper was on pace to lose $85 million in 2009. Nearly all metropolitan papers have been cutting their news operations for years, and some have fewer than half as many people in their newsrooms as they did a few years ago. The Los Angeles Times has dropped to about 600 news employees, from more than 1,200; The Washington Post to about 700, from more than 900; and The Boston Globe, which is owned by the Times Company, to close to 300, from well over 500.
  • April 30, 2009 -- The Baltimore Sun, owned by the bankrupt Tribune Co., has announced layoffs of 40 newsroom employees, or 20 percent of the staff by May 27, 2009.
  • April 22, 2009 -- Standard & Poor's lowered its credit rating for The New York Times unsecured debt on Wednesday on concerns about the grim outlook for advertising revenue. S&P lowered the Times' senior unsecured debt rating by one notch to B-plus, four notches into speculative grade, or "junk" status. It placed the rating on negative watch, meaning it could downgrade it again.
  • April 3, 2009 -- The New York Times Company has threatened to close the 137-year-old Boston Globe unless labor unions agree to concessions like pay cuts by the end of the month and the cessation of pension contributions. One of the top daily newspapers in the country, The Boston Globe, is on track to lose $85 million this year.
  • March 31, 2009 -- Sun-Times Media Group Inc., owner of the Chicago Sun-Times and many suburban newspapers, today voluntarily filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection with the aim of reorganizing operations, settling a tax liability and making the company fit for a buyer.
  • March 17, 2009 -- Seattle Post Intelligencer announced that it will cease publication of it's print edition as of today and continue with an online presence only.
  • March 13, 2009 -- The Washington Post has plans to fold its daily business section into the A section, according to sources at the paper. Per the Post: From Monday through Saturday, business coverage will now run in an expanded A section that includes National and International News, Economic & Business section, a Washington Business page, the Fed page, and Editorial and Op-Ed pages. In addition, the Post will cease running full stock listings on Tuesday through Saturday, with comprehensive listings on the website. In Style, we are shifting some comics online, where readership of such features already is high. One of our two crossword puzzles will end because the syndicate that provides it three days a week has decided to discontinue it, along with the weekly chess and poker columns. In addition, we are adjusting the television listings we offer to reflect prime-time programming.
  • February 27, 2009 -- The Rocky Mountain News closes, publishes final edition
  • February 25, 2009 -- The Hearst Corp. has threatened to sell or close the San Francisco Chronicle unless it can push through more job cuts. The publisher, already trying to sell the Seattle Post- Intelligencer, said yesterday that it would seek voluntary buyouts for a “significant” number of its 1,500 employees after the San Francisco Chronicle lost $50 million last year.
  • February 25, 2009 -- The Hartford Courant, struggling with an industrywide decline in advertising, said it will eliminate 100 jobs this week, primarily through layoffs.
  • January 26, 2009 -- Moody's Investors Services has downgraded the NY Times status to "junk" three steps below investment grade. Even worse is Moody's negative expectation, meaning further downgrades are on the horizon in the next 12-18 months. Moody's has withdrawn its rating for NYTCo commercial paper, its unsecured corporate borrowing. Nobody in his right mind is going to loan the company money that way anymore. The terms of the company's $250 million loan from 2 companies controlled by Carlos Slim Helú, the Mexican billionaire the paper once scorned, force the Times to pay over 14% to borrow money. The added interest cost, especially the 11% that is paid in cash (the other 3% gets added to the debt balance, just like a credit card bill that can't be paid in full), is one factor in Moody's downgrade
  • January 9, 2009 -- The Hearst Corp. announced that the Seattle Post Intelligencer lost about $14 million in 2008 and its forecast anticipates a greater loss in 2009 Hearst Corp. is planning to sell or close the Seattle Post Intelligencer, the parent company has confirmed that it is seeking a buyer for the daily
  • December 9, 2008 -- Tribune Co. files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. The company that owns the Los Angeles Times, KTLA Channel 5 and the Chicago Tribune filed for bankruptcy protection today, seeking relief from $12 billion in debt that largely stems from last year's leveraged buyout of the media firm.
  • July 01, 2008 -- Amid mounting pressure from the declining business prospects The LA Times has become the latest of the major US newspapers to make job cuts, as the paper announces 1,700 people will be let go. The LA Times follows the New York Times and other big US papers which have recently slashed their staff as the downturn in advertising revenue continues to bite. The paper also announced additional layoffs of 300 positions in January 2009.


US newspaper circulation falls 7.1 percent in Oct-March period, marking biggest decline yet
Michael Liedtke, AP Business Writer
April 27, 2009
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/US-newspaper-circulation-
sees-apf-15039695.html?.v=6



U.S. newspapers are losing circulation faster than ever, compounding the pain of an industry reeling from even larger drops in the advertising revenue that pays most of the bills.

The Audit Bureau of Circulations said Monday that average sales of newspapers declined 7.1 percent in the October-March period from the same six-month span in 2007-2008. The comparison is drawn from 395 daily U.S. newspapers that reported in both periods.

It's the most severe downturn since newspaper circulation began to crumble in the early 1990s. The erosion has been accelerating during the recession of the past 16 months: U.S. newspaper circulation decreased 4.6 percent in the April-September period of 2008 after falling 3.6 percent in the October 2007-March 2008 span.

In the most recent report, 11 of the 25 largest newspapers sustained double-digit declines in average weekday circulation. The New York Post was hit hardest, with its weekday circulation plunging more than 20 percent, or about 144,000 copies, to 558,140.

Major newspapers typically get anywhere from 15 percent to 30 percent of their revenue from subscriptions and copies sold at newsstands. Advertising remains newspapers' main money maker, but that revenue source has been disintegrating.

While many newspapers have intentionally whittled their circulation by curtailing deliveries in far-flung areas to save money, they also are losing readers who are simply choosing not to buy copies.

Some readers instead are shifting to the free versions of newspapers that most publishers post on their Web sites. That trend helped increase the traffic on newspaper Web sites by 10.5 percent during the first three months of the year, according to a Nielsen Online analysis conducted for the Newspaper Association of America.

But the bigger online audience isn't generating enough ad sales to overcome the huge losses in print advertising. Several major publishers reported their print ad sales plunged by 25 percent to 35 percent during the first quarter. To make matters worse, online ad revenue also fell at major newspaper publishers such as Gannett Co., The New York Times Co. and McClatchy Co.

With their revenue shriveling, many newspapers have been laying off significant numbers of reporters, photographers and editors. Some analysts fear the cost-cutting could cause circulation to fall even further, if readers feel newspapers aren't as useful as they were when more people were gathering and packaging the information. That in turn would probably exacerbate the decline in ad sales.

Some publishers have raised newspaper prices to help offset some of the advertising sales that have evaporated during the past two years.

The New York Post attributed its dramatic decline to a May 2008 increase that doubled the newsstand price to 50 cents. USA Today, the nation's largest newspaper, falls into this category. It raised its per-copy price by a quarter to $1 in December, contributing to a 7.5 percent circulation decline -- by far the largest in the publication's 26-year history.

The recession also stung USA Today because many of its sales are made in airports and hotels, both of which have been quieter because business and leisure travel has dwindled.

USA Today, owned by Gannett, also suffered a big decline after the September 2001 terrorist attacks and then quickly rebounded, raising hopes circulation will come back once the economy recovers, said Susan Lavington, the newspaper's senior vice president of marketing. "Hopefully, we will come roaring back this time just like we did after 9/11," she said.

Even with the sharp decline, USA Today finished the period with average weekday circulation of 2.11 million.

That was slightly ahead of The Wall Street Journal, one of only two newspapers among the 25 largest to avoid a decline in weekday circulation. Boosted by online subscriptions -- which count in the ABC numbers if the Internet readers are paying -- and a push to supplement its financial coverage with more general-interest news, The Wall Street Journal's weekday circulation averaged 2.08 million -- a 0.6 percent increase.

The New York Times ranked third in weekday circulation at 1.04 million after a 3.6 percent decrease. It boasted the largest Sunday circulation at 1.45 million, down 1.7 percent. Neither USA Today nor The Wall Street Journal publish Sunday editions.

Other than The Wall Street Journal, the only newspaper in the top 25 not to post a decline in circulation was The Denver Post. It gained by picking up the subscriber list of the Rocky Mountain News, which closed in February after its owner, E.W. Scripps Co., couldn't find a buyer for the unprofitable newspaper. The Post's average weekday circulation was 371,328 for the period from Feb. 28 to March 31. The Post's average until the News' Feb. 27 closing was 202,589, down 10 percent from the entire six-month period a year ago.

Two newspapers in the top 25 posted Sunday increases, but both gains were less than 1 percent. Sunday circulation rose to 516,562 at The Arizona Republic and hit 415,815 at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

At least one major newspaper, the New York Daily News, blamed its circulation drop-off on an adjustment made in advance of an October 2010 change in the way that the ABC counts sales. The revision will exclude certain bulk sales, such as those made to schools.

The Daily News started to phase out bulk sales in the latest reporting period, accounting for virtually all of its 14 percent decline in weekday circulation to 602,857, said newspaper spokesman Robert Leonard.

Had those bulk sales been included, the Daily News' circulation would have dipped by less than 1 percent, Leonard estimated.


A Leninist View of the American Media
March 26, 2009
By David G. Muller, Jr.
http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/03/
a_leninist_view_of_the_america.html



Conservative exasperation with media bias is a tired refrain, a waste of energy. Complaints of bias start from the premise that press coverage ought to be fair and objective. But is this the premise on which today's mainstream media is based?

It's not. The premise that now guides the mainstream media is something we haven't seen before in this country - thus the never-ending consternation of conservatives at the blatant bias of the media and the nonchalance of its practitioners when caught in the act. We have seen press behavior like this before, though - not here, but in China and the Soviet Union during their classical Leninist eras.

When studying Chinese and Soviet politics back in the 1960s and 70s, I lived on a constant diet of the People's Daily, Pravda, and their companion publications. It was clear from the first day that the press in Communist China and the Soviet Union was fundamentally different from ours. It had a different purpose, a different relationship not only to the political power structure, but to the truth itself. Railing at Chinese or Soviet media bias the way that today's conservatives whine about ABC or the New York Times would have been foolish. Instead, it was necessary to understand the assumptions and objectives that underlay media that was under Leninist control. How did they see their role in society? What did they see as proper and improper practice?

There are rules about how a Leninist press works - its operational code. When reading People's Daily and Pravda with these rules in mind, the controlled press made perfect sense. What's the point here? Troublingly, these same rules fit today's American mainstream media - and the media's relationship to the Democratic Party - nearly to a T.

But you be the judge. Here are the rules, as I discerned and formulated them. "Party" here refers to the governing Communist parties of China and the USSR, in their 20th century heydays.
  • The press is part of the Party establishment, not an independent or adversarial entity. The press does not think of itself as a prisoner of the Party, resentfully forced to abandon objectivity in favor of propaganda. Rather, it sees itself as fulfilling a critically important role in supporting and expanding Party rule. Writers are not journalists in the classic Western sense, but are political activists or functionaries.
  • The Party decides what is news, what is not, what will be reported, and what will not. The press is used to convey Party positions, and politically correct thinking, to the population. Grass-roots activists read, heed, and promote everything carried in the press. The general populace barely reads it, but has no other source of information or worldview, so tends to passively accept the press's messages.
  • Articles must carry the interpretation of events that the Party wishes to convey, without regard to objective accuracy. The press evinces utter certainty of the wisdom and correctness of the Party's motivations, worldview, and policies; no differentiation - much less opposition - is allowed.
  • From time to time, the Party uses the press to agitate the populace in a motivational campaign, aimed either at accomplishing a major goal (such as the Great Leap Forward), or criticizing a domestic Party opponent or a foreign country.
  • The Party's leading individuals always receive deference, reverence, approval, even adulation. No criticism or adverse reflections on Party leaders are allowed. Senior Party figures have unrestricted access to press coverage. Investigative journalism is rare, and unthinkable if directed against Party organizations, leaders, programs, or policies.
  • Individuals opposed to Party rule are selected as targets of disapproval, usually to the point of demonization. Criticism usually extends to allegations of personal corruption, wickedness, or barbarism. Terms used to vilify Party opponents are formulaic, seeming to draw from a lexicon developed for the purpose; there is little if any verbal creativity in criticism of Party-designated targets. Critics or independent thinkers who are not demonized become non-persons, ignored in all articles related to their areas of expertise or attention.
  • Fabrication of events, quotations - even people - is permitted in furtherance of Party objectives. Historical facts, or previous Party positions, may be omitted or reshaped to fit current political requirements. The press will report no past error by the Party or its leaders, except when a leader or faction has fallen afoul of the current ruling Party group - then reporting takes the form of demonization.
  • National security topics are viewed exclusively through the prism of Party interest. Threats will be ignored if the Party is not worried about them, or if in some way they reflect badly on the Party's performance in foreign affairs. Conversely, bogus threats will be touted if doing so is in the Party's interest.
  • Independent media outlets are either forbidden, or permitted only if they address topics of no political impact.
When we look through this Leninist prism, the behavior of today's American mainstream media becomes quite comprehensible. Where conservatives see dishonesty, double standards, and deception, media practitioners see themselves as fulfilling their role in consolidating Party power in pursuit of a socialist utopia. They have fundamentally different ideas of the media's role in society.

How did this happen? Unlike the China or Soviet Union of the 1950s, there is no explicitly Leninist curriculum in the journalism schools, nor have the Democrats formally appointed political commissars on television and newspaper editorial staffs. Yet the effect is clearly apparent. There seems to be a natural, organic affinity between a political party with dictatorial ambitions and the press, and this makes formal indoctrination or routine enforcement unnecessary.

More interesting, what does this Leninist model predict for the mainstream media and its fealty to the Democratic Party? Today's media adhere closely to all the above rules except the last one: exclusivity. NBC or the New York Times may enforce ideological uniformity within their organizations, but what about independent, conservative voices like Rush Limbaugh or National Review?

Democrats have been explicit about plans to revive the Fairness Doctrine, whose implicit goal is to drive conservatives off the talk-radio airwaves. There is no reason to think that a new Fairness Doctrine would not also be festooned with prohibitions against public "hate speech," defined as anything critical of the Left's political program or personalities. Hate speech prohibitions could also be extended to the Internet, targeting conservative opinion sites and blogs. A compliant Supreme Court is only an appointment or two away.

Nor is direct government ownership of media outlets out of the question. We already have the Public Broadcasting System, and this model could be applied more broadly. In this era of government bailouts, how hard is it to imagine a national icon such as the New York Times, crippled by shrinking advertising revenues, seeking government support "in the public interest"?
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