latimes.jpg

One hundred fifty of the Los Angeles Times Media Group’s 250 total job cuts will happen at the namesake paper, with more than one-sixth of the staff being shown the door. And the newspaper will trim its pages by 15 percent, resulting in an even thinner newspaper. This is a much larger bloodletting than execs previously let on; a few months back they were only expected about 50 positions to be lost. Then Sam Zell’s blood sugar dropped, and he got much more vicious. [NYT]

Jul 3, 2008 · Link · 2 Responses

lat_bldg.jpg

“As the company prepares to shed more reporters, it has measured writers’ performances by the number of column inches of stories they ground out. It found, said one Zell executive, that the number of pages per reporter at one of Zell’s smaller papers, The Hartford Courant (about 300), greatly exceeded that at the Times (about 50). As one of the handful of major national papers, however, the Times employs the kind of investigative and expert beat reporters not found at most smaller papers. I could name a number of Times writers who laboured for months on stories that went on to win Pulitzers and other prizes, and whose column-inch production, accordingly, was relatively light. Doing so, I fear, would only put their necks on Zell’s chopping block.” [The Age]

Jun 13, 2008 · Link · Respond

Scott Smith, the publisher of the Chicago Tribune, told staffers in a memo that he would step down, after 30 years with Tribune Co. Not so surprisingly, Smith alluded to differences with Tribune owner Sam Zell as the reason for his departure. Said “differences” likely include Smith’s want to keep his staff intact, while Zell’s plan is to “right-size” the operation. [CS-T]

Jun 13, 2008 · Link · Respond

latmag.jpg

Sam Zell, who continues to ruin all that remains good and honest with the beleaguered newspaper industry – a list that includes just the comics page, and those Best Buy circulars, at this point – is taking out one more strand of fishing wire and tying it around the neck of the Los Angeles Times, one of the Tribune Co.’s flagship newspapers that Zell has taken a liking for abusing. Rather than letting the editorial team there, led by editor Russ Stanton, operate the paper’s Sunday magazine as it always has, Zell sneakily hired an entire new staff for the weekly LAT Magazine without telling anyone. And that staff, it turns out, is part of the business side of the newspaper, not the editorial unit.

CONTINUED »

Jun 11, 2008 · Link · Respond

samzell.jpg

It’s not like Sam Zell ever promised to keep anyone around at the Los Angeles Times. He’s got billions in debt he needs to keep stable, which means he’s got a couple plans up his sleeve. Obvious first choice: job cuts. Except Zell calls this down-sizing “right-sizing,” because, based on his calculations that the average LAT journo produces the equivalent of 51 pages a year, while competitors in Hartford and Baltimore spit out 300 pages, the current staff overload is just waste. And so all of this will bring into focus his other big task, which is evening out the editorial:advertising ratio to 1:1, which will also allow him to shrink the actual size of the paper and the number of pages printed per year. And finally, Zell has taken to addressing his thousands of employees as “partners,” if only because the future of the Times, and its debt load, depend on their stock-option plan.

Jun 6, 2008 · Link · Respond

Sam Zell names Randy Michaels, the former broadcasting and interactive divisions chief, as COO of Tribune Co., putting him in charge of the company’s newspapers. [LAT]

May 8, 2008 · Link · Respond

zellmurdoch.jpg

In case the paparazzization of the Associated Press didn’t have you worried about one of the world’s most ubiquitous news services, perhaps its new hires will. Sam Zell and Rupert Murdoch are both joining the AP’s board, it was announced today at a meeting where chairman William Dean Singleton mixed up “Osama” with “Obama.”

The duo have been elected to three year terms, which is more than enough time for Rupert to BlackBerry Messenger Sam underneath the board room table with tips about how to swindle David Geffen into buying the Los Angeles Times.

That, or to chuckle about the New York PressWall Street Journal parody.

CONTINUED »

Apr 14, 2008 · Link · 1 Response

Is David Geffen making a third try for the Los Angeles Times? Nikki Finke’s gossips say yes, though Geffen has been yachting in the South Pacific for a few weeks, and it’s possible he never had those super secret talks with Sam Zell that have been reported. [DHD]

Apr 11, 2008 · Link · Respond

samzell.jpg

“Another freaking Clear Channel Communications executive on the payroll and this one’s been named President of Tribune Interactive,” announces a press release from Sam Zell’s Tribune Co. . And it gets ZANIER from there!

CONTINUED »

Apr 8, 2008 · Link · Respond

katie-hamilton.jpg It’s been a full two weeks since Chicago Tribune intern Katie Hamilton won the Chicago Sun-Times “Zell No!” music video challenge — and she hasn’t been paid the $1,000 prize yet. Naturally, the combative Sam Zell-owned Tribune will be watching its clock tick until the cheque arrives.

Meanwhile, raise your hand if you’ve ever had to wait more than 14 days to be paid for your freelance work.

Apr 3, 2008 · Link · Respond

zelltipjar.jpg “H—, I put $315 million into this thing, and we’re on the hook for $13 billion—the least I ought to get is my name on the company’s stationery,” writes Same Zell in his April Fools’ Day press release. Hey, at least he made the effort: He even made over the Tribune Co.’s homepage into the fictional ZellCoMediaEnterprises Inc. [WSJ]

Apr 1, 2008 · Link · Respond
Does your newspaper suffer from E.D.?

samzell.jpg The 160-year-old Tribune Company, which Sam Zell bought last April for a complex deal worth $8.2 billion, is floundering. Its newspapers are up for sale, ad revenue is down 15 percent, he’s willing to rename the Chicago Cubs’ Wrigley Field for the right price (though who knows if that’ll happen), and he’s been touring his properties in a storm of curses. He’s combining television and print operations – literally squeezing a TV studio insider a newsroom – created the position of “chief innovation officer” and prepping staffers for the rest of 2008 by telling them a “shitty year” is ahead. So how does the borderline-septuagenarian fancy himself? “‘The challenge is, how do we get somebody 126 years old to get it up?’ Zell said, referring to the newspaper. ‘Well … I’m your Viagra.’”

Mar 24, 2008 · Link · Respond

When the Chicago Sun-Times challenged readers to write a song about Sam Zell’s plan to re-sell naming rights to the Chicago Cubs’ Wrigley Field, little did they think the winner of “Zell No: Don’t Rename Wrigley Field” would be an intern at the competition.

But then they chose University of Illinois student Katie Hamilton, the free help at the Chicago Tribune, who didn’t just pen the lyrics — she made a music video.

The good sports that they are, the Sun-Times has its own report about getting punk’d by Team Zell.

But as the other entries prove, it’s not like they had another option.

CONTINUED »

Mar 20, 2008 · Link · 1 Response

A whole slew of folks are accepting buyout offers to leave the Los Angeles Times as part of yet another round of Sam Zell-issued job cuts. The person we’re saddest to see go? Darrell Kunitomi, tour guide. [LAO]

Mar 5, 2008 · Link · Respond
The L.A. Times isn’t doing well

la-times.jpg

Another joke about office porn may be stale and in bad taste, but we don’t care: L.A. Times reporters may have access to all the NSFW content they want, but the rest of their job leaves something to be desired.

Since David Hiller took over as publisher of the Los Angeles paper 16 months ago, things have been rough out there.

There was the very public departure of Jim O’Shea.

The announcement that the paper will be cutting 50 jobs.

Ad revenue fell 8.5%, lower than the industry average, and the paper has lost major money in classified ads.

No one has any confidence in the new editor, Russ Stanton.

Sam Zell, the newish owner of the Times, pretends to care about great journalism, but is ultimately concerned with the bottom line.

Yesterday, John Montorio, one of two managing editors, announced that he was leaving at the end of the month. Most Times employees see Hiller as “star-struck outsider, a meddler in the newsroom who does not understand journalism or Los Angeles.”

Feb 19, 2008 · Link · 2 Responses
russ stanton takes over the la times

364667321_845935d0be.jpg

As always, the rumors were true. The new L.A. Times editor (read: next head on the chopping block) is Russ Stanton, who is currently the editor of LATimes.com.

Stanton replaces Jim O’Shea, who you might remember, did not leave quietly.

Stanton will come into power following Sam Zell’s motivational porn-at-the office go ahead and his less motivational layoffs at the Tribune Co.

And as long as we’re on the topic of changes at the L.A. Times, circulation chief Jack Klunder will become president of the paper.

Some at the Times do not believe Stanton has the stature or experience to take-over the job. But this man collects bobble-heads, just like Dwight Schrute. And we all know how effective Schrute Bucks are.

Full memo after the jump.

CONTINUED »

Feb 15, 2008 · Link · Respond

PORN JOKES WERE JOKES Sam Zell may kid about multiple penetration, but he’s serious about fucking over his staff. The Tribune Co. CEO eliminated 400 to 500 jobs, including 100 to 150 at the L.A. Times. Looks like cuts are a step closer to that mythical “line” Zell speaks of. [LAT]

Feb 13, 2008 · Link · 1 Response
Apparently Encouraging Friday Porn Days is inappropriate

samzelly.jpg

Don’t you hate when people apologize, but really just blame you? Like, if we were to say, “sorry this site is riddled with grammatical errors, but maybe you should get back to checking for copy editing mistakes in your own work?”

Actually, we are sorry about any grammatical errors on this site. Please stay here and click all around. Don’t go looking for copy editing mistakes in your own work.

Sam “Watch X-Tube in the Office” Zell did just that. He sent out what he described as a mea culpa but wasn’t at all:

In some of these meetings, I used language that was deliberately outrageous. … You may not like me or the way I say things, but I’m thrilled and delighted that for the first time, you may actually have an opinion about your CEO. … So I ask you, when was the last time the industry sat up to take notice of Tribune, or cared what we had to say? …Extremism in the pursuit of opportunity is not a vice. You’ve seen me step over the edge, if only to get you to take a few steps toward the line.

We’re confused about this mythical line: What does pornography at work have to do with great journalism? It’s times like this we’re happy the Tribune Company isn’t hiring.

Feb 12, 2008 · Link · Respond
The Lies We Tell Ourselves

xtube.jpg

Let’s say you worked at a paper that had gone through four senior editors in three years and the general state of journalism was like your toilet after a big cup of coffee. And let’s say you lived in Los Angeles. And how about we quit the hypotheticals and say you work for the L.A. Times?

Well, then Jim O’Shea’s departure couldn’t have felt good. Because when he was ousted, he either was supremely bitter or incredibly honest—or maybe a little bit of both—and basically said the whole Times operation was crap. You’re probably interested in another job, but resigned to the fact that finding a new position at a paper on par with the L.A. Times is next to impossible.

But fear not, Sam Zell, owner of the Tribune Co., came in to make everyone feel better by talking smack on O’Shea, saying “[O’Shea] pissed all over the company where he worked for over 30 years.” But lest any reporters would take issue, Zell won them over by encouraging porn watching at work as long as masturbating and sexual harassment didn’t get in the way of deadlines.

What a kidder. But seriously, your jobs are not secure.

Feb 8, 2008 · Link · Respond
Who Will become the next EIC at The L.A. Times to be fired?

545962939_82514f9691_o.jpg

So while you were enjoying your three day weekend, Jim O’Shea was getting all outraged about getting fired from the L.A. Times over financial disputes, the demise of print journalism, etc.

In the past three years, four senior editors have left the L.A. Times complaining about budget cuts. Effectively, the L.A. Times is that guy who can’t commit that every girl thinks she can change. Rumors have it that the next editor who believes newspapers can change is former business editor Russ Stanton, who currently is the head of editorial content at latimes.com.

CONTINUED »

Jan 22, 2008 · Link · Respond
Next Page