Llewellyn
King
Read Llewellyn's bio and previous columns
October 27, 2008
A Requiem for
Reporting as Newspapers Face Mortal Danger
The newspaper of the
Newspaper Guild tells the terrible truth: Traditional newspaper
journalism is dying faster than anyone thought. Almost every major
newspaper is making drastic cuts in staffing, from The Washington
Post to The Chicago Sun-Times, from The St. Louis
Post-Dispatch to The Philadelphia Inquirer, and from The
Dallas Morning News to The Modesto Bee. Forty percent of the
Newark Star-Ledger's newsroom staff will depart in a buyout wave.
Jim Wilse, editor of The Star-Ledger, said 151 buyout offers were
accepted in a newsroom of about 330 people.
Here in Washington,
the all-important bureaus that make up most of the Washington press
corps are being decimated; and I mean that in the current usage of cut
by 90 percent, not the original usage of cut by 10 percent. Colleagues
and friends abound who are writing books, trying public relations or
seeking government jobs.
The cause of the
hollowing out of newspapers is well known: The Internet is getting the
information out faster, it is mostly free and the reader can access it
selectively. The trouble is that the information on the Web, if it is
any good, first appeared in a newspaper somewhere.
Newspapers still
keep the record, but they are woefully behind the times. Today's
newspaper makes no concessions to the passage of time. It is produced in
a factory in the middle of the night, transported through the traffic
and entrusted to a child for delivery.
Worse, the business
model is hopelessly outmoded. It relies on a healthy stream of
advertising revenue to make up for the poor income from actual sales of
the product.
The story is the
same in all advanced countries. Newspapers are in trouble – serious,
mortal trouble. Only in emerging markets are newspaper sales growing,
and that often reflects poor penetration of personal computers and
government control of broadcasting.
Newspapers have
suffered electronic competition in the past and survived. They were
portable and kept a tangible record of events. You cannot hook up a
printer to a radio or a television set, but you can to a computer.
Advertisers can even distribute coupons via the Web.
H.L. Mencken,
America's greatest journalist, feared for the morning newspapers in his
day because all the circulation and wealth was in the evening papers.
Television put paid to that.
In Washington, until
the 1960s, the dominant paper was The Evening Star. After its
purchase and merger with The Times Herald (a weak morning paper
owned out of Chicago) in 1954, The Washington Post became the
most important political newspaper in the country and a cash generator
for its owners. The 40-year golden age of the morning newspaper was
dawning. Now it is fading.
The mighty New
York Times lost money in one quarter this year and may repeat the
sorry event. The Washington Post is being subsidized by a
test-cramming company, Kaplan, Inc. Two once-proud titles, The
Chicago Tribune and The Los Angeles Times, are at the mercy
of a man who, in newspaper terms, is a Philistine – loud-mouthed, vulgar
and insensitive to the journalistic craft.
There are those who
would take pleasure in the agony, and what might be the death throes, of
the mainstream media, but they would be ill advised. With the death of
newspapers goes the health of the republic. Democracy only works with a
vigorous, disrespectful press, demanding and providing transparency in
every aspect of life. The press may be disreputable and eccentric, but
it is the indispensable partner of the ballot box.
Freedom of the press
is the freedom to comment and to criticize. But more important, it is
the freedom to investigate. Without investigation, government,
corporations and even science goes about its business in the corrupting
dark.
Already, reflecting
the collapse of the Washington reporter corps, there has been a falloff
in the number of Freedom of Information Act requests. There are fewer
newspapers that can afford to have correspondents travel with the
president. Newspapers are not detaching reporters for investigative work
of the kind undertaken by The Washington Post on the Walter Reed
Army Medical Center. Foreign bureaus, in critical places like Baghdad
and Kabul, are not being staffed, let alone Moscow, Beijing and Tokyo.
No entity in the
blogosphere has the resources to take up the newspaper role. Opinion is
cheap. Reporting costs money – a lot of money. The unintended
consequence of this collapse is that the Associated Press will become
more important politically and socially than is good for any
organization in the news business. The shafts of light will be fewer in
the long winter for news ahead.
© 2008 North Star
Writers Group. May not be republished without permission.
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