Friday, August 31, 2007

AFK ... Until Next Week


I've stepped away from the keyboard for a few days to say goodbye to summer.

Check back next week for some posts about copyrights, contracts and, of particular interest to LA residents living in rent-stabilized apartments, what to do if the landlord refuses to issue a receipt for your rent payment.

Until then, I'm AFK ...


— TJ Sullivan in LA

UPDATED: Albuquerque Tribune Tributes

An updated list of links concerning the E.W. Scripps Co.'s announcement that it plans to close the paper, unless it finds a buyer (NOTE: The newspaper is rejecting all new subscribers):

Comments from former Tribune staffers @ ABQTrib.com

(scroll to bottom of story to view comments)


"So sad and sorry to hear the news ..." former Trib Editor Kelly Brewer (2001-03)


Scripps CEO's Memo @ Romenesko

SCRIPPS CEO KENNETH LOWE: "... keeping our friends and colleagues at The Tribune in your thoughts and prayers as we work with them ..."


Flashback January 2007 @ Romenesko

SCRIPPS CEO KENNETH LOWE: "... no immediate plans to sell specific Scripps newspapers ..."


Flashback January 2007 (One More Time) @ Romenesko

ROMENESKO: An exec said the company is contemplating splitting off its newspaper operations


Scripps Sells Another Newspaper @ Westword

WESTWORD: "The August 28 announcement that the E.W. Scripps Company wants to sell the Albuquerque Tribune set stomachs rumbling at the Scripps-owned Rocky Mountain News ..."


Cincinnati-Based Scripps To Shutter 'Cincinnati Post' and 'Kentucky Post' @ Cincinnati Post

SCRIPPS COO RICH BOEHNE: "... It is always a difficult decision to cease publication of a newspaper, especially two with such fine traditions of journalistic excellence and community ..."


Iliana Limón's Wolf Tracks Blog @ ABQTrib.com

"... It appears we will be printing our final edition with within the next two months ..."


A Moment of Silence @ jj sez

A view from the other side of the hallway informally referred to as "The DMZ."


Will edit for food @ Ali Patterson

"Ladies and gentlemen, in about 2 months it's very likely that I will not be working at the Albuquerque Tribune -- or be employed at all, for that matter ..."


Afternoon papers, the handyman’s dream @ Reuters blog

"When someone tries to unload a house in need of serious repair, it’s not a money pit, it’s a 'handyman’s dream.'”


My old paper facing closure @ Jack McElroy, Knoxville News Sentinel

"I started my Scripps career at The Tribune in 1977 ...'”


The Trib must live! @ ABQrising!

"There are a lot of reasons to keep the Tribune around ..."


HOLY CRAP! @ Stephen W. Terrell's Web Log

"There have, of course been rumors ..."


Grab the Funnies @ Only In New Mexico

"I love getting ink on my coffee cup in the morning ..."


Albuquerque Tribune on the Block @ Duke City Fix

"OMG ..."


A Paper For Its Time; Now Time Has Run Out @ New Mexico Politics with Joe Monahan

"... assess what it will mean to New Mexico politics ..."


The End of an Era @ TJ Sullivan in LA

"When I was a part of it, the staff questioned its bosses as aggressively as it did bureaucrats and business leaders ..."


— TJ Sullivan in LA

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Are The Lights Already Out In ABQ?


As a former employee of The Albuquerque Tribune, I wanted to show my support of the staff there by purchasing an out-of-state subscription via U.S. mail at a rate of $17.50 per month. If the band is going to play on, I'm happy to pull up a chair and listen. But the circulation department (which is run by the JOA) told me they won't take my money.

The Tribune is up for sale, and yet the publishing company won't take my money?

The agent said: "We've been told not to do any starts on them. The Trib is up for sale and they've told us not to do any more starts on them." Is that supposed to be a selling point for a "qualified buyer?"


[see previous post here]

— TJ Sullivan in LA

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

The End of an Era

Regarding today's report that the Albuquerque Tribune will be sold, or closed ...



On December 30, 1994, The Albuquerque Tribune ran a story about the departure of its editor, Tim Gallagher, who, after eight years at the helm, was bound for a new assignment as editor of the Ventura County Star.

Written by Trib staffer Hank Stuever (now at The Washington Post), the story told the tale of Gallagher's eight years in charge, and made it obvious that this was an editor who would be missed. How else do you interpret a sub-head that reads: "After eight years, The Tribune's ever-optimistic Boy Wonder leaves the paper he nourished in spite of it all."

That last part — "... in spite of it all" — referred to a lot of things, but most all of them boiled down to circulation woes. Great stories were told well six days a week in the pages of The Tribune (there was no Sunday edition), but we couldn't help but sometimes compare it to dancing on the deck of the Titanic. When I arrived in 1994 I often encountered city residents who didn't even know The Tribune existed.

I worked for Gallagher at both The Trib and the Star, and was often advised by him to focus on what I could change, which was what the staff of The Tribune did best. As an evening newspaper that operated under the oldest joint operating agreement in the country, there was plenty outside of the control of The Trib's reporters, photographers and editors. But, no agreement stipulated what photos they could publish, or which stories they could write. I recall attending many staff meetings directed by Trib Managing Editor Neal Pattison, at which he'd draw a circle on the board and slowly fill it in like a pie chart as the group debated whether readers got 35 cents of quality that day.

Trib staffers didn't just look out their windows, they examined their own operation as aggressively as any. This was the culture during and after Gallagher. When I was a part of it, the staff questioned its bosses as aggressively as it did bureaucrats and business leaders. So when Gallagher decided to leave, and a corporate VP dropped by to make it official (and to introduce the new editor, Scott Ware), the staff fired away. People wanted to know if this was the beginning of the end.

The matter was also addresed frankly in that December 30, 1994, story, which I pulled out to review this week and found the following Gallagher quote regarding the circulation situation:
"We're fighting an uphill battle here, the trend away from evening newspapers. I quit blaming myself for it. I went through the Stuart Smalley 12 steps. I'm doing what I can, we're putting out a good newspaper, everybody knows it's a good newspaper [SNIP ...] Don't get worked up about these numbers. This is still a very profitable business."

Gallagher's departure was not the beginning of The Trib's end. It has continued to publish for the past 12 1/2 years since he left. And although the staff size has been considerably diminished during that time, along with circulation, The Trib's product has continued to be recognized with national awards. As pointed out in the story today, The Trib was a "first-place winner in the 1998 and 2001 National Headliner Awards ... [and] won a National Journalism Award in 2002 for 'State of Our Children,' a 20-part series documenting the travails that face kids in this state." There are many others. A complete list would fill multiple screens of this blog.

Quality, however, doesn't always sell.

Paid subscriptions went from about 42,000 in 1987 (when Gallagher was editor) to 32,000 in 1994. But, as of today, it's about 11,000.

In journalism the number 30 signals the end of a story. For The Tribune, it would appear 11,000 marks the end.

No one who knew The Trib can say they didn't see this coming, but considering the strange confluence of events this past week, it seems all the more significant, not just the end of a great newspaper, but the end of an era.

Five days ago Gallagher announced he'll soon step down from his post as publisher of the Ventura County Star, and step out of daily journalism. He wants to become a freelance consultant while he still feels young and energetic, to leave at the top of his game, rather than risk the uncertainty of what tomorrow might bring. [previous posts at LA Observed: here and here]

As for The Tribune, it appears likely to close. Despite the apparent hope in The E.W. Scripps Co. announcement today that it will either sell or shutter the publication, one has to wonder: Who would buy it? The Trib is a paper that, for all intents and purposes, has no printing press, no circulation department, no advertising department, and, well, no building either. The joint operating agreement under which it currently operates would not be in effect if the paper is sold and all the aforementioned essentials are part of the other newspaper. I suppose it's possible an agreement could be worked out, if the other newspaper's owner was willing, but two-newspaper towns just don't exist in the current reality.

There are many ways to demonstrate how much the newspaper industry has changed (and suffered) in the past few years. Many talented and dedicated people in many different places have lost their jobs. Once-great newsrooms have been folded up and forgotten. Everyone marks time in their own way. But for me, and I expect for many of my former Tribune colleagues, these past five days will be the place we mark as the end of an era.


RELATED BLOG POSTS ELSEWHERE:

Comments from former Tribune staffers @ ABQTrib.com

(scroll to bottom of story to view comments)


"So sad and sorry to hear the news ..." former Trib Editor Kelly Brewer (2001-03)


Scripps CEO's Memo @ Romenesko

SCRIPPS CEO KENNETH LOWE: "... keeping our friends and colleagues at The Tribune in your thoughts and prayers as we work with them ..."


Flashback January 2007 @ Romenesko

SCRIPPS CEO KENNETH LOWE: "... no immediate plans to sell specific Scripps newspapers ..."


Flashback January 2007 (One More Time) @ Romenesko

ROMENESKO: An exec said the company is contemplating splitting off its newspaper operations


Scripps Sells Another Newspaper @ Westword

WESTWORD: "The August 28 announcement that the E.W. Scripps Company wants to sell the Albuquerque Tribune set stomachs rumbling at the Scripps-owned Rocky Mountain News ..."


Iliana Limón's Wolf Tracks Blog @ ABQTrib.com

"... It appears we will be printing our final edition with within the next two months ..."


A Moment of Silence @ jj sez

A view from the other side of the hallway informally referred to as "The DMZ."


Will edit for food @ Ali Patterson

"Ladies and gentlemen, in about 2 months it's very likely that I will not be working at the Albuquerque Tribune -- or be employed at all, for that matter ..."


Afternoon papers, the handyman’s dream @ Reuters blog

"When someone tries to unload a house in need of serious repair, it’s not a money pit, it’s a 'handyman’s dream.'”


My old paper facing closure @ Jack McElroy, Knoxville News Sentinel

"I started my Scripps career at The Tribune in 1977 ...'”


The Trib must live! @ ABQrising!

"There are a lot of reasons to keep the Tribune around ..."


HOLY CRAP! @ Stephen W. Terrell's Web Log

"There have, of course been rumors ..."


Grab the Funnies @ Only In New Mexico

"I love getting ink on my coffee cup in the morning ..."


Albuquerque Tribune on the Block @ Duke City Fix

"OMG ..."


A Paper For Its Time; Now Time Has Run Out @ New Mexico Politics with Joe Monahan

"... assess what it will mean to New Mexico politics ..."


— TJ Sullivan in LA

Scripps to sell, or close, ABQ Tribune


PHOTO: A Trib circulation promotion in 1992
"I Get It" was a bumper sticker promotion run by The Albuquerque Tribune in 1992. Kinda wacky? Sure. But it was just one of many risks taken in the laboratory of journalism that developed at 7777 Jefferson Street NE., a destination paper for many talented journalists nationwide.

Unfortunately, readership has dwindled for more than a decade and the company that owns The Trib appears ready to beg off. It announced today that it plans to sell the paper, or close it if no buyer materializes.

This paper was the birthplace of the Scripps motto — "Give Light and The People Will Find Their Own Way" — and the newsroom has always been imbued with its sentiment. Now, it will likely be closed.

Read more about it in my post at LA Observed:
Five days ago [see previous posts here and here] The E.W. Scripps Co. announced that its publisher at the Ventura County Star, Tim Gallagher, would be stepping down to start a media consulting business. Then, this morning, Scripps announced that it has put The Albuquerque Tribune up for sale, and will close it if no buyer materializes ...

Read the rest at LA Observed.

— TJ Sullivan in LA

Monday, August 27, 2007

Median Price Expected To Fall

This year, for the first time since 1950, the median price of homes in the U.S. is expected to fall 1-2 percent, according to a story that appeared Sunday in the The New York Times.

Also in Sunday's NYT, was a column by Robert J. Shiller, the respected professor of economics and finance at Yale and author of “Irrational Exuberance."

In his column, Shiller addressed the rosy outlook that has gotten many recent homebuyers into trouble — the expectation that their homes would continue to soar in value just as these properties did during the first half of the 2000s:
This expectation would mean that a house valued at an already high level of $650,000 in 2005 would be worth more than $1.5 million in 2015. For most people in 2005, it would also mean that they should buy a house soon, or forever be excluded from owning one — and that it would be better to stretch and buy the most expensive house they could afford, to capture the huge profits of homeownership.

Now, of course, prices have been falling, and our survey over the last few months shows that in Los Angeles and San Francisco, the median 10-year expected price increase among recent home buyers has come down to 5 percent a year — a number that is likely to decline further if prices continue to drop. As price expectations fall, homeowners lose the incentive to pay off a mortgage on a home they are realizing is beyond their means. They decide to default. We thus have the beginnings of a mortgage crisis.
Some of Shiller's points were hammered home by today's announcement that the national inventory of for-sale homes jumped to 9.6 months in July:
A for-sale inventory greater than six months is generally considered to indicate a buyer's market -- this statistic indicates the length of time it will take to deplete the for-sale inventory at the current sales pace. The existing-home inventory has climbed 31.5 percent since July 2006, when there was a 7.3-month supply.

— TJ Sullivan in LA

Sunday, August 26, 2007

VC Star Publisher Explains, Kinda

A new post at LA Observed:
Ventura County Star Publisher Tim Gallagher's column on Sunday answered some (but not many) of the questions raised by the unexpected announcement Friday that he will step down to become a freelance consultant (albeit while tethered part-time to his current corporate parent, The E.W. Scripps Co.).

Still no departure date, though Gallagher writes that it will occur ...
Read the rest of the post at LA Observed.

— TJ Sullivan in LA

Saturday, August 25, 2007

Tim Gallagher To Step Down

A new post at LA Observed:
Ventura County Star Publisher Tim Gallagher, 51, who shepherded the 100,000-circulation newspaper through a complex series of transitions during the past 12 1/2 years (while also fighting — and winning — a sometimes-bitter battle for readers against the Los Angeles Times), is stepping down to "pursue other business opportunities" in media and management consulting, according to a story posted today (Friday, Aug. 24, 2007) on the Star's Web site.

The story didn't state directly whether Gallagher has already stepped down, or if he will do so at a later date. It said Gallagher's new business interests will not compete with the interests of the Star's corporate parent, The E.W. Scripps Co., and that he will continue to be employed on "special assignment" as ...
Read the rest of the post at LA Observed.

— TJ Sullivan in LA

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

The Contract Conundrum

Hat tip to Romenesko at Poynter.org for including in its Friday edition a link to last week's Native Intelligence blog post about the age-old issue of freelancer contracts.

As I explained in the post, the contract conundrum has been exacerbated in recent years by media layoffs and buyouts. Not only have more journalists been flushed into the freelance pool, but staff reductions have increased the reliance of publications on material produced by freelancers.

The result — more good journalists signing more bad contracts.

As Christine Tatum, president of the Society of Professional Journalists, wisely observed earlier this month at the conclusion of a post on her Freedom of the Prez blog:
"Far too many freelancers are not in a position to negotiate their own terms, and they are, frankly, continuing to sign bad contracts because they have no other choice if they want to pay the bills."
Highly skilled as the freelance ranks may be, many people are unqualified and, sadly, unwilling to challenge the many different contracts they receive each month. Some publications refuse to change contracts, but even if that's not the case, negotiations can take considerable time, which many freelancers don't have to spare.

This isn't just about wages and copyrights, both of which are cause enough for concern. This is also about the many other matters that freelancer contracts seek to define.

Some contracts seek give the publication ownership of notes and electronic files, a point that sometimes goes unnoticed because the notes and files remain in the possession of the journalist, unless the publication someday has a reason to seek them out.

Some contracts seek to bind the journalist to prevailing-party clauses, which means the loser pays all fees in the event of a legal battle between the journalist and the publication, a move that sounds about as advisable as betting your savings in a no-holds-barred cage match with a professional fighter.

More alarming than that, however, are contracts that seek to assign all legal liability to the journalist, which means if someone files a claim against the work, the journalist would pay for the court costs and attorney fees to defend it.

One need not look far to find examples of lawsuits filed against the work of freelance journalists.

This is of particular concern when taken in the context of the increased reliance of publications on freelancers to cover even traditional goverment beats. If it were to become standard for freelancer contracts to deny journalists the publication's legal protection, we can only imagine what injustices might go unreported for fear of retaliation. No journalist should have to weigh the risk to their house and future against reporting facts that some might prefer to keep concealed.

It's impossible to determine how common any type of freelancer contract is at the moment. There are at least as many different agreements as there are publications, and no clearinghouse exists to guage the norm. However, because contract terms like this exist anywhere, independent reporters and photographers must be cautioned, and the organizations that serve as journalism's watchdogs must take the lead in pursuit of a solution.

— TJ Sullivan in LA

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

SPJ's Struggle A Sign Of Something Else

A new post at Native Intelligence. ...
Like a human body unsure of whether the brain outranks the heart, or vice versa, the Society of Professional Journalists* wrestled itself into a knot during the past few weeks, apparently conflicted about whether to throw its considerable weight behind The Publication or The Journalist in a legal battle over copyrights and contracts. The resolution of SPJ's inner struggle came last week when the non-profit professional organization reversed its initial decision to side with the publication in this particular case. But rather than switch sides, SPJ pulled itself out of the match and retreated to the sidelines, which is where some say it should have been from the start.

...

Read the rest of the post at Native Intelligence.

— TJ Sullivan in LA

Sunday, August 12, 2007

Foreclosures, Foreclosures, Foreclosures

Another weekend of housing woe in the pages of the Los Angeles Times:

Foreclosures may spur price drops
Major lenders are repossessing homes in Southern California much faster than they can sell them, a development that could set off a downward spiral of price cuts and more foreclosures.

At some point -- maybe this fall, maybe in 2008 -- the lenders' inventories will grow so large that they will have no choice but to start aggressively cutting prices, many agents and analysts predict.

That, in turn, will put more pressure on individual sellers, who will have to reduce their own prices if they want to find a buyer.

As values fall, more people could lose their homes, which would swell the lenders' inventories anew.

"We're going to have a bear market in housing for a while," said Christopher Cagan, director of research for First American CoreLogic in Santa Ana. "It's going to be bad to be a seller or someone forced to refinance in the impact zone."

Foreclosures: How does your ZIP Code fare? — A searchable database that cointains foreclosure figures by Southern California ZIP Code for 2Q 2007.

One house's trip through the boom and bust
Lenders have never been so careless with their loans, knowing they could easily resell them to Wall Street. With home values on the rise, houses took on a new role. They became ATMs where you never had to make a deposit but could withdraw endlessly, or so it seemed to many at the time.

MORTGAGE MELTDOWN: Housing woes afflict many
The sub-prime mortgage pain convulsing financial markets is nothing new to people who make their livings in real estate and the housing construction industry. For months, the deteriorating market has been taking money out of millions of workers' pockets.

The real estate agent

The house appraiser

The mortgage loan processor

The mortgage brokers

The escrow owner

The tile setter

The painter


— TJ Sullivan in LA

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Dolphins in Venice (Summer 2007)

A new post at Native Intelligence. ...
Most mornings for the past couple months, several pods of particularly playful dolphins have been spotted in the surf just off the shores of Santa Monica and Venice. I took my camera along this morning to shoot a few quick photos and, sure enough, they did not disappoint. I saw at least two dozen dolphins, all seemingly unfazed by the presence of ...

Read the rest of the post at Native Intelligence.

— TJ Sullivan in LA

Thursday, August 02, 2007

Mayor Villaraigosa in Westwood Village

A new post at Native Intelligence.

Here's an excerpt:
There he was, all alone on Lindbrook Drive in front of Jamba Juice at 12:25 p.m. today, the mayor in the shade on a cell phone while a security detail stood sentry in the sunlight (blame Hizzhonor's choice of the shade for the grainy quality of the cell-cam image, which would have been more clear had he stood in the sun). Nontheless, the Mayor was seemingly unfazed by the heat, his shirt so nicely pressed and perfectly white. He's clearly a man who's got that pesky ring thing under control, I mean, the ring-around-the-collar thing.

At least one young woman asked to have her picture taken while ...

Read the rest at Native Intelligence.

— TJ Sullivan in LA