Guest guest Posted October 31, 2005 Report Share Posted October 31, 2005 RANDY SHAW, BEYOND CHRON - The New Times Corp., publisher of the SF Weekly, East Bay Express, and 15 other weeklies, announced that it has acquired the Village Voice and the Los Angeles Weekly. Both publications will not only cease making political endorsements, but will likely replace politically progressive writers and columnists with those espousing the chain’s standard mix of cynicism and anti-government libertarianism. The transformation of weekly papers from the voice of the anti-war movement and sixties youth culture to mere vehicles for corporations to reach consumers between 21-35 is now largely complete. The New Times Corp.’s purchase of the most prominent remaining stars of the alternative weekly press---the Voice and LA Weekly---marks a sad turning point for progressive activists. While the Voice lacked the luster of its 1960’s-80’s pre-Internet heyday, the paper still featured important progressive writers like Sydney Schanberg and filled important information gaps in mainstream coverage of New York City politics and culture. For those of us in California, the likely future purging of the progressive LA Weekly is even more troubling. The LA Weekly helped link the city’s geographically scattered progressives, promoted the agenda of Progressive LA, strongly backed the Villaraigosa mayoral campaigns both in 2001 and 2005, and has writers like Harold Meyerson who are among the most perceptive in America. The LA Weekly is far and away the best progressive print source on state politics, and the best general circulation source on local and state labor union issues. Based on the New Times track record, the LA Weekly’s strong pro-union tilt will soon be gone, as will its in-depth coverage of worker issues from a labor perspective. In the mid-1990’s, there were three progressive weekly newspapers in Los Angeles. Thanks to New Times, soon there will be none. New Times provides a cookie-cutter product that includes massive advertisements, a thorough entertainment calendar, a few short news items, and one long story that rarely addresses social or economic unfairness. When New Times does touch such topics, it writes cover stories with titles like “The Case Against Rent Control.” New Times owners Michael Lacey and James Larkin are political libertarians whose publications routinely criticize progressives and their institutions. Both the East Bay Express and SF Weekly shifted to this New Times paradigm after acquired by the corporation. Unless the Bush Justice Department intervenes to stop these latest acquisitions on antitrust grounds (fat chance),New Times will soon control 25 percent of the 7.6 million in circulation claimed by the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies. . . The Bay Guardian was the only local news source covering the negotiations leading to New Times’ announcement. The weekly has reason to be concerned, as New Times’ 25% control of the weekly market and its new presence in New York City and Los Angeles does not bode well for Guardian advertising revenue. The SF Weekly disputes that it is offering cut-rate ads as a strategy to put the Guardian out of business, and instead attributes the Guardian’s financial decline to increased printing and occupancy costs and reduction in advertising reductions following the dot-com boom. While a court will decide this controversy, one need only look at the practices of the Gannet Corporation to see where New Times may be heading. . . Gannett’s longtime strategy is to enter a market with an established home-controlled paper, destabilize the competition through selling ads below-cost, and then offer to buy its competitor at a price too generous to refuse. Following the sale, the original paper is closed down and Gannett sets new advertising rates reflective of its monopoly in the marketplace. New Times’ recent history shows that it appears to be following Gannett’s lead. And unless San Francisco residents and business begin to speak out against monopoly control of the local “alternative” weekly media, then the Bay Guardian could well go the way of its New York City and Los Angeles colleagues. www.beyondchron.org/default.asp?sourceid= & smenu=110 & twindow= & mad= & sdetail=264 FIFTY YEARS OF THE VILLAGE VOICE NAT HENTOFF - I arrived at The Village Voice in 1958 in urgent need of a wide-ranging forum because for years I had been typed by editors as only knowing about jazz. No pay was offered me then, but I was promised that I could write about anything I wanted to. Soon I was immersed in a " newspaper culture " I'd never experienced before. Many of the " assignments " were self-propelled, and the writing had to be in your own voice if you could find it. (This came to be known later as " personal journalism. " ) Jack Newfield, who first became known through The Village Voice , used to say that co-founder and first editor in chief Dan Wolf " orchestrated the obsessions of his writers. " We were indeed a passionately opinionated motley lot. Dan Wolf prided himself on not hiring anyone with experience as a professional journalist. He wanted writers who hadn't been conditioned to the rules and restraints of the conventional press. There was no party line at the Voice. Dan Wolf hardly ever wrote an editorial. And members of the staff continually differed with one another, not only in the small confines of the office but continually in its pages. For one of many examples, in 1968, when Albert Shanker, head of the United Federation of Teachers, closed down the entire school system in a fierce dispute with the black leadership of the Ocean Hill–Brownsville school district, there was constant warfare in our pages among the regular writers - and from many contributors on both sides. . . I was invited to speak at Harvard to the Nieman fellows, highly regarded professional journalists chosen to spend a year in Cambridge, where they could take any courses they wanted. During my talk, a professor auditing the session said to me in exasperation: " What I can't stand about the Voice is that I have no idea of what its editorial policy is. There's no clean line. " . . . Furthermore, back then there was no line between " objective " reporting and being part of the story you were writing about. That was especially true during the Vietnam War, when some of us were active participants in marches, teach-ins, and even civil disobedience. I was in a crowd trying to obstruct an induction center. One morning, I got a call from a young reporter, one of our best, Don McNeill, who was covering an anti-war demonstration at Grand Central Terminal that the police tried to break up by force, including smashing heads. Our reporter, who had been clubbed, said hurriedly to me on the phone, " Should I put in the story that I've got blood on my shirt, or is that putting myself too much into the story? " " That's your lead, " I told him. I doubt that anyone on the New York Times news desk ever got such a call from a reporter in the field. . . Not long ago, I saw Rupert Murdoch at a book party for Judge Andrew Napolitano of Fox News at its New York studios. I reminded Murdoch that I'd once worked for him. He groaned and said, without missing a beat, " Oh, the Voice, the bane of my existence! " During his regime here, the Voice was, to my knowledge, the only one of his properties that openly and directly criticized him from time to time. At one point, he was so furious at one of our columnists, Alexander Cockburn, that he called the then editor in chief, David Schneiderman, and ordered him to fire Cockburn. Schneiderman did not. Murdoch called him again and threatened, " If you don't fire him, I'll sell the Voice to someone worse than I am! " Schneiderman took the chance. That was, and is, the spirit of the Voice. And that's why I've stayed here all these years. http://villagevoice.com/specials/0543,50thehent,69254,31.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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