The Journalism professor looked at his class of 25 and asked, “How many of you read a newspaper?”
Silence. After about a minute the oldest student in the class (40ish) raised her hand. She was somewhat embarrassed to even admit she still read a newspaper.
Many in the class were quick to chime in they get their news from Google, Yahoo or other sources (like late night TV). They said it is far more timely than what comes out in a newspaper, and they felt the information was more accurate.
That is the situation today in the newspaper business. How bad is it?
According to a former award-winning Kansas City Star reporter, the Star laid off five more veteran newsroom journalists today. The five included Alan Bavley, Greg Hack, Brian Burnes, Jim Fussell and Mary Schulte. All together they total at least 115 years of service—and enough awards to fill a room.
Later on, it was confirmed the Star also dumped Barb Shelly, who had been with the newspaper since 1984 and a member of its editorial board since 2004 (her final column). Editorial page editor Steve Paul also departed with his 40 years of experience, along with long-time theater critic Robert Trussell and assistant sports page editor Mark Zeligman.
In a week more about 250 years of stalwart journalism experience has been dumped at the KC Star alone.
A few years ago the Star, a McClatchy-owned paper, boasted nearly 2,000 employees. With the most recent gutting, that number is closer to 400.
Tony Berg took over as publisher in January noting, “the future of the publication is bright.” He is from the advertising side of the business so actual journalism is not a priority. In fact, he noted that he plans to add advertising positions.
Berg assumed publisher duties from Mi-Ai Parrish, who in her five-year reign oversaw the biggest downsizing in the newspaper’s 136-year history. For her stalwart efforts, she was promoted to president and publisher of the Arizona Republic.
The slicing and dicing at the Kansas City Star is not unusual. It is happening at newspapers across the country. Veteran journalists at publications such as USA Today have all but been eliminated. They were replaced by much younger talent with far less experience and an increase in story mistakes. Most significantly, these rookie journos’ salaries are also far lower.
Ironically, while newspapers are shrinking in circulation and eliminating the journalists who are the heart of the product, most have raised their prices dramatically over the years.
It could be likened to a candy bar manufacturer shrinking the size of its product from 10 inches to four while substituting chocolate with another ingredient. And then charging consumers twice the cost of the original.
Consumers today demand their news be timely, cheap and relatively unbiased. TV and radio stations can do that. Social media does it even better for the younger demographic.
Newspapers have become as useful as buggy whips, and there is little hope that will change in the future.











McGUFF ROLLING IN GRAVE TODAY
I was working at KCMO Radio (when it had an audience in 1989). The late Editor Joe McGuff called a press conference to announce that the evening STAR would soon be merged with the TIMES and the evening paper would go away.
I have the 90-minute cassette with McGuff’s comments and the tons of questions that followed. The point: McGuff said in 1989, the two papers had a total of 379 reporters and writers! Twenty-five years ago.
Call me next time you come to KC, and I will play it for you. Joe wouldn’t believe what’s happened to his paper in 2016!
Thank you.
Joe H. Vaughan
WE LOSE WHEN JOURNOS ARE LET GO
It is so much worse than you realize and you don’t even know it. People DO consume media that newspaper journalists have produced, although these days it’s often online.
The problem is without newspaper journalists, we lose coverage of municipal, school and county governments. Television and radio don’t do this, except in rare cases.
I worked for a now-defunct newspaper, the Kansas City Kansan, and I struggled with how I was going to do everything as the newspaper’s sole reporter at the time. Luckily, the local government made it easy by consolidating Wyandotte County and Kansas City, Kansas into one Unified Government. Myself and another Kansas City Star reporter were typically the only people who were not government staff at meetings. That bureau is now gone. That newspaper is now gone. 10 years later, I wonder who covers one of Kansas City area’s largest governments?
I say this as a communications professional who has taken on representing the City of Leavenworth. I provide recorded video meetings to the general public here. What I do not provide, what I cannot provide, is independent in-depth analysis of our elected officials and their actions. We’re lucky in Leavenworth to have a newspaper that does that for us. How many of you live in areas where reporters attend your local government meetings? How do you find out how your school board is spending your tax dollars? How do you know who’s running for office in your county government? For an increasing number of small Kansas communities, the answer is, “I don’t know.”
Excellent points. I totally agree. We lose a tremendous amount of news without newspaper journalists.
CONSUMERS NOT BUYING MCCLATCHY PRODUCT
Barb Shelly and Steve Paul are gone, too.
McClatchy has been trying to sell a left-wing product to largely conservative consumers. It hasn’t worked and it never will.
Zack,
It really has nothing to do with politics. It also has nothing to do with diminishing readership or the consumership of media. I’ve seen newspapers close that have plenty of readers. The corporate structure is just ill-suited to govern newspapers. There’s absolutely nothing readers can do unless they’ve got deep pockets to buy shares.
DISAGREES WITH EDITORIAL POSITIONS
Politics are a factor for some people. I’m a journalist, and I used to have subscriptions to the Star, Post-Dispatch and Columbia Tribune. I dropped all of them years ago because I disagree with their editorial positions.
A BALANCED APPROACH?
I agree. Why do newspapers lean so hard politically one way or another and then expect people of all political affiliations to enjoy reading their paper? You’d think they’d want to take a more balanced view and not alienate so many of their current and prospective customers. It just doesn’t make good business sense.