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5 Other Reasons the Boston Globe Faces Closure
High Talk ^ | 04/08/09 | Hightalk blog

Posted on 04/11/2009 5:59:35 PM PDT by raccoonradio

The urgency I’ve felt about the possible closure of the Boston Globe was put into stark contrast yesterday morning. As I walked home after accompanying my daughter to her elementary school, I was joined by another parent who had just completed the same duty. As we strolled up the street, I mentioned the story that I’ve been obsessing over the last few days. Cadbury, put the Boston Globe next to the champagne and cavier. And send a check to some orphans.

Cadbury put the Boston Globe next to the champagne. And send a check to some orphans.

It was news to him. He neither knew about the Globe’s crisis nor cared. He told me he hasn’t subscribed to the Globe in years. This was yet another example of a college-educated professional with no connection to his hometown newspaper (earlier this week I blogged about my unscientific survey of Gen Y professionals and how none of them subscribed to the Globe).

Clearly, I’m in the minority in how much I care about the Globe. Clearly, I’m part of an older demographic still clinging to concept of newspapers. But it made me wonder why so many people don’t read the Globe anymore. There’s no doubt that the primary reason is because of the easy access to information available on the web and the global financial crisis. But the Boston Globe has also made other big mistakes - and in the process lost the loyalty of their community.

Here are five of the biggest mistakes:

1. Embracing Elitism.

They did this in two ways:

* First by its hiring practices of editors and reporters. The fastest way to get hired by the Globe? Have a degree from an Ivy League college. In the last decade, the Globe rarely recruited young talent from the smaller and regional newspapers in New England. I worked at the Telegram & Gazette in Worcester for more than a decade (the 5th largest newspaper in New England), yet not one reporter or editor while I was there was hired by the Globe - and it wasn’t for a lack of effort by the T&G staff. The Globe shunned locally trained journalists in favor of those with better pedigrees. As a result, they built a staff of like-minded individuals mostly culled from upper echelons of society. * Second they began to write specifically for this class of people - mostly white and affluent and living in the Boston suburbs. They became obsessed with real estate, gourmet cooking, home decorating, Harvard University, technology gadgets, travel, restaurants and child care. The content was often maddeningly skewered to this wealthy suburban audience often assuming that every reader faced the same challenges when redesigning a 1,000-square-foot kitchen or throwing a dinner party for 18 after a Tanglewood concert. This was the ultimate betrayal of the Globe’s working and blue-collar readers.

2. Abandoning Boston

At some point, the Globe decided to cede its city coverage to the Boston Herald. Probably at the same time it decided to focus outward on the suburban audience. As a result, they no longer covered City Council or School Committee meetings. If you wanted to understand the politics and issues of Boston you wouldn’t find it in the pages of the Globe. Coverage of issues was spotty. Columnists - even the local ones - focused on national issues. There was more coverage of the Bush administration in the editorial and op-ed pages than of the Menino administration.

3. The Liberal Bias

I believe the Globe tries to balance each story, but I also believe it slants to the left in what it chooses to cover and how it covers it. The editorials have become preachy - and a bit heavy handed. And other than Jeff Jacoby there are few op-eds from the right side of the aisle. The Globe rarely gives thoughtful analysis or support to conservative and Republican issues, causes and candidates. While I don’t believe this bias is as bad as many critics say it is in reality - the perception is that the Globe is a liberal newspaper - even on its news pages. The Globe hasn’t successfully put that perception to rest. This, of course, alienated many readers in the center and on the right.

4. Cutting Coverage

The Globe - under the terrible stewardship of the New York Times Co. - has slowly, but methodically eliminated staff. With the long downsizing of reporters and editors - from foreign correspondents to sports reporters - the content has suffered. The Globe has relied on wire stories, freelancers, and younger reporters (without the institutional knowledge or experience) to generate too much of its content. And as the staff got smaller, they were forced to write more - and do less reporting. Quality suffered. When you put out a lesser product (and what the Globe is publishing right now is a sub-par sporadic dartboard of news). You lose customers when you charge more for less.

5. Insular Mentality

With the staff shrinkage came an entrenchment of the Globe establishment. The insiders ruled. Outsiders - or those that thought differently than the establishment - were either sent packing or left of their own freewill. This establishment became arrogant and blind to the realities happening outside of Morrissey Boulevard. They failed to innovate, failed to change with the times, failed to embrace new technologies and new revenue models. They stuck to the doomed course and are now suffering the consequences.

There is no doubt the web and the economic global crisis are the primary reasons why the Globe finds itself on the edge of closure. But the Globe needs to shoulder the responsibility for its own demise. And if it doesn’t stop thinking like this and start thinking like this - then it the newspaper’s closure is immenient.The urgency I’ve felt about the possible closure of the Boston Globe was put into stark contrast yesterday morning. As I walked home after accompanying my daughter to her elementary school, I was joined by another parent who had just completed the same duty. As we strolled up the street, I mentioned the story that I’ve been obsessing over the last few days. Cadbury, put the Boston Globe next to the champagne and cavier. And send a check to some orphans.

Cadbury put the Boston Globe next to the champagne. And send a check to some orphans.

It was news to him. He neither knew about the Globe’s crisis nor cared. He told me he hasn’t subscribed to the Globe in years. This was yet another example of a college-educated professional with no connection to his hometown newspaper (earlier this week I blogged about my unscientific survey of Gen Y professionals and how none of them subscribed to the Globe).

Clearly, I’m in the minority in how much I care about the Globe. Clearly, I’m part of an older demographic still clinging to concept of newspapers. But it made me wonder why so many people don’t read the Globe anymore. There’s no doubt that the primary reason is because of the easy access to information available on the web and the global financial crisis. But the Boston Globe has also made other big mistakes - and in the process lost the loyalty of their community.

Here are five of the biggest mistakes:

1. Embracing Elitism.

They did this in two ways:

* First by its hiring practices of editors and reporters. The fastest way to get hired by the Globe? Have a degree from an Ivy League college. In the last decade, the Globe rarely recruited young talent from the smaller and regional newspapers in New England. I worked at the Telegram & Gazette in Worcester for more than a decade (the 5th largest newspaper in New England), yet not one reporter or editor while I was there was hired by the Globe - and it wasn’t for a lack of effort by the T&G staff. The Globe shunned locally trained journalists in favor of those with better pedigrees. As a result, they built a staff of like-minded individuals mostly culled from upper echelons of society. * Second they began to write specifically for this class of people - mostly white and affluent and living in the Boston suburbs. They became obsessed with real estate, gourmet cooking, home decorating, Harvard University, technology gadgets, travel, restaurants and child care. The content was often maddeningly skewered to this wealthy suburban audience often assuming that every reader faced the same challenges when redesigning a 1,000-square-foot kitchen or throwing a dinner party for 18 after a Tanglewood concert. This was the ultimate betrayal of the Globe’s working and blue-collar readers.

2. Abandoning Boston

At some point, the Globe decided to cede its city coverage to the Boston Herald. Probably at the same time it decided to focus outward on the suburban audience. As a result, they no longer covered City Council or School Committee meetings. If you wanted to understand the politics and issues of Boston you wouldn’t find it in the pages of the Globe. Coverage of issues was spotty. Columnists - even the local ones - focused on national issues. There was more coverage of the Bush administration in the editorial and op-ed pages than of the Menino administration.

3. The Liberal Bias

I believe the Globe tries to balance each story, but I also believe it slants to the left in what it chooses to cover and how it covers it. The editorials have become preachy - and a bit heavy handed. And other than Jeff Jacoby there are few op-eds from the right side of the aisle. The Globe rarely gives thoughtful analysis or support to conservative and Republican issues, causes and candidates. While I don’t believe this bias is as bad as many critics say it is in reality - the perception is that the Globe is a liberal newspaper - even on its news pages. The Globe hasn’t successfully put that perception to rest. This, of course, alienated many readers in the center and on the right.

4. Cutting Coverage

The Globe - under the terrible stewardship of the New York Times Co. - has slowly, but methodically eliminated staff. With the long downsizing of reporters and editors - from foreign correspondents to sports reporters - the content has suffered. The Globe has relied on wire stories, freelancers, and younger reporters (without the institutional knowledge or experience) to generate too much of its content. And as the staff got smaller, they were forced to write more - and do less reporting. Quality suffered. When you put out a lesser product (and what the Globe is publishing right now is a sub-par sporadic dartboard of news). You lose customers when you charge more for less.

5. Insular Mentality

With the staff shrinkage came an entrenchment of the Globe establishment. The insiders ruled. Outsiders - or those that thought differently than the establishment - were either sent packing or left of their own freewill. This establishment became arrogant and blind to the realities happening outside of Morrissey Boulevard. They failed to innovate, failed to change with the times, failed to embrace new technologies and new revenue models. They stuck to the doomed course and are now suffering the consequences.

There is no doubt the web and the economic global crisis are the primary reasons why the Globe finds itself on the edge of closure. But the Globe needs to shoulder the responsibility for its own demise. And if it doesn’t stop thinking like this and start thinking like this - then it the newspaper’s closure is immenient.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: bostonglobe; dinomedia; elitism; nytime

1 posted on 04/11/2009 5:59:35 PM PDT by raccoonradio
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To: raccoonradio; Andonius_99; Andy'smom; Antique Gal; Big Guy and Rusty 99; bitt; Barset; ...

Howie Carr/ Globe deathwatch ping


2 posted on 04/11/2009 6:00:22 PM PDT by raccoonradio
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To: raccoonradio

sorry for double post in article!


3 posted on 04/11/2009 6:04:13 PM PDT by raccoonradio
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To: raccoonradio
The death of an elitist, etc. newspaper isn't a problem. It's too long survival is.
Which newspaper admits it's failing financially due to failing it's readers?
Anything and everything is at fault except the newspapers them selves. So as long as they made money they congratulated themselves with Pulitzers and other such nonsense and concluded the owners and managers were brilliant. Now it's clear they never knew what they doing at all. Good riddance as a lesson of what not to do.
4 posted on 04/11/2009 6:34:47 PM PDT by count-your-change (You don't have be brilliant, not being stupid is enough.)
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To: raccoonradio

Not a bother - it was worth reading twice!

Hey Mass FReepers - check the Mass board here for info about the Mass Tea Parties.

Anyone know if Howie is going to be there? I’m assuming at Christopher Columbus Park @ 3PM but haven’t listened of late (my bad).

Who is at 11AM?


5 posted on 04/11/2009 6:39:16 PM PDT by Sparky1776
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To: raccoonradio
sorry for double post in article!

*snicker*...I noticed that, starting crossin' the eyes...
hate it , when that happens.

"When buying and selling are controlled by legislation, the first things to be bought and sold are legislators." - P. J. O'Rourke
“The problem with socialism is that you eventually, run out of other people’s money.” - Margaret Thatcher
"There are two sets of rules. One set for the rulers and another for the rest of us." —Richard Yancey, former IRS tax collector

6 posted on 04/11/2009 6:39:21 PM PDT by skinkinthegrass (just b/c you're paranoid, doesn't mean "they" aren't out to get you.. :^)
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To: raccoonradio
While I don’t believe this bias is as bad as many critics say it is in reality - the perception is that the Globe is a liberal newspaper - even on its news pages. The Globe hasn’t successfully put that perception to rest. This, of course, alienated many readers in the center and on the right.

This silly statement only echoes the mindset of the liberal scum who produce the Globe:
"Oh, we're not as liberal as everybody thinks we are."
"We're not really THAT liberal - - it's just people's perception."

How crass.

The perception exists for a reason.
Add #6 to the list: Self Delusion

7 posted on 04/11/2009 8:30:11 PM PDT by Lancey Howard
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To: raccoonradio
Second they began to write specifically for this class of people - mostly white and affluent and living in the Boston suburbs.

Ah, the typical Globe reader . . . Let me share a couple of old memories (I haven't read the Globe in at least 10 years) of Letters to the Editor:

Susan Trausch (remember her?) once wrote a light, rather amusing column on the end of summer doldrums, when it's been too hot for too long and everything looks wilted and dry and dusty. One line: "You can even hear it in the name of the month -- Awwww-gust." I thought it was pretty good. One Globe reader wrote an utterly indignant letter protesting that "Ms. Trausch is apparently unaware that August is named for the Emperor Caesar Augustus . . ." No idea why he thought that was a relevant comment, but he was truly bent out of shape over that column!

Another time, some guy (the name Jack Thomas might be it, but might not) wrote a Sunday magazine column on his attitude toward exercise (negative, in case you were wondering). He said he hated it when his wife came into the room and put on one of her Jane Fonda workout tapes; he said his first impulse would be to duck down behind the couch, but he was afraid Jane would jump out of the video and haul him out -- clearly not a serious column weighing thoughtfully the pros and cons of exercise. This one drew several protests, exemplified by one by a (I believe) certified physical therapist, who was outraged at the bad influence such an irresponsible column would have on "our young people"!

Globe readers -- I'm proud and happy not to be one of them! ;-)

8 posted on 04/12/2009 9:03:34 AM PDT by maryz
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To: raccoonradio
Great post. Many members of the MSM write for each other - and for “prizes”. In truth, the only prize worth having is the loyalty and respect of readers...
9 posted on 04/12/2009 1:19:04 PM PDT by GOPJ (Iraq trip: Obama should have bowed to the troops - not to King Abdullah.)
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