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- <text id=90TT2527>
- <title>
- Sep. 24, 1990: Front Page vs. Bottom Line
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Sep. 24, 1990 Under The Gun
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PRESS, Page 77
- Front Page vs. Bottom Line
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The New York Post is reprieved, but tabs are still in trouble
- </p>
- <p> REAL ESTATE MOGUL ON THE ROPES. UNIONS BATTLE FOR SURVIVAL.
- The conflict had the makings of a tabloid-headline writer's
- dream. But the journalistic juices were not flowing as usual
- at the New York Post last week, as the gossipy newspaper itself
- became one of the biggest stories in town. The Post, founded
- in 1801 by Alexander Hamilton, faced the imminent prospect of
- closing unless unions coughed up some $19 million in wage and
- benefit concessions to satisfy the deadline demands of its
- owner, real estate developer Peter Kalikow. After marathon
- bargaining, a tentative settlement kept the tabloid alive--for the time being. "We're optimistic," said Kalikow. "But if
- the climate gets substantially worse in 1991, that may be
- another set of facts."
- </p>
- <p> The Post's plight was the latest skirmish in the prolonged
- battle for survival in New York City's fiercely competitive
- newspaper market, increasingly an oddity in the era of
- one-paper monopolies and bland corporate chains. Four papers--the broadsheet New York Times (circ. 1.1 million) and three
- tabloids, the Post (504,000), the New York Daily News (1.2
- million) and New York Newsday (230,000)--managed to make it
- through the booming 1980s. But now the city's economy is in a
- tailspin, and the tabloids are being dragged down with it. "I
- don't think there's room for more than two papers in town," says
- Gary Hoenig, editor of News, Inc., an industry trade magazine.
- </p>
- <p> Even the powerful Times has felt the chill. Its ad linage
- during the first half of the year was off 13% compared with the
- same period in 1989. But while nobody doubts that the Times
- will continue, optimism about the tabloids is hard to find. The
- Post, a mix of catty gossip columns, conservative editorials
- and chest-thumping sports reporting, hasn't earned a penny in
- nearly two decades. Press lord Rupert Murdoch lost $150 million
- during the 12 years he owned the paper. He was threatening to
- close it down in 1988, when Kalikow, wealthy and eager to join
- the glamorous world of publishing, bought it from him for $37
- million. Vowing to preserve the city's last conservative
- editorial voice, Kalikow pumped nearly $100 million more into
- the paper. He has already cut costs: forcing Post president
- Valerie Salambier to resign saved $500,000 a year in salary and
- perks, and Kalikow has said that was merely for starters. But
- he also said the Post was still losing money at a $27 million
- annual rate. The nine allied unions facing him, led by their
- president, George McDonald, believed him, hence their will to
- engage, however tensely, in talks that ended in a package of
- layoffs, benefit cuts and shortened workweeks, in return for
- 20% ownership.
- </p>
- <p> A similar battle, for a similar reason, has been under way
- at the Daily News since January. Once the nation's largest
- daily, the News lost 4% of its circulation this year alone and
- is reporting losses that run about $45 million annually. Even
- before the Post settlement, News executives had declared that
- they wanted the equivalent of whatever concessions Kalikow
- obtained. In the meantime, the paper has hired labor lawyer Bob
- Ballow, a tough Tennessean with a reputation for union busting.
- "We want to regain management control of our business and
- eliminate rampant labor abuses," says News vice president John
- Sloan. Labor leaders contend that the News is trying to
- destroy the unions, and they have urged major advertisers to
- boycott the paper until progress is made on contract talks.
- </p>
- <p> The most likely survivor of the turmoil is New York Newsday,
- a metropolitan spin-off of a successful Long Island-based daily
- that has won praise for its in-depth coverage of the troubled
- city. The Newsday edition has yet to turn a profit since it
- began publishing six years ago, but the Times Mirror Co., which
- owns the paper, has deep pockets and lower overhead costs than
- the other owners and may withstand the economic shakeout more
- easily than they can.
- </p>
- <p> A turnaround won't happen soon. New York's unemployment rate
- is rising as the local economy mirrors Wall Street's failing
- fortunes, real estate prices are falling, and advertisers are
- pulling back. Brassy Bloomingdale's slashed its ad purchases
- 13% during the first half of the year; Macy's, a mainstay for
- all four local papers, cut back by 10%. Meanwhile, demographic
- changes in the city are cutting into circulation as the white
- ethnics who were once among the tabloids' most loyal readers
- are replaced by new immigrants. They prefer publications like
- the bilingual weekly Observateur, which caters to the city's
- growing Haitian population, and the Korean Chosun Daily News.
- </p>
- <p> Increasingly penned in by these circumstances, Kalikow has
- tried hard to reinvent the Post for a broader audience. First
- he went after the yuppie market, hiring ace magazine editor
- Jane Amsterdam to upgrade the paper's image and introducing a
- 30-page Sunday edition that featured a travel section, a book
- review and life-style articles. When those efforts flopped, he
- replaced Amsterdam with veteran Post newsman Jerry Nachman, who
- restored the paper's streetwise--and sensationalistic--approach (GETTIN' HOSED, screamed a headline when gas prices
- began to rise after Iraq's invasion of Kuwait). The Post even
- managed to score a couple of authentic scoops, including the
- first revelations that Father Bruce Ritter, founder of Covenant
- House, the nation's largest program for runaway teens, was
- having sexual relations with some of the young males in the
- program.
- </p>
- <p> The fact that the tinkering failed, and that the best the
- Post can hope for is a negotiated break-even future, suggests
- that the days of noisy debate among mass-circulation papers
- with different political views may truly be gone. That does not
- bother press critics like Everette Dennis, head of the Gannett
- Center for Media Studies, who argued that the loss of the Post
- "would mean very little" to New York readers because there are
- so many other news outlets, including six local television
- stations. That view was unlikely to inspire tabloid headline
- writers either.
- </p>
- <p>By Janice C. Simpson. Reported by Leslie Whitaker/New York.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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