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If Chicago doesn't get the Olympic Games, life here will go on as before. If the changes now under way at the Tribune vastly diminish it as a daily newspaper, life won't. Bread and circuses are fine, but the public is better served by a civic conscience (however flawed it may be). This principle might be understood better in Los Angeles than here.

Tuesday night a reception was held in the LA Times building for Jim Newton, the departing editor of that paper's editorial page. Told to slash his staff, Newton decided to quit instead. Attending the reception, according to laobserved.com, were the present mayor of Los Angeles,  Antonio Villaraigosa, former mayor Richard Riordan, Sheriff Lee Baca, and local billionaire Eli Broad, who'd hoped to buy the Times before the entire Tribune Company was taken over last year by Sam Zell.

Do you think Mayor Daley would show up to say good-bye to Bruce Dold, who runs the Tribune's editorial page? More to the point, what dignitaries would attend a farewell party for reporter Maury Possley, who deserves thanks from a grateful city?

As lists are being drawn up of the dozens of Tribune editorial employees who will soon be tossed over the side to lighten the payroll, Possley has decided to leave voluntarily. This costs the city a terrific investigative reporter who has specialized in prosecutorial misconduct. In a note to his colleagues Monday, Possley wrote that he'll "never forget those moments standing outside a prison and watching inmates go free, knowing that our reporting played some role in exposing their wrongful convictions and securing their freedom. For the past decade, I have had the privilege to work with the since-departed Ken Armstrong and my seemingly constant companion, Steve Mills, on some of the most important journalism in our country."

Possley went on, "It just doesn't seem possible that less than two months ago, some of us gathered at Columbia University for the Pulitzer luncheon with [editor Ann Marie Lipinski] to celebrate our prize for investigative reporting. I understand that there are no guarantees in life -- that God laughs when we say we have plans -- nevertheless, how stunning it is to see the dismantling of our newspaper in such a short time."

(The entire note and other Tribune memos are posted here on Jim Romenesko's forum.)

Dismantled? Some would say "differently mantled." 

The new editor, Gerould Kern, seems fluent in both languages. In a staff memo of his own (it's embedded in the Lee Abrams blog post that follows Possley's farewell note at the above link), Kern declares:

"Courageous public service, credibility, integrity, fairness and accuracy form the foundation of this newspaper. We will stand watch over our country, our city and our communities because this is our special duty and because they demand it of us. You have made this our hallmark."

Kern then segues effortlessly into a tongue that few old-fashioned journalists have begun to master. He continues: "But the economics that have supported our newspaper for decades are in disarray. I do not have to tell you how significantly this affects the newsroom. Still, amid the dislocation and uncertainty lies an opportunity we can seize. We can transform into a news organization that is ideally suited for a new century defined by breathtaking technological innovation and a voracious appetite for specialized information delivered over multiple digital and print channels."

No matter how voracious the new Tribune's appetite for "specialized information delivered over multiple digital and print channels" turns out to be, I doubt the state's attorney's office will find the new Tribune more of a load than having Possley around.


Comments
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William
July 23rd - 10:24 p.m.
The only newspaper in the USA that seems to have a clue about the internet is the NY Times.

Chicago is really becoming a cultural backwater. Imagine if Sam Zell had taken over Apple in 1996 rather than Steve Jobs. Do you think Apple would be this tremendously profitable and innovative company today? You cannot just hire people and tell them to do "innovation."

The Guardian offers a business model that is more in keeping with a quality, civic presence and watchdog. They are non-profit.

The Trib will turn into Red Eye. You know, it really wasn't all that great a newspaper to begin with. The LA Times and the NY Times have consistently done a better job for a while.
Law Enforcement Supporter
July 24th - 4:33 a.m.
Possley was a non-productive FOAM of the worst stripe. His "by-line count" had to be among the lowest in the newspaper business, so I'm sure he saw the handwriting on the wall.

His reporting "skills" left a lot to be desired, as well (despite the Pulitzer he claims). The "prosecutorial misconduct" that he (mis) reported about may yet still bite the Tribune.

Steve Mills can't be too far behind. Don't let the door hit you in the rear-end,
To FOAM or not to FOAM
July 24th - 3:59 p.m.
I don't believe I have ever heard Bruce Dold utter a single word. He makes Clarence Thomas look like an auctioneer. He and the entire army of Brylcreem robots can march into the lake and make the Trib a better place. Maury Possley, on the other hand, FOAMer or not, had passion.
Basil
July 24th - 4:07 p.m.
One can question the value of having relatively "unproductive" (byline-counting-wise) investigative reporters. One can question the costs and benefits of devoting too many resources to winning prizes like the Pulitzer at the expense of forgoing day-to-day coverage. But I do know this from personal experience: Maury Possley has been a reporter in Chicago for more than 30 years and put in more than his share of daily beat coverage before getting to be an "non-productive" investigative reporter. (He once had 3 bylines on one front page in the Sun-Times--that was pretty hard to do, even in the pre-Murdoch days.) Can't speak to the level or intensity of his FOAMiness, but I think he earned his way to his position through solid work.



The News Bites blogroll
Harold, Daily by Harold Henderson

The View From Here by Andrew Patner



Branzburg v. Hayes, the split U.S. Supreme Court decision (1972) generally construed by journalists and judges alike as affirming some sort of reporter's privilege in federal courts.

U.S. Appellate Judge Richard Posner's influential opinion in McKevitt v. Pallasch (2003) telling those journalists and judges they were wrong -- there is no such privilege.

John Milton's Areopagitica (1643), one of the earliest and most eloquent arguments for a free press. Said Milton: "As good almost kill a man as kill a good book; who kills a man kills a reasonable creature, God's image; but he who destroys a good book, kills reason itself, kills the image of God, as it were in the eye."

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