Los Angeles Times / Meg James
Kevin Merida is the L.A. Times’ next executive editor →“Since 2015, Merida has been editor in chief of The Undefeated, the award-winning ESPN division that plumbs the intersection of race, culture and sports…Merida also spent three decades in traditional newsrooms, including 22 years at the Washington Post, where he rose to managing editor in charge of news, features, and the universal news desk.”
The Washington Post / Elahe Izadi
Why your new favorite NPR show might sound a lot like a podcast →NPR has “struggled with the need to bolster a listenership that is rapidly aging. Increasingly, it has branched out into digital media, where younger and more diverse listeners already are, particularly podcasts. Now, programs that have cultivated huge followings in the podcast world are making their way to radio, and to a vastly different group of listeners.”
Variety / David Lieberman and Brent Lang
It was still good to be a media company CEO in 2020 →“Looked at another way, a typical employee would have to work 306 years to match what [media company] CEOs averaged in 2020 alone based on each company’s calculation of median worker pay. That’s an improvement from 416 years in 2019, but remains a far higher ratio than you see at most top U.S. corporations.”
Los Angeles Times / Stephen Battaglio
The New Yorker / Sue Halpern
Facebook and the normalization of deviance →“When the sociologist Diane Vaughan came up with the term ‘the normalization of deviance,’ she was referring to NASA administrators’ disregard of the flaw that caused the Challenger space shuttle to explode, in 1986. The idea was that people in an organization can become so accepting of a problem that they no longer consider it to be problematic.”
The Washington Post / Margaret Sullivan
The politicians who tried to overturn an election — and the local news team that won’t let anyone forget it →“The journalists at WITF, an all-news public radio station in Harrisburg, Pa….decided they wouldn’t shrug off the damaging lies of election denialism…The station has stuck to its pledge in its day-to-day coverage ever since, by simply and without fanfare including boilerplate language about how lawmakers conducted themselves during the attempts to overturn the election whenever they are mentioned in the course of regular news coverage.”
Nieman Storyboard / Alexander Trowbridge
Reuters / Joshua Franklin, Echo Wang, and Krystal Hu
Forbes wants to go public via SPAC →“Forbes’ owner is also fielding offers from bidders including investment vehicle Borderless Services Inc [a fund “specializing in blockchain technology”], which has bid $700 million, and from a consortium led by tech investor Michael Moe, the sources said. Both of these bids would result in Forbes remaining a privately held company.”
New York Post / Keith J. Kelly
WNYC money troubles lead to 14 layoffs, including at Gothamist →“WNYC CEO Goli Skeikholeslami in a memo told to staffers that the station is entering fiscal year 2022 with ‘a sizeable deficit’ as sponsorship funding plunged 27 percent compared to pre-pandemic levels…Skeikholeslami said the cuts affected four jobs in news and 10 in other departments.”
New York Daily News / Cathy Burke
Workers at the New York Daily News have unionized →“The vote for membership in the NewsGuild was 55-3, the union tweeted Friday. ‘Our newsroom overwhelmingly voted to form this union after more than a year of organizing,’ the new union stated. The News’ parent company is Tribune Publishing,” which is facing acquisition by mustache-twirling industry villain Alden Global Capital.
Variety / Cynthia Littleton
Gray Television will buy Meredith’s local TV stations for $2.7 billion →“The addition of Meredith’s stations in Atlanta, Phoenix, Nashville, Portland, Ore., and other mid-sized markets will bring Gray’s holdings to 101 stations serving 113 markets. Des Moines-based Meredith, meanwhile, is slimming down to focus on its magazine publishing and digital assets.”
Twitter / Oversight Board