Nine Questions: New England Guilds, Tribune Fallout, San Diego Vacuum And The News Industry's Most Successful Alumnus
Things are turning ugly. Globe staffers up the ante in Boston. John Carroll calls Sam Zell an idiot. Online ads on newspaper sites drop to double-digit negatives. Which leaves me, as we approach this summer of our discontent, with more questions than answers. Here's Nine:
1. Down the road, will the Globe Guild members like their new owners better than the New York Times Company? Certainly, the Globe's sense of loss is understandable -- and real. Still, it's intriguing to compare the Globe Guild's rejection of the Times' offer to the Portland Guild's recent
partnering with venture capitalists to take Maine Newspapers down a new road. The Maine Guild accepted givebacks to get the deal done, and to get a share of the company. My sense: It's always easier to be enthusiastic about the new, unknown guys than the management you've dealt with for years, even it is the New York Times.
2. Where will lenders -- the new owners-to-be of bankrupt newspapers like the Tribune and the Inquirer -- turn for new leadership? They've got old-time publishers to choose from -- lots of them in the market -- as they replace the entrepreneurs like Sam Zell and Brian Tierney who fatally entered the trade in the last several years. They've got broadcast people, borrowing a page from Zell's playbook, as inevitably newspaper and local broadcast operations do grow together. They've got their pick of ad veterans, if they smartly see that local media success is going to be dependent on inventing scalable digital businesses.
3. Won't Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal's okay of Tribune's merged TV/newspaper operations in Hartford seem quaint fairly soon? Sure, the FCC-related value of diverse community voices is a good idea. Going forward, though, the divide between local news video and local story/blog writing creation is an artificial one. Bottom line: The marketplace will probably take care of local news diversity rather than the increasingly outmoded rules of Old Media.
3. Aren't we finally able to put a pricetag on Sam Zell's unwarranted optimism and hubris? It
looks like his $250 million "loan" to Tribune will be wiped out in the bankruptcy, as will his $90 million warrant.
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