Hey, listen, I’m part of the problem as much as anyone. I
read the Daily News and the New York Times every day. For free. On my phone, or
my laptop. Both newspapers have put up pay walls, but I have been able to
circumvent them through various not-so-clever means. I’m reading their content
and not paying for it. Therein lies the conundrum of daily journalism: How to
survive financially in the digital age. They haven’t figured it out, and as a result, fine
men and women, many of whom have spent their lives in the industry, were sent
packing on Monday. During the past decade, I experienced it myself at the Poughkeepsie
Journal, where I worked for more than half of my life, watching a paper that once employed hundreds of people get whittled down to well under 100 folks; now, most of the "local" work at the Journal is not done by or from local sources at all. Seeing it on a larger
scale – the Daily News pared its sports staff from 34 people to 9 people
yesterday! – hits home and really saddens me and others who still care about
the noble mission of the free press in this country (you know, the whole “checks
and balances” thing). If you are so inclined, check out a vintage rant on ESPN Radio by Michael Kay, himself a former Daily News sportswriter. I don’t even
like Michael Kay (my preference is Mike Francesa), but his poignant soliloquy
sums it up. Kay pointed out that as institutions like the Daily News skitter
into irrelevance, it chips away at our democracy and our way of life. Most
people don’t care, but I would posit that we should. The fired editor of the
Daily News, clearly bitter, wrote this on Twitter on Monday: “If you hate
democracy and think local governments should operate unchecked and in the dark,
then today is a good day for you.” He also dropped the Daily News affiliation
from his Twitter bio. “Just a guy sitting at home watching journalism being
choked into extinction,” it reads. Amen brother.
Newspapers have mattered to me my whole life. When I was
growing up in northern New Jersey, delivering newspapers, I would read the Star
Ledger and Daily Record on my handlebars as I pedaled around the neighborhood
hurling the papers in plastic bags onto driveways. My heroes were not the
baseball players being written about; rather, my heroes were the sportswriters
chronicling them. I can still rattle off their names, just as quickly as I can
give you Ron Guidry’s stat line from his epic 1978 season. One of those
sportswriters, John Harper, was just fired from the Daily News yesterday. A
long and distinguished career, extinguished in a second with a heartless,
corporate decision. Sundays were special in my house, because we would get the
big Sunday Daily News. I loved reading the “funnies” (the comics) and reading
the list of Major League batting averages – all of them – which were only
printed on Sundays. My grandfather Tatone (really, he was my father’s uncle, but he
was like my grandfather) would walk a mile roundtrip each day, well into old
age, to the deli down the street to get Il Progresso, the Italian language
newspaper. When he died, we put a copy of that newspaper and a bottle of wine –
two simple pleasures of his life – in the casket. Newspapers matter. Or, should
I say, mattered. A sad day in a sad era for journalism.
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