NY Times vs. Jill Abranson, and the Sulzberger family
I confess I’m more fascinated than I should be (and perhaps than you are) by the evolving story of the firing of Jill Abramson by the NY Times.
It has a little bit of everything: the hypocrisy of a newspaper I grew up respecting but which I’ve grown to despise in the last fifteen years, the clash of competing liberal protected victim groups, and most of all the mystery of what really happened. We think we know the general outlines by now, but I’m pretty sure there’s quite a bit we don’t know.
One of the unknowns is what really sparked the final denouement. Even writer Ken Auletta, who seems to be the go-to guy on the story and who points out that Abramson’s fall from grace seemed to happen quite quickly at the end, remains puzzled as to what actually transpired.
Today one of his sources tried to retract a statement she allegedly made to him that could get the Times into hot water because it indicated that Sulzberger may have terminated her in part because she hired a lawyer to speak to the paper about her claim that her salary was less than that of her male predecessor. If true, that would be strong evidence of a wrongful firing, and actionable (although it also seems to be the case that Abramson may have signed an agreement not to sue as part of her settlement).
The paper’s attempt to retract seems absurd on its face. Here’s the original quote in the Auletta piece:
Eileen Murphy, a spokeswoman for the Times, argued that there was no real compensation gap, but conceded to me that “this incident was a contributing factor” to the firing of Abramson, because “it was part of a pattern.”
And here’s Murphy’s “correction,” conveyed in a later email to Auletta:
I said to you that the issue of bringing a lawyer in was part of a pattern that caused frustration. I NEVER said that it was part of a pattern that led to her firing because that is just not true.”
Murphy would have us believe that there was a whole “pattern” of behavior by Abramson that had caused long-term and repeated “frustration” on the part of management and colleages, that bringing in a lawyer upped the frustration ante that was already high, but that the Times management had carefully constructed a firewall between all that seething frustration and their precipitous firing of Abramson that occurred shortly after the lawyer incident. Nice try, Murphy, but that dog won’t hunt.
My favorite article so far about the whole thing is by Matthew Continetti:
Reading the New York Times’ report on the defenestration of the paper’s executive editor, Jill Abramson, and the coronation, at a hastily arranged meeting Wednesday, of her replacement Dean Baquet, I could not escape the feeling that the Soviet press must have covered the comings and goings of Politburo members in much the same way…
What makes the story so enjoyable, on the most superficial level, is its lurid combination of identity politics””Abramson was the first female editor of the Times, and Baquet is its first African-American editor””and liberal hypocrisy. Equal pay has been one of the rallying cries of the American left, a category that very much includes the New York Times, and the possibility of sexism at the paper is rich indeed. But I have to say I am less interested in equal wages, in comparable worth, and in what the New Yorker calls the “inescapably gendered aspect” of the Times’ latest scandal than I am in how that scandal confirms one of my pet theories. The theory is this: The men and women who own and operate and produce every day the world’s most important newspaper are basically children.
If you’re interested in this story, Continetti’s article is worth reading in its entirety. However, I would add something he leaves out—which is that, when he uses the word “children” to describe the people who operate the Times, the appellation is quite literally true, and not just in the sense that he meant it.
Sulzberger, the main player here, inherited the Times from his father. Like many newspapers, the Times is (among other things) a family business passed down mostly from father to son (although initially through a daughter). As with most such enterprises, the founder is often a person of great drive and accomplishment, and the children often represent a drop-off in the latter if not the former:
Sulzberger was born in Mount Kisco, New York, the son of Barbara Winslow (née Grant) and the previous Times publisher Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, grandson of Times publisher Arthur Hays Sulzberger, and the great-grandson of Times owner and publisher Adolph Ochs.
As such, Sulzberger himself is pretty much immune from firing, and probably knew from the start where he’d end up. Here’s the bio of his father and predecessor, and here’s the story of his grandfather (who, although a Reform Jew, was a noted and vocal anti-Zionist who played down the Holocaust in the paper’s pages during the war).
Here is the family’s first NY Times owner Adolph Ochs, who was a self-made man. Note the irony in the following [emphasis mine]:
After borrowing money to purchase The New York Times, [Ochs] formed the New York Times Co., placed the paper on a strong financial foundation, and became the majority stockholder. In 1904, he hired Carr Van Anda as his managing editor. Their focus on objective journalism, in a time when newspapers were openly and highly partisan, and a well-timed price decrease (from 3¢ per issue to 1¢) led to its rescue from near oblivion. The paper’s readership increased from 9,000 at the time of his purchase to 780,000 by the 1920s…
Ochs was engaged in crusading against anti-Semitism.
How did the Sulzbergers get into the act? Ochs’ only daughter married Arthur Hays Sulzberger, who inherited the mantle and passed it on to his descendents.
Here’s an article discussing the state of the Times’ ownership by the Sulzbergers. Harry Reid may rail against the Kochs, but they can’t hold a candle to the Sulzbergers:
While other families have had more power for a time””the Roosevelts and the Kennedys come to mind””their time of great power eventually waned. By contrast, the Ochs/Sulzberger dynasty has had a seat at the table in every administration since Adolph Ochs helped put William McKinley in the White House. The family has effectively occupied an ex officio cabinet post that has been a family birthright, passed intact from generation to generation. There is nothing comparable in American history.
Ponder that.
No sensible person would ever accuse the management of the times of self-awareness. One of my favorite examples is that the 4th-generation rentier in charge was happy to publish this:
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/24/arts/24comm.html.
Davis Guaspari
One of my favorite examples is that the 4th-generation rentier in charge was happy to publish this.
That is indeed a howler, that a Sulzberger publication would tut-tut about neoptism at another publication- a publication much smaller than the NYT. The mote in your eye…
This NYT affair is proving to be very entertaining. I just hope that Carlos Slim’s investment in the NYT goes down the drain concurrent with his losing his telcom monopoly in Mexico. Sorta funny to hear Harry Reid fulminating about the Kochs when a furriner multi-billionaire is involved with the NYT. At least the Kochs made their billions in fair competition, whereas Carlos Slim got his through crony capitalism- a telecom monopoly.
Ah, well. May the slings and arrows fly in prodigious numbers.
Everything to loathe here and nothing to love. May they all suspire in a refining fire until their lungs are ash.
I think Sulzburger has done a wonderful job of convincing the public that newspapers are not fair and honest and can’t be trusted. I live in Fairfax, Virginia and quit taking the Washington Post years ago because there was no difference between the front pages and the editorial pages and it was in the tank with the democrats.
When I watch Chris Hayes and Rachel Maddow I constantly think of spoiled high schoolers that are attending bad schools.
Back when the Times was busy constructing its new headquarters , it ran an editorial decrying “corporate welfare”.
Yet in its Business section was a small article announcing that the newspaper had secured a $29 million tax break from NYC as an incentive to build that headquarters.
Same paper, same day.
Ray has the right of it. The NYT’s unctuous dreck hasn’t been able to withstand the relentless scouring of new media. Half bad example and half walking dead man, it’s no wonder the Grey Lady is suffering one painful embarrassment after another.
Neo notes that Abramson fell rapidly at the end. Just another cascade failure, I think, and so typical of the delusional constructions of leftists. Look at the Veterans Administration, trying to solve a crucial government healthcare problem by waitlisting it away. Statists are incapable of imagining that seriously ill veterans would actually die from lack of medical care, and couldn’t foresee that grieving families might use the power of the net to harry those responsible for the murders. This is bound to go very badly, very fast.
Cascades. They’re not just the mountains east of Seattle. More NYT subscriptions will be canceled, and much more popcorn will be needed.
The Abramson affair is no mystery, it’s very simple:
– The Times, along with most other print media, is shrinking.
– Abramson wasn’t genius enough to reverse that trend.
– The market was larger when her predecessor was there.
– She thought her political status justified a raise, in a shrinking market.
– She was wrong.
The affair does point out a couple of interesting corollaries:
– In a stagnant or shrinking market, protected groups will be forced to fight each other for “market share.” And they will.
– Feminism has sold a lot of women a load of crap. They go into the world with dogma instead of understanding, and are surprised when the ideology doesn’t hold up.
– Probably not a good idea to get a tattoo of your employer’s logo on your back.
Reid thinks the Kochs are doing what their allies, the Sulzbergs, are. Projection.
To me the most interesting thing to come out of the drama is the fact that this venerable newspaper has no idea what to do about the internet.
The “innovation” report that was leaked makes it quite clear that they they have no idea how to think about the huge market change happening under their noses. They have lots of ideas about how to create a new business model that will extend their reach online. Every one of the ideas is based on a false premise–the idea that the New York Times can create a digital presence that will allow it to remain The Very Important Paper it imagines it is.
That’s not going to happen.
They’re averting their eyes from the real problem–turns out good writers will write for free now that we have a platform that makes it easy. That’s what has changed everything, and it’s very unlikely to ever change back.
Anyone who says they know now what that means for the newspaper business in the future is kidding himself. Nobody knows yet what’s going to happen.
It’s a lot like the software firms I’ve watched fail. People cannot or will not grasp that the market they were once a part of has imploded, or been blown to smithereens (or in the case of software, sometimes the market simply never emerges).
Some people think their ideas are more real than reality. Lot of that going around lately….
I was going to recommend the Continetti story, too. As a member of all the Times’s most despised demographics (white, male, southern, conservative, Catholic) I don’t feel the least bit guilty about savoring the schadenfreude.
Matt_SE:
Actually, it’s not that simple. Under Abramson, the Times was doing well financially.
See this.
Au contraire. It’s still simple, just a bit changed:
If the Times was doing well under Abramson (so says Vox!), then she earned a raise. If true, whoever fired her is an idiot.