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Friday, April 24, 2009
Rich Tucker :: Townhall.com Columnist
An Obit for the "Grey Lady"
by Rich Tucker
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Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


The first thing they teach you in journalism school is to get a subscription to The New York Times. It’s also the final thing they really need to teach you.

Any observant student can see that what’s on the front page of the Times often ends up leading the network newscasts that evening. Other newspapers also play follow-the-leader, either by directly republishing Times stories or by aping the “gray lady” in style (liberal, stilted) and appearance (dull, drab).

As an aside, there’s a CNN corollary to this. The cable network often steals story ideas from The Wall Street Journal. If that paper has a story on Monday about how food companies are charging the same amount for smaller packages, expect to see a CNN reporter live on Tuesday in a supermarket, holding up bags of potato chips. “Smaller bag, same price. Back to you in the studio.”

In any event, any aspiring journalist with a subscription to the Times and the Journal can go ahead and skip the last four years of J school; for a few hundred bucks a year he knows all he needs to know about what stories will be covered and how they’ll be reported. But the Times may not be with us for much longer.

“With more than $1 billion in debt already on the books, only $46 million in cash reserves as of October, and no clear way to tap into the capital markets (the company’s debt was recently reduced to junk status), the paper’s future doesn’t look good,” wrote Michael Hirschorn in The Atlantic’s January-February issue. “Regardless of what happens over the next few months, The Times is destined for significant and traumatic change.” Further, “At some point soon -- sooner than most of us think -- the print edition, and with it The Times as we know it, will no longer exist.”

Hirschorn writes as if this would be a sad development. But in reality, it’s probably a good thing.

The problem with much of American print journalism is that it’s too dull. Critics like to make fun of USA Today, calling it “McPaper.” But there’s a reason it has the highest circulation in the country: It’s at least interesting. That’s the same reason the New York Post and New York Daily News survive and even thrive, although they’re competing for the same market. They’re both fun, readable and compelling.

The Times, meanwhile, is the voice of an outdated liberal establishment. It chooses to ignore news it doesn’t like. For example, the April 15th Tea parties were buried on page 16 of the print edition, and mocked even there.

“Although organizers insisted they had created a nonpartisan grass-roots movement, others argued that these parties were more of the Astroturf variety,” sniffed reporter Liz Robbins. Somehow the paper had half a dozen reporters following the story, but managed not to print the fact that more than 5,000 people gathered in New York City alone. Continued...

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About The Author

Rich Tucker is an editor in Washington D.C. and a columnist for Townhall.com.

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Times founders
The Times wasn't founded by a Jewish family. It was bought by the Ochs and Sulzberger families late in the 19th century when it was about to go under. At the time of the US Civil War it was owned by a WASP Republican family.

There was a time when the owners put journalistic standards ahead of ideology. One of the most dispassionate and perceptive commentators in the last 50 years was C.L. Sulzberger. However, the present Sulzberger is a left-wing moron who has turned one of the two most distinguished newspapers in the US (the other is the Wall Street Journal) into a Democratic yellow sheet.

Perry White
The global warming hoax is a great current example of NYT bias. They have been beating that horse on one side for years without giving the other side any play at all.

I get it from a nexus search in the Insurance community and have pointed out the ridiculous one sided-nature of their coverage for years.

They are not "reporting" this issue. They are attempting to drive the culture on it - in the face of MANY facts to the contrary.

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