August 11, 2006

2 Editors Resign at Web Site Linked to Journalism Review
By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE
NY Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/11/business/media/11mag.html?ref=business&pagewanted=print


The managing editor of CJRDaily.org, an online adjunct of The Columbia 
Journalism Review, and his deputy both quit yesterday after the dean of 
Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism told them he was 
cutting the site’s budget nearly in half.

The dean, Nicholas Lemann, said in an interview that the amount of money 
raised for the Web site could not sustain the online staff, and he was 
using a portion of the magazine’s discretionary money for a direct-mail 
campaign to try to increase subscriptions to the print magazine. The 
journalism review, which comes out six times a year, has a circulation of 
20,000.

Mr. Lemann said he was faced with the same quandary confronting most news 
organizations today — how to pay for an online staff when the site is free 
to readers.

The Web site will soon start to sell advertising, hold conferences and sell 
archival material, he said, but even that revenue will not support the cost 
of the staff. He said he had been “out fund-raising every day,” but had not 
scraped together enough to finance the site at full strength.

As a result, he said, he has decided that a campaign to gain subscribers 
for the print magazine, while expensive, will result in more income, which 
will help maintain an online staff that he said would still be bigger than 
that of most other magazines.

“I have the same issue that everyone else in journalism has, and this is 
our best lunge toward a solution,” Mr. Lemann said.

The decision prompted the site’s top editors to quit, reducing the staff 
from eight to six.

Both Steve Lovelady, 63, the managing editor, who had been managing editor 
of The Philadelphia Inquirer and deputy Page 1 editor of The Wall Street 
Journal, and Bryan Keefer, 28, the assistant managing editor, resigned in 
protest yesterday.

“It’s a fundamental policy dispute about the allocation of resources,” Mr. 
Lovelady said. “Nick has decided to spend the money on a direct-mail 
campaign for the magazine, in hopes of saving subscription revenue. To me, 
that sounds like something out of the 19th century. He’s taking the one, 
fresh, smart thing he has and gutting it.”

Mr. Lovelady said the size of his staff could not be compared with those of 
many other magazine Web sites, because CJRDaily produces its own original 
content, while many other such magazine sites simply put print content 
online. Mr. Keefer said that, like Mr. Lovelady, he did not want to preside 
over the shrinking of something that he helped build.

“I appreciate the position Nick is in,” Mr. Keefer said, “but I don’t want 
to be a part of the direction he’s taking things in.”

The journalism school started the Web site in 2004, with the help of 
foundation grants, to scrutinize the mainstream media’s coverage of the 
presidential campaign.

The site, which was originally named campaigndesk.org, was supposed to last 
for the duration of the campaign. But its cheeky tone and its quick, 
often-incisive analysis of political news proved so popular that Mr. Lemann 
and others decided to extend its life and broaden its scope to cover the 
entire media landscape. Thus was born CJRDaily.org.

(The journalism review has its own Web site, CJR.org, which essentially 
reprints the magazine. Mr. Lemann said he planned to merge CJRDaily with 
the magazine’s Web site, making them one brand.)

In 2005, CJRDaily.org received an honorable mention from the National Press 
Club in the category of “distinguished contribution“ to online journalism. 
It now receives nearly 500,000 page views a month, Mr. Lovelady said, up 30 
percent from the beginning of the year.

Mr. Lemann’s decision to transfer money from the site to a 
small-circulation print magazine would seem to run counter to some of his 
own writings on the importance of the Web.

He wrote recently in The New Yorker, “As journalism moves to the Internet, 
the main project ought to be moving reporters there, not stripping them away.”

In the interview, he said redirecting money to the magazine did not 
contradict that view because he was still maintaining a relatively large 
online staff.

“We’re making a powerful commitment to the Web because we really believe in 
it,” he said. But he said he also believed in print.

“I don’t think print is going away,” he said. “Keeping the print magazine 
brings in revenue, and print can do some things that the Web can’t.”

Jay Rosen, a blogger and journalism professor at New York University, said 
the move was a “strategic error” and that the review should drop its print 
version to reduce costs and go entirely online.

“I’m sure their current subscribers want it in print, but you have to look 
at your potential subscribers,” he said. “Since the profession is going 
toward the Web, in the long run, that’s the smarter move.”


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu



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