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1995-02-24
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<text id=93TT2492>
<title>
Feb. 15, 1993: News to Post:Drop Dead
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Feb. 15, 1993 The Chemistry of Love
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
PRESS, Page 58
News to Post: Drop Dead
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Backstabs and staffgrabs heighten Gotham tab war as newshawks
battle for survival!
</p>
<p>By JESSE BIRNBAUM--With reporting by Bonnie Angelo and
Sophfronia Scott Gregory/New York
</p>
<p> A tabloid is a newspaper designed for wrapping fish.
Before folding in the flounder, some folks read it for prurient
gossip about the filthy famous and filthier rich, political
scandals, meat-ax murders, baby killers, horse-race results,
used-car ads and, now and then, a scoop. It speaks with a
cigarette behind its ear and a toothpick in the corner of its
mouth. Its headlines are punchy and raunchy: HEADLESS BODY FOUND
IN TOPLESS BAR and BEST SEX I EVER HAD. Men read these papers
mainly for sporting news. Women prefer tabloids, jokes Mortimer
Zuckerman, owner of the New York Daily News, "because women tend
to have shorter arms."
</p>
<p> Be that as it may, there was nothing arm's length about
the raucous tabloid wars that erupted in New York City last
week. On the one arm was the hard-driving Zuckerman, a
millionaire real estate developer who also publishes the weekly
newsmagazine U.S. News & World Report and the monthly Atlantic.
On the other was another big-bucks businessman, Steven
Hoffenberg, who has announced his intention to buy the News's
competition, the failing New York Post. With the Post thus
gasping for breath, Zuckerman leaped for its jugular and in a
few days hired away its three top editors and three of its best
columnists.
</p>
<p> This prompted the Post, which doesn't have a dime to buy
a banana from a pushcart, to lodge a lawsuit against the News.
Hoffenberg charged that Zuckerman is a "vulture" and "body
snatcher" who is trying to destroy the Post with his "crazy
Kamikaze attack." The pages of both papers, meanwhile, barked
daily accusations of impropriety and nasty innuendos about each
other--behaving, in other words, like tabloids. IT'S WAR!
shrieked a Post banner. DAILY NEWS RAIDS THE POST!
</p>
<p> The war actually began in January, shortly after Zuckerman
bought the News for $36.3 million. Once the top tabloid in the
U.S., with a circulation of 3 million (now 777,000), the paper
had been crippled by a strike and a hemorrhaging of advertising
revenues wrought largely by the recession. Zuckerman could not
hope to go head to head against the steady New York Times, but
he had to be concerned about two other dailies. One was the
genteel, struggling New York Newsday, once described by a News
editor as ``a tabloid in a tutu." The other, to be sure, was the
staggering, vulnerable Post. It was the first target.
</p>
<p> Preparing for battle, Zuckerman swiftly chopped down the
News' fatted staff, firing 185 newsroom and business employees
(out of a total of 540) and at the same time demoralizing even
those who were lucky enough to keep their job. Not the least
infuriated by this treatment was the Post's star columnist Mike
McAlary, who wrote a scorching piece about the "massacre,"
labeling Zuckerman "a filthy little dictator...a tyrant on
the political make" who "borrows freely from the fascist
handbook" and, furthermore, "knows less than nothing about
writing [and] even less about newspapers."
</p>
<p> McAlary's own paper was in even worse financial shape than
the News. Press tycoon Rupert Murdoch, who bought the Post in
1976, lost about $150 million in a dozen years before caving in.
The latest would-be savior was Peter Kalikow, like Zuckerman a
real estate lord, who ran down the circulation (from 550,000 to
about 438,000), threw his real estate holdings into bankruptcy
and exacted a 20% pay cut from his staff before finally putting
the paper up for sale. Answering the call was Hoffenberg, whose
millions come from "financial services," in this case buying
other business's bad debts at a discount and then hounding the
debtors to pay up.
</p>
<p> Zuckerman was not about to take this interloper--and the
threat of heightened competition--standing up. His newshawks
were soon reporting that Hoffenberg once employed a "Mafia leg
buster," a commodities swindler and even the discredited former
billionaire Adnan Khashoggi. Not only that, Hoffenberg had been
involved in questionable business dealings that aroused the
interest of federal and state securities regulators.
</p>
<p> Never mind all that, says Hoffenberg, a self-styled "nice
guy from Brooklyn," who explains that his troubles were merely
"technical violations." In any case, he wants to make the Post
a going business. He has already made good on his promise to
reinstate half of Kalikow's salary cuts and hopes to bolster the
bottom line by using his 1,000-member sales force as advertising
salespeople. He won't interfere in editorial matters, he
insists. "The creative side, that's not my job. I have enough
to do on the publishing side," although he wants to write a
weekly column "to promote my feelings about what America should
be." He claims that morale at the Post has improved vastly since
he stepped in. "It's like a family now," he says.
</p>
<p> Some family. One Post columnist calls his new boss "Repo
Man." Another newsman in that shop grouses, "We're sort of like
a MASH unit. There's never been enough of anything. We don't
know if [Hoffenberg] is for real. He talks a good game. If it
turns out to be bluster, we've all been duped."
</p>
<p> Post columnist McAlary did not wait to be duped. To the
astonishment of colleagues on both papers, he announced last
week that he was going over to the News (for a reported
$260,000). Speaking of Hoffenberg, McAlary said, "It's very hard
to work for a publisher who, when you talk to him, is staring
at the watch on your wrist and the rings on your fingers. I
cover crooks. I don't work for them." But how, he was asked,
could he work for Zuckerman after denouncing him so viciously?
Easy, replied McAlary. "He's willing to look past it. So, he
starts off a bigger guy than me."
</p>
<p> The rest of the News staff may not feel so charitable.
They are still smarting from the wholesale firings and worried
about their own futures--as well they might be, in the face
of rumors that Zuckerman has been talking to a couple of Newsday
staffers. Many News reporters also resent McAlary for his
turnabout and take even less kindly to the appearance in the
newsroom of the key editors from the competition.
</p>
<p> So, now it's a war to the finish between two ego-driven
businessmen, Mr. Bigger Guy, who enjoys the power and perks of
publishing--and to his credit harbors serious hopes of
energizing his news coverage and style--and Mr. Repo Man, who
simply wants to play in the big time and tell America what it
should be. Of the two papers, it is the Post, in the hands of
an untried newcomer and shorn of several talented top
journalists, that may not survive. That would leave New Yorkers
with only one hometown tabloid to thrill them with headlines
like GOTHAM BESIEGED BY KILLER COCKROACHES!
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>