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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>
-
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