New Republic Exodus: Dozens Of Editors and Journalists Resign

Started by jimmy olsen, December 05, 2014, 09:19:18 PM

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CountDeMoney

Dana Milbank dishes some inside dirt.

QuoteOpinions
The New Republic is dead, thanks to its owner
By Dana Milbank Opinion writer December 8 at 10:38 AM
Washington Post

At a 40th birthday party in July for Franklin Foer, editor of the New Republic, the magazine's young owner, Chris Hughes, got all choked up as he pledged to the roomful of writers at Foer's country home in Pennsylvania that the two would be "intellectual partners for decades."

But the moist-eyed Hughes would, in the coming months, prove himself to be neither an intellectual nor a partner but a dilettante and a fraud.

When he bought the magazine in 2012 at the age of 28, the Facebook co-founder pledged to "double down" on "in-depth, rigorous reporting," telling NPR that "the demand for long-form quality journalism is strong in our country."

But after just two years, Hughes decided that saving long-form journalism was just too hard. He declared that the 100-year-old journal of opinion would become a technology company, and he brought in a new CEO who literally proposed that writers team up with engineers to make "widgets" for TNR's website.

Hughes ousted his intellectual partner Foer without even the courtesy of telling him; Foer found out when his replacement, a man who previously had been fired as editor of the gossip website Gawker, began announcing himself as the new editor and offering people jobs. Most of the entire staff quit in protest, and the Hughes management team suspended publication until February. They needn't bother resuming at all. The New Republic is dead; Chris Hughes killed it.

This is personal for me. I left the Wall Street Journal to join TNR in the 1990s, taking a 50 percent pay cut and a 95 percent reduction in subscribers for the pleasure of joining what felt like a family. I met Hughes earlier this year and, I, too, was fooled by his talk about the resources he was pumping into the magazine. I told him in an email that he was "doing the Lord's work in rescuing this proud old brand" and called him a "21st-century Walter Lippmann."

But Hughes is no Lippmann; he's a callow man who accidentally became rich – to the tune of some $700 million – because he had the luck of being Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg's roommate at Harvard. Hughes seemed intent on proving he could be a success in his own right, but it hasn't happened. He created a "cause-oriented social network," Jumo, in 2010, but when it didn't take off, he was done with it in 2011. He turned out to be no more devoted to TNR.

He began with a flourish, rehiring Foer, a well-liked former editor, for the top job. He spent lavishly, opening and staffing a New York office and moving the Washington office to glitzy new quarters with big windows overlooking the National Portrait Gallery. He hired an interior decorator to advise him on office decor, and he picked out the paint colors himself. Hughes built a library for Leon Wieseltier, then TNR's legendary literary editor, and insisted that it be painted the same color as the bedroom in one of Hughes's three homes.

He said all the right things, telling the New York Times that he would "recruit a lineup of all-stars" and put the magazine in a league with the New Yorker. He was still on message last year, telling Pando that "we are not the next big trend in Silicon Valley." And Foer got good results for Hughes: a succession of high-impact stories, and online readership that was on course to double to 6 million this year from 3 million in 2013.

Hughes is no idiot (he reads Balzac in French), but as a businessman he turned out to be a lost boy. When he took over in 2012, he fired the magazine's business staff, hiring instead a Harvard friend with no media experience. He had no interest in the work needed to woo advertisers. He redesigned the website himself; it looked good but didn't work well. He tried to eliminate landline phones, seeing no reason why reporters might need them. And his spending spree caused annual losses to swell from $1 million when he bought the struggling magazine (he was its fifth owner in a decade) to $5 million.

While his mistakes are excusable, his childish impatience is not. After David Bradley bought the Atlantic in 1999 he made plenty of mistakes – but he kept the long view and ultimately made that grand old institution a leader in digital innovation. By contrast, Hughes became bored with journalism, occupying himself with the latest phones and the prospect of creating new apps; his visits to Washington headquarters became infrequent. He announced a "New Republic Fund" to invest in "early-stage technology companies."

The final blow: bringing in former Yahoo News general manager Guy Vidra (who once worked on the business staff of the Post) to be CEO, a man dedicated to "re-imagining TNR as a vertically integrated digital media company." And Hughes became bitter. On Oct. 31, the New York Times published an article about his husband, Sean Eldridge, who was running for Congress in upstate New York "with a thin resume and a thick wallet." Eldridge and Hughes bought a house in the district in 2013 for $2 million, though it was just an hour from the $5 million home they already owned.

The same day the article appeared, Hughes lashed out in a group email to staff because senior editor (and former Post reporter) Alec MacGillis had dared to propose writing a piece about Apple avoiding taxes just after Apple's Tim Cook had come out of the closet. Hughes shot back that "Apple has acted squarely within the law" and that MacGillis's argument would be "tone deaf." MacGillis quickly backed off, but Hughes did not, writing twice more to defend Apple's tax strategy and to call Cook "incredibly heroic" for coming out.

After Hughes's husband lost by 30 points in what should have been a close race in a swing district, it became an open secret that Hughes was done with the New Republic. At a lavish 100th-anniversary gala for the magazine at the Mellon Auditorium Nov. 19, Hughes did the seating chart himself – and he put most of the magazine staff at tables in the back. He told junior staffers they could not bring guests to the event, and he reacted furiously when one politely asked if she could bring her fiancé who had given the magazine pro bono advice on social media strategy.

Two weeks later, Foer, after learning of his firing second-hand, called Hughes, who claimed, absurdly, that it was "Guy's decision." In a Hughes op-ed published by the Post Sunday night, after the staff walkout and withdrawal of articles by outside contributors forced him to suspend publication, Hughes said that the New Republic should "become a sustainable business and not position ourselves to rely on the largesse of an unpredictable few."

An unpredictable few? The magazine relied on an unpredictable one – him – and he failed it.

R.I.P., TNR. You deserved better than Chris Hughes.

Martinus


CountDeMoney


Martinus

Quote from: CountDeMoney on December 08, 2014, 03:54:01 PM
Quote from: Martinus on December 08, 2014, 03:46:58 PM
Maybe there is a reason there are so few gay CEOs.  :hmm:

Because they play to type?

Well, erratic drama-queen-ish behaviour is not perhaps what a well run company needs. I haven't met a lot of CEOs like that. I met a lot of gays like that, though. :P

Capetan Mihali

Quote from: Ideologue on December 06, 2014, 02:44:25 AM
Quote from: Sheilbh on December 06, 2014, 02:30:29 AM
Quote from: jimmy olsen on December 06, 2014, 01:50:44 AMI thought you were all about melodrama and style?
Style, yes who isn't. There ain't much style in whining.

I don't know where people have got the idea I like melodrama :o

I think you're the one who told me to watch Douglas Sirk movies. :hmm:

Quote from: Sheilbh on December 06, 2014, 02:49:44 AM
You lie!

:faints:

Indeed, I've always been the big Sirk backer, get your gay Englishmen straight for the Lord's sake.  Now will you help me get this stricken Beau Brummel back onto his feet if it isn't too much effort for such a delicate Piedmontese petty-bourgeois. :glare:  :administers smelling salts to Sheilbh:  :pope:
"The internet's completely over. [...] The internet's like MTV. At one time MTV was hip and suddenly it became outdated. Anyway, all these computers and digital gadgets are no good. They just fill your head with numbers and that can't be good for you."
-- Prince, 2010. (R.I.P.)

garbon

Quote from: Martinus on December 08, 2014, 03:58:57 PM
Quote from: CountDeMoney on December 08, 2014, 03:54:01 PM
Quote from: Martinus on December 08, 2014, 03:46:58 PM
Maybe there is a reason there are so few gay CEOs.  :hmm:

Because they play to type?

Well, erratic drama-queen-ish behaviour is not perhaps what a well run company needs. I haven't met a lot of CEOs like that. I met a lot of gays like that, though. :P

I don't think we should tar and feather all gays because of your set.
"I've never been quite sure what the point of a eunuch is, if truth be told. It seems to me they're only men with the useful bits cut off."
I drank because I wanted to drown my sorrows, but now the damned things have learned to swim.


The Brain

Women want me. Men want to be with me.

The Minsky Moment

The purpose of studying economics is not to acquire a set of ready-made answers to economic questions, but to learn how to avoid being deceived by economists.
--Joan Robinson

CountDeMoney

Quote from: The Minsky Moment on December 10, 2014, 04:44:36 PM
Quote from: Sheilbh on December 10, 2014, 01:05:16 PM
I enjoyed Ta-Nehisi Coates' piece on the eulogies of TNR:
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2014/12/the-new-republic-an-appreciation/383561/

Seemed like he was holding back.  I wish he would just come out and say what he really thinks.

The man quoted Sheridan.  Good enough for me.  #scorchedvirginianotawarcrime

grumbler

Quote from: The Minsky Moment on December 10, 2014, 04:44:36 PM
Quote from: Sheilbh on December 10, 2014, 01:05:16 PM
I enjoyed Ta-Nehisi Coates' piece on the eulogies of TNR:
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2014/12/the-new-republic-an-appreciation/383561/

Seemed like he was holding back.  I wish he would just come out and say what he really thinks.
Unfortunately, he is the boy who cried "wolf!"  At this point, I expect him to find racism in anything, so his finding it in The New Republic concerns me not at all.
The future is all around us, waiting, in moments of transition, to be born in moments of revelation. No one knows the shape of that future or where it will take us. We know only that it is always born in pain.   -G'Kar

Bayraktar!

Ideologue

Quote from: The Brain on December 10, 2014, 04:36:35 PM
Is Ta-Nehisi a sci fi alien race?

That made me giggle.  Brain, do you know that you're a Languish treasure?  That seems more backhanded than I intended. :P :hug:
Kinemalogue
Current reviews: The 'Burbs (9/10); Gremlins 2: The New Batch (9/10); John Wick: Chapter 2 (9/10); A Cure For Wellness (4/10)

CountDeMoney

Quote from: grumbler on December 10, 2014, 07:13:35 PM
Unfortunately, he is the boy who cried "wolf!"  At this point, I expect him to find racism in anything, so his finding it in The New Republic concerns me not at all.

"Boy" :rolleyes:

Meanwhile...

QuoteLeon Wieseltier, the veteran New Republic literary editor who resigned last month, has joined The Atlantic as a contributing editor and critic, the company announced on Monday.

"For a generation of editors and writers, Leon has helped define standards for piercing criticism of culture and society," James Bennet, the Atlantic's president and editor-in-chief, said in a statement. "There is no writer better equipped — by dint of erudition, wit, and forcefulness — to fill the role of critic for The Atlantic."

Wieseltier, who spent three decades as TNR's literary editor, will write for the Atlantic's magazine and website. He will work with literary editor Ann Hulbert, his former colleague at The New Republic.

Both Wieseltier and TNR editor Frank Foer left the magazine in December amid disagreements with the magazine's ownership, which has announced plans to rebrand the century-old institution as a "digital media company." Their departure sparked the resignation of the majority of the magazine's masthead and fierce protest from Washington's political and media establishment.

The Brain

Quote from: Ideologue on December 10, 2014, 07:15:58 PM
Quote from: The Brain on December 10, 2014, 04:36:35 PM
Is Ta-Nehisi a sci fi alien race?

That made me giggle.  Brain, do you know that you're a Languish treasure?  That seems more backhanded than I intended. :P :hug:

I missed this one earlier. Thank you! :hug:
Women want me. Men want to be with me.

Caliga

Only children, women, and gays giggle.  Try guffawing instead Ide. :)
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