LocalNewser standupkid's dispatches from the frontlines of local news

10Jul/092

Lost in the Layoffs: The Non-Reporters, Non-Anchors Who Don't Make the Paper

Sony_MVS-8000a_lgI can't operate a switcher to save my life.  In fact, in all the years I've been in and around control rooms, they've never failed to give me the creeps (the low light and monitors, glowing buttons and standys and takes and, of course, all that shouting) I've always been far more comfortable out in the middle of a hurricane or elbowing my way into the pack to get my mic in front of some indicted public official.

But the honest truth is this:  if I lose my job, odds are it'll get mentioned in the newspaper (I treasure my New York Daily News headline:  No More Joyella in Mudville upon my departure from WNYW).

But lay off the entire control room, and not only will the newscasts look darn bumpy that night (you can just forget that quad box and custom wipe you were hoping for), but the people who lose their jobs will almost certainly not be mentioned in the next day's paper.

Unless, of course, it's "15 laid off at Channel 6--but fear not, it's nobody you know...the wacky weatherman's safe, the salty and avuncular anchor's hanging on for another day, and that cute morning traffic girl will be back in the morning in that news-director-ordered tight sweater. The layoffs?  Just some, you know, behind the scenes people."

Very rarely does the firing of a longtime but unseen employee merit mention in a newspaper by name.  It happened recently when Alan Henney, a weekend assignment manager at WUSA/DC put himself on "permanent furlough" and left the station with a blistering memo that suggested that the station's longstanding tradition as a home of serious journalism was in danger, if not dead already.

It happened again when KARE/Minneapolis parted ways with a behind-the-scenes player considered the "heart and soul" of the KARE newsroom, Senior Executive Producer Lonnie Hartley.  His layoff was made newsworthy when the entire newsroom, led by talent with connections to print writers, voiced their outrage.

For most, though, it's pink slip, then silence.  You walk out the door you've been reporting to for decades, and as far as viewers know, nothing's even happened.  I know it's part of the downward spiral stations across the country are in.  Only the lean have a shot at surviving.  Got it.  And yet, there's something about all the pity pouring out for the poor dethroned anchors and reporters, who, after all, have their name to fall back on.

On this blog, the most popular comments continue--even months after the fact--to involve a laid off weatherman in Denver, and fired reporter/anchors in Washington, DC and Tampa.

DeDapper Media CEO (and ex WNBC reporter) Jay DeDapper

DeDapper Media CEO (and ex WNBC reporter) Jay DeDapper

This week the New York Daily News reported that former WNBC reporter Jay DeDapper's started his own production company, DeDapper Media.  I applaud Jay and wish him well.  I've done the same thing myself, and I'd be the first to admit that having any kind of "name" is one card to play when you're up against it.  "The jobs, they're not just disappearing and they'll be coming back; they're disappearing permanently," DeDapper told the Daily News' Richard Huff. "There will be very few places in journalism on television for good people."

The advantage to having a name, is being able to use it to find the next thing.  "The idea is, basically for 20-some-odd years, what I've done more than anything else is tell stories for a living," he told the News. DeDapper has contacts and he's a known entity.  And when a guy like Jay DeDapper decides on a new path, that itself becomes worthy of a news article, which never hurts when you hang out a shingle and start looking for business.

The laid off TD isn't so lucky.  Brilliant in those dimly-lit control rooms, working magic on a Sony MVS 8000 ("I can give you eight boxes, but we don't have eight live sources") but separated from the control room, then what?  No newspaper mention, and no clear next step.  No, they're not storytellers like reporters, who can find other ways of assembling information and telling stories, whether its for a production company, a PR firm, or as a TV pitchman.  Had there not been an injustice of Epic Proportions, I'd be playing the role of a TV type on the new season of HBO's True Blood (I'm not bitter, mind you, just disappointed.  I don't carry a grudge).

So how does the live truck op, the satellite engineer, the camera operator or the TD sit down, stare at their resume (which shows a clear flow from college to today that screams "I'm damn good at what I do!") and think, this only gets me the job I just lost?

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Rebecca Zucker

Rebecca Zucker

Rebecca Zucker is a San Francisco based executive coach and partner at Next Step Partners, a firm that specializes in guiding clients through career transitions.  She says in the current business climate, about a third of the firm's business involves helping clients answer that question, "now what?"

"Formulate a hypothesis," she says.  "Even a crazy daydream."  What was it you wanted to do before you ended up in local news?  Actor?  Pastry chef?  Try and remember.  Zucker asks her clients to think back to the peak experiences--outside of work--in their lives.  "A time when you felt like you were thriving, alive, confident, competent and at the top of your game," she said.  The exercise involves looking at those times and figuring out what made them so special.  Was it intellectual or artistic challenge?  Was it cooperation or collaboration?  Whatever it was, these are the keys to your own personal satisfaction, and knowing what they are will help you figure out what kind of work will make you happy.  "The reasons (those experiences) felt so great were because you were completely expressing your own values," said Zucker.

Zucker urges clients to read Herminia Ibarra's book, Working Identity, which offers tips for mid-career professionals on reinventing themselves--and enjoying the result.  Key piece of beginner's advice?  "Don't try to analyze or plan your way into a new career," write Ibarra.  (Take that you over-analytical technical directors and producers!)

Zucker suggests trying out new ideas, even a bunch of new ideas.  If you think it could be pastry chef, figure out who you can invite to lunch for an informational interview.  Does it feel natural?  Could you see yourself doing that kind of work?  Attend a conference or a class.  Small steps.  "They'll find out which doors they want to shut, and where they want to dive deeper," says Zucker.

Oh.  And here's a big one:  don't obsess about what others are telling you.  What would you do for a living if your friends, former co-workers, spouse, and family didn't get a vote?

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14Feb/090

Doesn't Matter Who You Are, How Long You've Been There, What You've Done: Peabody Award Winner Shown the Door in St. Louis

LATEST LAYOFFS:  KMOV/St. Louis reporter John Mills would seem to be the kind of guy a station likes having around:  hard-working, good in the field and as a fill-in anchor;  and a journalist with credentials:  A Peabody, and Edward R. Murrow Award, and, just last fall, the local "Riverfront Times" named Mills "Best Reporter."  He seems the the kind of guy you build a strong bench by keeping in the dugout.  Oh.  Except, these days local TV station are playing baseball with one marquee name, maybe, and a smattering of little leaguers willing to play pro ball for very little money, and agree to clean up the stands after the game.

Mills lost his job this week.  After thirteen years at KMOV, he was laid off, and his award-winning bio got the traditional trip into the local news memory hole.  Mills, though, had a few thing to say, via his personal website, and amazingly, the guy took the high road (just like Andrea McCarren, and Randy Price, and Carolyn Gusoff, and Jay DeDapper...) "if any St. Louis companies or organizations are interested in a loyal and dedicated employee, I would very much appreciate their consideration," he wrote.  "I'm not bitter.  In TV, this was an incredible run."

Too bad companies like KMOV (and WJLA, and WHDH, and WNBC...) aren't willing, able, or interested any longer in "loyal and dedicated" guys like John Mills.

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10Feb/090

WNBC/NY Newsers Party in Midtown: "Severance Fest '09"


Yeah.  It wasn't your typical going away party.  As detailed in the New York Observer's The Media Mob column, WNBC/NY newsers gathered at an Irish bar in midtown recently to send off a group of some of Channel 4's best and brightest;  not headed to bigger and better things, just headed "in a different direction," as the ludicrous management cliche goes.

"In the days leading up to the party, some staffers jokingly referred to it as a 'Wake 4 NY and a 'gathering of the recently departed.' Others took to calling it 'Severence-Fest 2009.'"  As the once-mighty WNBC has transformed in recent months from a team of titans to an ever-more-anxious group of survivors in the "Content Center," the bold-faced names that once populated the place have been picked off, one by one.  

"By the time Friday night rolled around, everyone needed a stiff drink, went the thinking. And in the end, despite the recent gloominess at WNBC-4, Friday night's party turned into a jovial affair, according to several attendees. The cash bar, located in the basement of Legends 33, was packed by 7:30 p.m., and the party didn't break up until 3:30 a.m. By Monday morning, photos of the revelry were already making their way onto Facebook," the Observer reports.

Jay DeDapper

Jay DeDapper

Recently laid off political reporter Jay DeDapper served as an impromptu emcee, and kept it positive, but told the paper the station New York had come to know over the last few decades as solid, serious, and staffed with veteran New Yorkers, has ceased to exist.  "It was more of a reunion and a goodbye. We put the dot at the end of the sentence. News Channel 4 is over."  (DeDapper, though, is not.  He's taken his show on the web.)

"Everything that we did, all the Emmys we won, all the great stories and series we did, that's done," he added. "There may be great stuff in the future with the new group of people. We're just not going to be a part of it. We had what we had. Now it's time to move on."
[digg=http://digg.com/television/Laid_Off_WNBC_Newsers_Party_in_NY_at_Severance_Fest_09]

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27Jan/094

Andrea McCarren, You Say? Hmmm… Not Ringing a Bell, Comrade

Andrea McCarren

Andrea McCarren

I've always felt that, in a perverse way, local television stations are a lot like the old Soviet Union. There's the cult of personality; the way we line our hallways with oversized smiling photos of our dear leaders on the 6 and 11, and the way we shoot those heartwarming promos at the holidays showing the loving newsteam--all outfitted in holiday sweaters, whether the station's in Minneapolis or Miami. We're constantly using words like "family" to describe a group of employees. At least, until something goes wrong.

A beloved family member gets busted for DUI, or a contract doesn't get renewed, and--poof!--it's like they never existed. No farewell mention on the news; the picture just vanishes off the wall of heroes in the lobby, and the holiday image promo gets a quick re-edit. Just like Stalin used to do after a purge: cut the pictures out of the history books, and carefully remove the comrade who has fallen out of favor.

Josef Stalin

Josef Stalin

And so it is, in this season of layoffs, with local news websites, where the top banner's usually reserved for a smiling collection of anchor heads--the Action News "family," and inside pages have glowing bios describing the health reporter's love for rescued puppies, and the sports guy's years of participation in the Big Brothers program. 

But as Neal Zoren writes in the Delco Times, the last place you'd want to go for information on what's happening to the members of your favorite news team--would be the station's web site. Think of them as promotional vehicles with a few pop-up ads, some news content, and a striking resemblance to a Soviet history textbook. Because when you fall out of favor--no matter how many chili cook-offs you've attended over the years in your Channel 7 polo shirt--you just vanish without a trace: "At a volatile time when layoffs are adding to the missing persons lists, there should be a handy place to find out who, so to speak, is on first," Zoren writes. "Between firings, resignations, and transfers of market, voluntary and involuntary, station personnel has shifted a lot in the last few weeks."

But the websites--they just keep on with their family first and all's well approach. The WJLA/DC website, for instance, would not be your best source on information regarding Andrea McCarren's layoff. As the cliche goes, her "picture has been removed from the station's website," usually an immediate indication that you are no longer part of the family. Ditto for Jay DeDapper at WNBC, and, back in Philly, the notorious departures of Alycia Lane and Larry Mendte.

Alycia Lane/NBC 10 Photo

Until a week ago, Andrea McCarren, a well-respected and high-profile journalist was a key player at WJLA. Today, enter "andrea mccarren" into the search box on the WJLA website, and you get no news story explaining her departure, only a list of stories, presumably reported by McCarren, the most recent of which dates to 2007.

To its credit, the revamped "NBC Philadelphia" website, if prompted by entering "Alycia Lane" in the search box, will cough up a series of articles on the legal wrangling between Lane and Mendte. So maybe there's hope? Maybe we local newsers will start actually reporting honestly about the stories that involve, you know, us?

Or, then again, maybe not. What was that name again? McCarren something? Nope. Not ringing any bells.

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25Jan/092

Jay DeDapper's Still Forcing NY Pols to "Get Real"

Ex WNBC/NY political correspondent Jay DeDapper, released this month in yet another offloading of experienced talent at the "content center" has not, it turns out, gone gentle into that good night.  DeDapper, smart and savvy, has turned his personal website, jaydedapper.com,

Jay DeDapper

Jay DeDapper

into "Get Real with Jay DeDapper," a site devoted to turning the screws on the ever-so-screwturn-deserving pols in Albany, but he's also got his sights set on politicians everywhere:  "Get Real is based in New York so we’ll split our focus between national and New York news looking at politics, government, business, and other big stories. If you see a story or detect some serious BS give us a shout and we’ll get on it. Change is supposedly in the air. Let’s see how that works out," he says.

DeDapper doesn't dwell on his unceremonious departure from WNBC, saying only in a pithy Q&A on the site, "Q:  Why aren't you on TV anymore?   A: Patience."

Check out Jay's site here.
[digg=http://digg.com/politics/WNBC_Reporter_Forced_From_Job_Takes_His_Act_Online]

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24Jan/090

Saturday Rant: Saving the Fat, Cutting the Muscle

I get it.  Times are tight.  Advertisers aren't spending.  The local TV money machine isn't functioning the way we've come to expect.  So budgets must be cut.  It would seem to be the responsible thing to do.  When less money is coming in, you've got to adjust the budget and start spending less.  But I question the way some station managers and corporate execs are choosing to trim.  They're not going for the fat, they seem to be targeting the muscle.

When WJLA/DC hired Leon Harris from CNN, he told reporters the lure was "working with great co-anchors and an excellent, focused news team."  It wasn't the cool spinning 7 logo or the nifty treats in the break room. "The resources and commitment that WJLA brings to bear on news coverage are simply phenomenal," Harris said.

At that time, Robert Allbritton, Chairman and CEO of WJLA's corporate owner, Allbritton, said spending the money on Harris was "yet one more indication" of WJLA's plans to be the "dominant TV news station" in the D.C. area.  Makes you wonder.  When Mr. Allbritton went about cutting his budget, he did as others have done in recent months, keeping the familiar face out front (in this case, Mr. Harris;  in New York, Chuck and Sue) but just below the billboard names, it was well-compensated experience that took the hit.  Andrea McCarren at JLA.  Jay DeDapper at WNBC.

We could--and we should--assemble a roster of what's been lost.  Tally up the names of the A list, experienced veterans of local tv news--the people who went network and came back, the people who chose to stay in a community where they'd built ties and sources, and did the work that drew us into journalism in the first place.  Not to get our mugs on tv, but to truly "report" and tell stories that matter.  

Any kid can cover a car wreck.  But when the story is big, when it requires a little depth of knowledge about City Hall or the history of a community, where will those reporters be?  WNBC kept Jay DeDapper on the payroll--and the political beat--until the end of the election season.  Too bad his insight and knowledge of Albany's no longer there to delve into the appointment this week of Kristin Gillibrand.

I know I'm naive and I don't have to balance the books like GMs do.  I know that experience comes with a hefty pricetag, especially experience that has a "name."  And I know the business is rapidly changing.  But when the advertising comes back, what will these "dominant news teams" really look like?
[digg=http://digg.com/politics/TV_Stations_Cut_Budgets_by_Sparing_Fat_Cutting_Muscle]

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17Jan/091

Latest Layoffs: Gutting a Once Great Station; NBC New York Cuts 3 More

Amazing.  In the same week when WNBC reminds viewers that it actually can compete on the big story, the station waits until Friday to bury a far more telling news item:  three more experienced New York vets cut at the "content center."  The Daily News' Richard Huff broke the story overnight on nydailynews.com: 

"A day after WNBC/Ch. 4 scooped its rivals in covering the Hudson River plane crash, the station fired three of its most familiar names.

Market veterans Jay DeDapper, Kendra Farn and Carol Anne Riddell were let go Friday.

"Their contracts were not renewed," said a station spokeswoman.

They are the latest in a long string of on-air layoffs for the once dominant station, which in recent years has seen its news ratings fall. "

DeDapper, a veteran New York City political reporter, now apparently out of a job at NBC's flagship just hours before one of the biggest political stories of our lifetime.  Who will "NBC New York" have in Washington?  Who will it have in Brooklyn?  Who will it have who can even remember what WNBC once was?  Chuck, Sue,... and who?

Jay DeDapper/WNBC

Jay DeDapper/WNBC

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