Friday, December 12, 2008
Rosenberg sues his boss over transfer
Don Rosenberg has filed suit naming his newspaper, the Plain Dealer, his editor Susan Goldberg and the Musical Arts Association (Cleveland Orchestra) over his ouster as orchestra critic.
You will want to click on the headline to go straight to the lengthy New York Times article, complete with a head shot of Rosenberg or you can read the first few graphs here. We did not bother to check the Washington Post or other newspapers that grabbed onto the news. The PD also supposedly had an item on it. Here’s a summary:
Plain Dealer’s Music Critic, His Beat Changed, Sues Paper and Orchestra
By DANIEL J. WAKIN
New York Times
A classical music critic who was removed from his post at The Cleveland Plain Dealer after a history of negative reviews of the Cleveland Orchestra’s music director struck back on Thursday with a lawsuit.
The critic, Donald Rosenberg, charged that orchestra officials had waged a “campaign of vilification” against him and that his bosses at the newspaper had caved in to demands that he be ousted.
“It’s key that people realize that journalists have to be given the freedom to operate without pressure from outside sources,” Mr. Rosenberg said in a telephone interview. Mr. Rosenberg stressed that his complaint was directed at the orchestra’s management and not its musicians.
Mr. Rosenberg’s case became a nationwide cause célèbre among music critics, a dwindling breed in a time of newspaper cutbacks. They said a prominent, knowledgeable voice had been silenced by an influential local institution.
Mr. Rosenberg remains at the paper as a music reporter and dance critic and writes some music reviews, but not of the Cleveland Orchestra. The paper in September assigned a former intern who had worked with Mr. Rosenberg to do that job.
Mr. Rosenberg’s suit, filed in the Court of Common Pleas of Cuyahoga County, names the newspaper and the orchestra’s parent, the Musical Arts Association, as defendants. Also named are Susan Goldberg, the newspaper’s editor; Gary Hanson, the orchestra’s executive director; Richard Bogomolny, its chairman and president; and James Ireland III, a board member and former president.
Mr. Rosenberg, 56, charged the defendants with defamation. He accused orchestra management of tortious interference with his job, and the paper and Ms. Goldberg of age discrimination and violating Ohio’s free speech principle. The suit seeks damages of at least $50,000.
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