Bud Shaw exit 433,000th newspaper job lost in 28 years!
Among the eight veteran reporters, writers and
editors who took voluntary buyout offers from Cleveland.com and the Plain
Dealer this week were sports columnist Bud Shaw, Washington bureau chief Steve
Koff and sports editor Mike Starkey.
Bud Shaw covered more than
a dozen Super Bowls and World Series, eight Masters golf tournaments, the PGA
and U.S. Open golf championship, six Olympic Games, the Ryder Cup, the NBA
Finals, the Stanley Cup Finals, the Daytona 500, the NCAA Final Four and the
U.S. Open tennis tournament.
But that’s irrelevant in today’s
crumbling newspapers era.
Indiana University of
Pennsylvania graduate and Philadelphia native Shaw came to the PD in 1991 from
The National Sports Daily where he worked in Chicago and Detroit.
His career
includes newspapers in Atlanta, San Diego, Philadelphia, New Jersey and western
Pennsylvania.
It’s a sad time when a Bud
Shaw walks out the door because newspaper owners didn’t get ahead of the infant
Internet and, with all their reporting resources, own it.
No one who toddled
onto the Internet to write could have matched all that newspaper talent.
During that same time frame, internet publishing and online broadcasting rose from 30,000 to more than 200,000. A 433,000 loss and a 170,000 gain means 260,000 more people out of work.
Oh, many migrated to TV newsrooms, which have more reporters than newspapers for the first time in history.
Is this good for democracy? Hell, no! The Washington Post puts it bluntly and accurately.
Go to
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/the-crisis-in-journalism-has-become-a-crisis-of-democracy/2018/04/11/a908d5fc-2d64-11e8-8688-e053ba58f1e4_story.html?noredirect=on&utm_term=.dc902ab1fcfb
to read it.
There are too many Bud Shaws in this equation to benefit America. There are so few left to catch the politicians and businesses raping America.
Politicians and businesses will have a field day without newspapers being the guarddogs for democracy.
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