How’s this sound? The Chicago Sun-Times wants its journalists to work 10 hours a day before they can qualify for overtime pay, according to Jim Romenesko. They’re also calling for the “creation of a new, lower-paid classification of reporters, photographers, designers and copy editors” to work for as low as $13.50 per hour in an intern capacity, with the hopes of being hired as (ostensibly) part of the higher-paid classification. We know the newspapers are trying to gauge the best way to handle this crisis of technology. The European newspapers are starting to feel the plague too. The notion of “overtime” does seem to change in online journalism, where the cycle doesn’t abate.
Chicago Sun-Times Wants Journalists to Work More for Their Money
December 20, 2012 by Michael Juliani
Filed Under: The Repeater Tagged With: Chicago Sun-Times, dying newspapers, Jim Romenesko, journalism jobs, journalists, newspaper jobs, newspaper staffs, newspapers, reporters
Smart Businessmen Still Buy Newspapers
December 18, 2012 by Michael Juliani
The New York Times recently reported that New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg might buy The Financial Times. Why are billionaires thinking of investing in newspapers, the dying breed of media? AdAge suggests it may be because several papers (including The New York Times) are doing quite well. The piece also says that struggling papers don’t dissuade shrewd buyers either, as evidenced by Russian oligarch Alexander Lebedev’s purchase of The Independent. The AdAge compiled graphics showing some of the current winning and losing papers.