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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
03.10.2008
Goodbye to the New York Sun

I remember the New York World Telegram and Sun from my childhood in New York. It was one of a species now long dead: the afternoon newspaper. Those were the days when news dribbled in on the wire all day and all night, and some papers published first, second and final editions. In the a.m. and in the p.m. Like PM, the fellow-traveling, near Communist newspaper that was owned by Marshall Field and for which I.F. Stone wrote. My father bought the World Telegram and Sun for the afternoon stock prices. I vaguely recall it being a center-right publication which was too right for my mother, who read the liberal New York Post with her favorite columnists Dorothy Schiff (the owner who had an affair, unknown to mom, with FDR), Max Lerner, Murray Kempton, James Wechsler, Dr. Rose Franzblau (a serious psychiatrist not at all as funny as Ruth Westheimer) and the gentle gossip columnist Leonard Lyons. The Journal American, the Daily News and the Daily Mirror never crossed our doorstep. 

The Sun was revived six and a half years ago by Seth Lipsky, an editor with a journalistic mission (to publish a paper that looked at news in historical context) and a political message that was goo-goo, free market, aggressively anti-tyrannical in foreign policy. It was a pleasure to read. What's more, it had the best culture section of any newspaper in America. No comparison. None, neither yesterday nor today.

The Sun did not like the New York Times, and it made that clear.

Still, after the Sun died earlier this week, the Times gave it a decent farewell. But it couldn't keep itself from a churlish "however." "Some critics found biases toward Israel...a bit too obvious." Well, many critics of the Times find its biases against Israel more than a bit too obvious.

Posted: Friday, October 03, 2008 3:11 PM with 8 comment(s)

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LISAH said:

it will be missed....

October 3, 2008 4:22 PM

teplukhin2you said:

Couldn't Bruce Kovner pony up the cash needed to save it?

Or was it a perpetual money pit?

October 3, 2008 4:55 PM

jimprice said:

Given the frequent and persistent errors of fact and omissions of fact that populate the New York Times' reporting and commentary on the Arab-Israeli conflict, "bias" is not the word.  Lying is.

October 3, 2008 5:07 PM

Wandreycer1 said:

A fabulously grumpy, flashy player in NY journalism with loads of insight and an important say.  Always a great read.  It will be missed.  Much more fun than he tedious Orange County Register in California, another regional, grumpy, conservative paper, never as fun a read as the Sun - too bad.

October 3, 2008 8:26 PM

rozenson said:

I'm also surprised that there was not the monetary will to sustain the Sun. Sheldon Adelson was too busy?

October 4, 2008 3:06 AM

thejauntyboulevardier said:

Since I do not live in NY or on the East Coast, the only time The Sun ever appeared on my radar was when peretz would link to that paper here on the Spine.

Still, I also mourn the loss of the evening papers. Growing up in LA, we took the LA Times of course, but I would go out and buy the Herald Examiner, the evening paper, from a vending machine on the corner, which usually was sandwiched between those girlie newspapers where there would be stars covering the women's nipples...

And I would get stuff in the Herald that I could never get in The LA Times. They had some slightly sinister looking sports writer name Allan Malamud, who I disliked but would always read - sorta like my sick attachment to this blog - and where else could this inquiring mind read copies of Rock Hudson's love letters to his last boyfriend. I mean, that kind of shit was priceless and I had to have it, and the evening papers, thank Fortuna, gave it to me in spades.

Now, as peretz noted, the evening paper is gone. In all seriousness, I mourn this peculiar piece of Americana journalism.

October 4, 2008 1:13 PM

ginzy said:

The SUN ע"ה was truly a breath of fresh air in an otherwise monolithic media landscape..  I would check it daily via the WWW site, not only for it's Israel coverage but for the best coverage around of the UN (Benny Avni who also has occasional reports on Israel radio), its expose of Columbia U's rabid & deep seated anti-Israelism, an best of all the Sun's merciless dissection of the hypocritical NGO Human Rights Watch and their distorted "reports" alleging Israeli human rights violations.  And many of its reports from Washington, both national issues as well as international ones, put the NY Times to shame.

What helped do the Sun in was the bad timing to run out of money just when Wall Street was heading into a nose dive and even with the most optimistic assessment of the bailout package it will be rough going for another couple of years.  In this sort of business environement I can't see anyone putting money into a financially struggling newspaper especially when the print media in general is suffering from reduced readership & reduced ad revenues.

But more than anything else, a paid circulation of only 14,000 and only 18 pages or so of newspaper could not attract the kinds of ad revenues needed to survive.

With regard to Sheldon Adelson:  He's been busy here in Israel plowing his investment money into an interesting media experiment:  The quick-read but reasonably good quality FREE weekday  (Sun. - Thurs.) newspaper, "Yisra'el Hayom" ("Israel Today).  The paper is distributed to commuters at the major central bus stations, commuter train stations, office building complexes, and cafes in business areas.  As I mentioned it's designed to be a quick read, that in theory you could read cover to cover in a 30 minute commute.

The revenues come entirely from advertising.  Y.H. hired-away a number of major journalists from the other papers and very quickly has become Israel's second largest mass circulation daily.   Keep an eye on this business model for papers as it could well be the future of print journalism.

Hershel Ginsburg

Efrata / Jersualem

October 4, 2008 2:50 PM

teplukhin2you said:

Hershel - super-sharp billionaire investor Phil Anschutz is betting big on the free papers here, too. Local advertising is the print media's ace in the hole. The smallest and most intensely local papers are best positioned here.

October 6, 2008 1:20 AM

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