May 5, 2006

Eggers Resigns At The Post-Dispatch

Terrance Eggers, the publisher of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, is leaving the newspaper effective May 19th. Last November, Ellen Soeteber resigned as Editor-in-Chief. It seems that Mr. Eggers is leaving for the same reasons Ms. Soeteber left - the Post has money problems, or as they described it, the paper faces a "choppy advertising market that prevented Egger from meeting modest revenue targets during his last year of a decade-long run in St. Louis."

I have to feel sorry for newspaper people these days - its the best of times as the internet beckons, and it is the worst of times, as the current advertising base dries up. Here we are in a robust expansion, and the ad revenue isn't coming back -- which means it isn't going to come back. I think this accounts for the generally unhappy outlook on the economy by the press -- their economy isn't good, so they assume nobody else's is, either.

Bill McClellan wrote about Mr. Egger's departure. Bill get's his facts right but his interpretation is way off: "An odd but endearing quality of newspaper folk is that we profess to know a lot about everybody else's business but know almost nothing of our own." It isn't odd but endearing - it's thoroughly annoying. And then he notes the big bucks Mr. Eggers has been paid ($3 million when Pulitzer was bought out, $675,000 retention bonus, and $1 million severance package) -- all the while his editorial page has been blasting other execs for similar excess. The press can't stand the same scrutiny and standards they hold everyone else to.

Posted by Kevin Murphy at May 5, 2006 11:49 AM | Media Criticism