Top

news

Stories

 

After the Rocky taps out, the Post acts like it won by a knockout

The Saturday, February 28, edition of the Denver Post — the paper's first since the Rocky Mountain News put out its final issue the previous day — featured scads of in-house ads meant to convince Rocky readers that subscribing to the Post wouldn't constitute an act of disloyalty. Most of these displays affected a charitable tone, as did Dean Singleton, vice chairman and CEO of MediaNews Group, the Post's owner, during remarks at a February 26 press conference about the Rocky's demise. "We're not here because one newspaper beat the other newspaper," but due to changing economics that made it impossible for Denver to support two major dailies, Singleton had emphasized. Nonetheless, a full-page spread in the Saturday sports section (it turned up on Sunday, too) felt considerably less gracious. The spot was dominated by a black-and-white photograph of an empty boxing ring over which a headline read, "We feel a little like Ali without Frazier."

For sports fans who know even a little bit about the history of boxing, this message was freighted with symbolism. Note that Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier met three times during the first half of the 1970s, with Ali emerging victorious in two of those matches en route to becoming his generation's ultimate pugilistic icon. Hence, the ad equated the Post with an athlete nicknamed "The Greatest" even as it dismissed the Rocky as a scrappy underdog whose main achievement (after almost 150 years of existence) was to help its opponent hit exalted heights.

Now that the Post has reached this pinnacle, it apparently can maintain excellence without goading from its longtime rival. At the aforementioned press conference, Post editor Greg Moore said fear that his paper's quality would drop now that the Rocky is gone isn't among his top four worries.

And what made his list? "None of your business," he declared, to the amusement of the media on hand to quiz the assembled executives — among them Rich Boehne, president and CEO of E.W. Scripps, and John Temple, the Rocky's editor, publisher and president (who subsequently announced that he won't be taking a position with the company). After the laughter subsided, however, Moore made it clear that he isn't entirely free of concerns. He just prefers to share his trepidations privately with his staff, not at an event being streamed live by a gaggle of local news outlets.

This acknowledgement was far more believable than the faux humbleness being pushed by the Post's promotions department. In truth, the Post has a long way to go before becoming the broadsheet Ali. The paper's stacked with strong, talented reporters and editors, and the addition of numerous big names from the Rocky only adds to its strength in this area. And yet, despite having more resources than any other news organization in town, not to mention an owner — Singleton — with oversized ambitions and a continuing (and increasingly rare) belief in the future of newspapering, the Post is often dull, unimaginative and risk-averse, particularly in comparison to its late, lamented adversary. If the Post rests on its laurels now, it could soon join the Rocky as part of journalism history. And given the sorry state of the newspaper business these days, even retaining at least 80 percent of Rocky subscribers (Singleton's pie-in-the-sky, historically unprecedented goal) is no guarantee of long-term survival.

Granted, Singleton sounded confident that the Post would thrive. But he also admitted that he might have been forced to close the paper if his desire to keep operating in the town where he lives had been weaker, and "if Scripps had wanted badly to stay in the market" — a claim Boehne has echoed more than once.

Boehne's words didn't answer the rhetorical question posed by Rocky reporter April Washington after the December announcement that Scripps was putting the tabloid up for sale: "Why does Scripps always blink first?" But clearly Scripps had done so even though the Rocky had a higher circulation than did the Post, whose numbers were often propped up by smoke-and-mirrors trickery (like third-party sales, in which advertisers paid for papers to be delivered to non-subscribers) intended to make the contest seem closer than it really was.

Scripps's disinterest in keeping up the fight proved a blessing for the Post, whose financial health has been in dispute for months. According to a late-January article by Rocky business reporter David Milstead, the Denver Newspaper Agency, which handled business matters for the Post and the Rocky under a joint operating agreement, paid millions in newsroom expenses to keep the Post going — but it couldn't do so again because, Milstead wrote, "the agency's credit has dried up and the banks will not lend it any more money." Although MediaNews Group reacted angrily to this claim, charging Milstead with unspecified errors in a press release, the gist of his piece appears to have been accurate. At the press conference, Singleton conceded under Milstead's questioning that the DNA might have been a candidate for bankruptcy "had we not gotten our costs down" via agreements with various unions resulting in pay and compensation cuts estimated at 11.7 percent. For Singleton's creditors, this deal was a pretext for renegotiating a payment plan on a backbreaking $130 million debt associated with a state-of-the-art printing press that came online in 2007. Singleton hopes to finalize this arrangement once labor pacts with the DNA and the Post are ratified.

1 | 2 | Next Page >>
 
  • Phil 03/06/2009 5:31:00 PM

    How many Pulitzers has Westword won? A finalist perhaps? Ever won a state journalism contest? That's what I thought. Are you really in a position to denigrate others? For the record, Susan Greene has been hospitalized for the past week, which you would know if you did any reporting at all. You're a real inspiration to all journalists.

  • J. Frazier 03/06/2009 1:05:00 AM

    Jack, Your comments are well taken. The Post�s ad doesn�t at all strike me as an attempt to be condescending or smug, despite what Michael Roberts is wont to believe. The Rocky and the Post were arch competitors. The Post�s decades-long competition with the Rocky helped define who it was and what it did, good or bad (and vice versa). To me, the ad was a recognition of that competition and what it signified, as well as an admission that, with the Rocky gone, the Post in a way is going to have to reinvent itself. In any event, I�ve come to the conclusion that anything Roberts ever writes about the Post, especially in relation to the Rocky, has to be taken with a large rock of salt. His unwavering dislike for the Post is almost as palpable as his affection for the Rocky, and his somewhat creepy adoration of David Milstead. Bottom line: Roberts needs to chill. The Post was just trying to be gracious.

  • Jack Farrell 03/05/2009 9:00:00 PM

    hey...i would not take the ad, as you describe it, as an insult to the rocky...not if you are old enough to remember joe frazier...he was a lot more than a scrappy little foe...at the peak of their careers he was ali's equal...a monster in the ring, just like the rocky

  • Highlypaidmanager 03/05/2009 5:02:00 PM

    THUMP goes the foot against the dead horse. I know recycling's a noble effort, but not in newspaper reports, even Westword. What's worse is that you keep repeating factual errors; Milstead's numerous assertions of wrongdoing which have long since been clarified by the Post (which for some reason, never get recycled along with his accusations) Also, I was one of the six Post managers who got "bounced." In addition to getting my position wrong when you made the initial announcement, you keep asserting I was "highly" paid. I don't know where you got access to these supposed salaries, but you may want to (gasp) check your sources. I made about the same as a senior reporter, if that. Not that it matters anymore. I hope you and Milstead have a long and happy life together, though...

 
Browse Voice Nation
  • Voice Places

    Voice Places

    Discover restaurants, nightlife, travel, shopping...

  • VOICE Daily Deals

    VOICE Daily Deals

    Get 50 to 90% off every day on restaurants, movies, massages...

  • Best Of

    Best Of...

    More than 10,000 of the BEST things to eat, drink, and experience

  • My Voice Nation

    My Voice Nation

    Join the Village Voice community and get exclusive deals and info

  • Happy Hour

    Happy Hour

    Your local Happy Hour guide at your fingertips

or

Log in or Sign up

Social Connect:

Use your favorite account to access My Voice Nation.


Use your My Voice Nation account to log in:





Forgot password?
or

Sign Up or Log in

Social Connect:

Sign up for My Voice Nation with your preferred network.


Sign up for a My Voice Nation account:



Privacy policy