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Showing posts with label Kellyanne Conway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kellyanne Conway. Show all posts

Sunday, March 19, 2017

What the Borgs started at The Record, Gannett is finishing with a vengeance

Trevor Irvin of PoliticalCartoons.com calls this caricature of Kellyanne Conway, former campaign manager and now counselor to President Trump, the "I-have-no-evidence con job."

-- HACKENSACK, N.J.

By VICTOR E. SASSON
EDITOR

In less than a week, 141 employees at Gannett's North Jersey Media Group -- publisher of The Record of Woodland Park -- will have worked their final day.

This the second major slashing of the payroll since November, when Gannett redesigned the print edition and NorthJersey.com website.

Gannett has laid off a total of about 350 employees since buying NJMG from the Borg family last July.

See: Borgs take the money and run

This second round of 141 includes about 50 reporters and editors, who were offered one week's pay per year of service and told they can apply for unemployment. 

But Gannett hasn't said who will stay after March 25 and who will go, so readers scanning bylines in today's paper have no way of knowing whether Travel Editor Jill Schensul, for example, has written her last column (Better Living cover).

Ex-staffer's take

When the second major round of layoff notices went out in late January, a former reporter had this reaction on a restricted Facebook page called Bergen Record Cast of Characters:
"So my former employer, The Bergen Record, recently sold for $44 million or so to Gannett.
"First the top editors got renamed 'directors' of bla bla. Then, artists and photographers largely were gone. People who could retire did.  
"Today, 141 talented, iconic Record reporters, writers, editors...etc. -- those whose knowledge as tenacious truth-seekers, wordsmiths, and fine-tuners of copy -- GONE.  RIP Bergen Record.
"I hope the Borg family -- who I always will be grateful for for owning and supporting a fantastic newspaper -- can manage on $40 or so million.
"Their distasteful handling of the sale -- having talented, dedicated, long-term employees read about it in The New York Post -- is about as shocking to anyone who knows Mac Borg as it is that his family empire would collapse with his son Stephen Borg at the helm.
"The foreshadowing began the day Stephen got named heir apparent many years ago and, in his first staff meeting, compared our toils -- the "product" -- to having the 'shelf life' of a box of cereal. That and no socks in the winter and no eye contact ever -- real fourth-generation charm.
"Today, a great newspaper died.
"And to every single talented person who lost a job today -- I hope and pray your talents are valued elsewhere.
"To Gannett -- and your soulless bottom line and mid-level henchmen who specialize in takeovers and layoffs -- please know being the largest newspaper chain in the biz ain't even close to being the best."

Borg layoffs

The downsizing of NJMG and The Record began about a decade before Gannett bought the Woodland Park daily in 2016.

First, then-Publisher Stephen A. Borg moved printing of the paper to the company's press plant in Rockaway Township, and laid off more than 50 press operators who were printing other newspapers, including USA Today.

About two years later, in 2008, Borg downsized the newsroom staff, including laying off the photography director, copy editors, photographers and other employees who had worked there for decades. 

That came several months after NJMG gave Borg a $3.65 million mortgage to buy a McMansion in Tenafly.

In 2009, The Record and NJMG moved out of its River Street headquarters in Hackensack -- where the paper and family had prospered for more than 110 years -- to an office building overlooking Route 80 in Woodland Park.

In Hackensack, businesses -- including Solari's Restaurant, Naturally Good and others -- lost the patronage of hundreds of customers who worked at 150 River St.

Borg's major editorial changes included:

Folding the award-winning Food section, starting a highly promotional Real Estate section to boost advertising revenue, and permanently assigning a reporter to write expanded obituaries about prominent North Jersey residents. 

Fourth Edition

Now, Borg will likely use millions of dollars from the sale to Gannett to give his four sons the best Ivy League education money can buy.

His big sister, former Vice President and General Counsel Jennifer A. Borg, has joined Pashman Stein, the Hackensack law firm she retained on numerous occasions to represent NJMG.

The Borgs have formed a new company, Fourth Edition, which has offices in the same Woodland Park office building that houses the newsroom of their former daily and weekly papers, magazine and website.

Today's paper

The lead story on Page 1 today is another long, tortured account of alleged fraud in publicly funded charter schools that have their "roots in New Jersey's Turkish community" (1A).

The focus is on a school in Union County, which is far from the paper's circulation area.

Even more space is devoted to a third front-page column in only six days about Kellyanne Conway, the counselor to President Trump whose lies have conned so many voters and reporters, including Record Columnist Mike Kelly (1A).

Local news?

In Local, Road Warrior John Cichowski tackles the ordeal of pedestrians who had to walk in the street because crews failed to clear sidewalks after last Tuesday's big snowstorm (1L).

Is he really that concerned?

No. This is the first time in the more than 13 years he has written the column that Cichowski has bothered to report on how pedestrians are endangered by sloppy snow clearing.

Friday, March 17, 2017

Federal judges teaching Dictator Trump several valuable lessons in democracy

A cartoon from Marian Kamensky in Switzerland shows President Trump getting his ass kicked by federal judges after he signed a new travel ban targeting Muslims.

-- HACKENSACK, N.J.


By VICTOR E. SASSON
EDITOR

So far, three federal judges have turned thumbs down on President Trump's revised travel ban targeting Muslims.

Isn't that rich? 

Trump's older sister is a federal judge on the U.S. Third Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelphia.

And on Wednesday, The Record reports, that very same appeals court granted a 25-year-old Afghan man a temporary emergency stay from deportation from New Jersey (1A).

It's unlikely Judge Maryanne Trump Barry, who has been on senior status since 2011, took part in the decision, but I've yet to see The Record or any other news outlet try to interview her about her brother's attacks on the integrity of the federal judiciary.

An Associated Press story on 8A today reports judges in Hawaii and Maryland blocked Dictator Trump's latest executive order from taking effect on Thursday, "using the president's own words as evidence that the order discriminates against Muslims."

The judges agreed with civil liberties groups and refugee and immigrant advocates that the temporary ban on travel from six predominantly Muslim countries violates the First Amendment.

The Trump administration argued the ban was intended to protect the United States from terrorism.

Trump himself called the Hawaii ruling "unprecedented judicial overreach," and promised an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

By the way, today's paper was the first one Gannett delivered to my home since Monday.


Federal appeals court Judge Maryanne Trump Barry,
older sister of President Trump, will turn 80 on April 5.
This photo is from Reuters.


Spying claims

Meanwhile, the leadership of the Senate Intelligence Committee -- the Republican chairman and Democratic vice chairman -- flatly refuted Trump's claims that his New York offices were wiretapped by Barack Obama himself or anyone else in the Obama administration (9A).

Trump tweeted the charges, but provided no evidence.

Days before the intelligence panel's decision, The Record ran two Page 1 columns based on an interview with Kellyanne Conway, the serial liar who was the Trump campaign manager and now is the president's counselor. 

The neutral headline gave Conway's lies more credibility than they deserved:

"Conway extends
surveillance tale"

Snow removal

Could a photo on the front of today's Local section be The Record's first mention of the effectiveness of snow removal in Hackensack, Englewood and other towns in the circulation area after Tuesday's big storm (1L)?

A man is shown clearing snow from the roof of a building "along Route 4 in Paramus."

Of course, drivers found many streets still covered with ice on Wednesday, and uncleared crosswalks forced pedestrians to endanger themselves by walking in the street.

Meanwhile, editors and reporters at the Woodland Park daily caught up on their sleep.

Photo blooper

On March 8, a photo caption in The Record's Better Living section mistakenly identified Alexander Graham Bell as the "inventor of the light bulb and telephone."

Surely, Thomas Alva Edison turned over in his West Orange grave.

Monday, March 13, 2017

Trump counselor hoodwinks columnist into splashing even more lies onto Page 1

From cartoonist J.D. Crowe of the Alabama Media Group. You can see more of his work here.
From cartoonist Taylor Jones. You can find more of his work on the Cagle.com site.


-- HACKENSACK, N.J.

By VICTOR E. SASSON
EDITOR

Some reporters at The Record of Woodland Park will do anything to score an "exclusive" interview or to "scoop" the competition.

And these same reporters have already forgotten the lesson of the 2016 presidential campaign -- that even when the news media pushed back, all of the lies told by GOP nominee Donald J. Trump and his band of dirty tricksters ruled the day and stole the election.

Now, Columnist Mike Kelly of The Record is being made a fool of by none other than Trump senior counselor Kellyanne Conway, the serial liar who managed the billionaire's campaign.

Conway, you may remember, denied President Trump ever lied. Those were just "alternative facts," she claimed, just as Trump himself called his lies "truthful hyperbole."

Today, Conway and the back of Kelly's graying head appear in a big photo on Page 1 during what is described as an interview in her Alpine home.

The veteran columnist asked her about President Trump's tweeted allegations that Barack Obama himself wiretapped Trump Tower before the election.

Instead of addressing those charges or providing any evidence the tweets were based on fact, Conway spun new lies until her lingerie smoldered.

I won't perpetuate them here, but you can read Kelly's column on NorthJersey.com.

The story was picked up by TheHill.com, which doesn't name the columnist, but refers to the Gannett-owned newspaper as "the Bergen County Record in New Jersey."



Attorney Frank P. Lucianna, with gray hair and not wearing a hat, marching in the 2014 Memorial Day Parade in Englewood when he was 91 years old.

Page turner

The only real page turner on 1A today is Staff Writer Jay Levin's profile of Frank P. Lucianna, the 94-year-old criminal defense lawyer who practices full time in Hackensack, just blocks from the Bergen County Courthouse. 

Lucianna was the first attorney in New Jersey to use the battered woman's defense at a murder trial, "a gambit that won [an] acquittal for a Fair Lawn housewife" who killed "her abusive husband," Levin reports. 

This is a rare instance when Levin -- the local obituary writer -- profiles a prominent North Jersey resident before he dies.

Tuesday, January 24, 2017

Times: Trump again wrongly claims that illegal immigrants cost him popular vote

Cartoonist Mark Streeter of the Savannah Morning News is referring to President Trump's counselor, Kellyanne Conway, using the phrase "alternative facts" to defend falsehoods by White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer.


By VICTOR E. SASSON
EDITOR

Stung by charges his loss of the popular vote and meddling by Russia make him an illegitimate president, Donald J. Trump again lashed out at illegal immigrants.

A Breaking News alert sent out by The New York Times reported:
"President Trump used his first official meeting with congressional leaders on Monday to gripe about his loss of the popular vote, falsely telling the lawmakers that he would have won a majority if millions of illegal immigrants had not voted against him."

Trump claimed 3 million to 5 million illegal immigrants voted for Democrat Hillary Clinton, echoing Republican governors and legislators who cited similar allegations of fraud to enact voter-suppression laws in recent years.

No evidence of widespread voter fraud has ever been produced.

An editorial in The Record today cites so-called voter ID laws in urging the U.S. Supreme Court to defend "the right of all citizens to vote," but doesn't address Trump's preposterous claim that millions of illegals voted illegally for Clinton (8A). 

'Alternative facts'

A Page 1 story in The Record today reports New Jersey native Kellyanne Conway "has become the target of mockery" ... "after saying it [the new administration] used 'alternative facts' about the size of the inaugural crowd."

Sean Spicer, Trump's press secretary, on Saturday accused the media of lying about the size of the crowd "and insisted, with no factual basis, that it was the largest audience to ever witness an inauguration, period, both in person and around the globe" (1A).

More layoffs

More "job losses" have been announced by Gannett's North Jersey Media Group, publisher of The Record, Herald News, NorthJersey.com, 30 weekly papers and (201) magazine (5A).

The story describes "a restructuring" in several departments at NJMG "to meet the growing digital demands of readers and advertisers while responding to changes in the publishing industry."

By the end of the week, 141 employees will receive notices required by state and federal law "when significant layoffs are planned by private employers," according to NJMG.

Last September, Gannett announced half of the 426 employees left at NJMG would see their jobs end in mid-November, but never disclosed how many actually departed.

The enhancement of NorthJersey.com and the addition of smartphone apps have been of little use to the overwhelmingly older readers of the print edition, many of whom don't use computers or smartphones.

Many readers, commenting on the paper's Facebook page, have slammed the November redesign of the Woodland Park daily, including a decline in quality, accuracy and the number of local stories.

Crazy headlines

Gannett moved production of The Record from Woodland Park to Neptune, where the company's six other New Jersey dailies are put out.

Editors in the Gannett design center lay out text and photos on computers, and write headlines, resulting in some of the weirdest I've ever seen.

On Page 1 today, for example, is this incomprehensible headline:

"Issues
hit day
laborer
support"

The "issues" are listed in the sub-headline as "safety, policy, funds," but how can "issues" hit "support" for day laborers in Palisades Park?

A reader of The Sasson Report who works in Hackenack cited a headline on Monday's Local front:

"Faithful
seek a 
role with 
Trump"

"Nonpartisan gathering
aimed at healing divides"

But the "faithful" aren't Republican Party faithful, and no one mentioned in the story is seeking "a role" or job with the new president.

The story reported nearly 100 Christians, Jews and Muslims gathered last Friday, after the inauguration, to start the process of healing after a bitterly divisive presidential campaign.

Here is the comment from the reader:


"Victor: Like the new site.  Two issues -- my wife commented that the new Record appears to have a lot more pictures -- not only do they have more pictures, but they are big ones that cover over half a page. "Also, I could not believe the headline on today's Local section front: 'Faithful seek a role with Trump.'  
"I thought that the article was about Trump supporters who were looking for some form of job or at least a local organization. 
"No. It was about a Friday event of people of faith.  What does the headline have to do with the story, and why report a Friday event on Monday?"

Here are a couple of possible answers:

Running many photos or big photos usually means the layout editors are desperate to fill space, because the newsroom didn't produce enough news stories, features or columns.

Running a Friday story on Monday likely meant it was held to accommodate coverage of the inauguration by staffers sent from New Jersey that appeared in the Saturday and Sunday editions.