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Post Watch: “We Have a Problem With Our Local Newspaper”

By Harry Jaffe   Published Thursday, October 02, 2008

The change of the guard at the top of the Washington Post has sidelined some big Redskins fans.

Post Company head Don Graham, who was publisher for 21 years, tries to attend every Redskins home game. He’s been spied sitting at the 50-yard line in the upper deck. A Washington native, he’s been a Skins fan his whole life. Ditto Boisfeuillet “Bo” Jones, publisher until February and Graham’s longtime friend.

Katharine Weymouth, Graham’s niece, has taken over as Post publisher. A native New Yorker, she has been to a few games but says, “Don is the real sports fan in the family.”

Departed executive editor Leonard Downie had a heart of burgundy and gold. He tries to go to every home game, and he paid special attention to Redskins coverage. It was Downie who reserved a spot on the front page for game coverage the morning after the Redskins played.

Downie’s replacement, Marcus Brauchli, grew up in Boulder, Colorado; he’s a Denver Broncos fan.

Will taking the Redskins fans out of the executive suites affect coverage? In recent years, the Post’s coverage sometimes seemed celebratory—the paper devoted page after page to coach Joe Gibbs’s return to the team in 2004.

“In the year I’ve been there,” says beat writer Jason Reid, “I’ve never heard from any of the top editors about direction of coverage or whether they were dissatisfied. I didn’t even know they were fans.”

A Brooklyn native, Reid came from the Los Angeles Times, where he covered “everything except track and field.” Of the Redskins he says, “It’s obvious the Redskins are the thing people in this region care the most about. My goal is to be accurate and fair. When my head hits the pillow at night, that’s all I can do.”

The team’s number-one fan—owner Dan Snyder—often hits the pillow seething about Washington Post coverage. In 2005 he was so mad about the way the Post covered his team that he yanked hundreds of the newspaper’s season tickets. He summoned Post editors to his mansion to complain about coverage.

Shortly after Snyder bought WTEM, the local sports radio station, in June, a Wall Street Journal reporter said fans were concerned its coverage might become “propaganda.”

Snyder says the complaints come from the Post: “We have a problem in this marketplace with our local newspaper. There’s a monopoly. I have no problems saying that. They have been losing circulation by the droves, losing advertising by the pound load, and they are desperate to create controversy.”

Snyder might take more of his ire out on the Post—but with the fans gone from the helm, it’s likely no one will listen. And the coverage probably will be straight and tough, as it should be.

This article first appeared in the October 2008 issue of The Washingtonian. For more articles from that issue, click here

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Comments


Glad to see Snyder calling the arrogant Post out. People like LaCanfora DO have an anti-Redskins agenda and his editor encourages it.

Posted by: Joe, Oct 04, 2008 07:00:13 AM

Snyder has always gotten his way. Whether it was in the sandbox with other boys or when he cut down hundreds of trees behind his mansion so he could get a better view of the river. But to my great enjoyment he sometimes he shows how ignorant he is. He bought three low-powered radio stations thinking that he could corner the market. But the little genius never had anyone do a test to see how strong the signals of these stations were. As a result no one listened and he threw a fit. Now he has more stations and surprisngly the various hosts haven’t been exactly buddy-buddy with the little jerk. Let’s see how long that lasts.

How much coverage does he want in the Post? On Monday’s there are normally at least eight or nine bylined stories, three columns, and various sidebar articles. What a jerk he is.

Posted by: Jay, Oct 02, 2008 06:10:51 PM

Daniel Snyder owns a franchise that is protected by an anti-trust exemption. The Post is one of two daily newspapers in town and faces competition from literally dozens of other, smaller papers.

As is so often the case, Snyder is wrong.

It would do the team, the league and the city a lot of good if the little man would sell the Redskins and go back to raking in the cash from his junk-mail empire.

Posted by: Todd A, Oct 02, 2008 08:47:53 AM

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