Summer was a stormy season for Washington Post deciders. The Post’s leadership took heat for setting up off-the-record “salons” with reporters, to be paid for and attended by corporate sponsors. Merging Web and print newsrooms taxed all sides. Heading into the fall, how do Posties rate their leaders on a scale of 1 to 10?
Katharine Weymouth: 6. Good will toward the popular publisher slipped away a bit when she acknowledged signing off on the salons; her apologies rang hollow to some reporters and editors.
Marcus Brauchli: 4. Weymouth’s hand-picked editor took responsibility and lost cred for the salons; he also had to eat crow for allowing and then killing Mouthpiece Theater, a cheeky online video hosted by Dana Milbank and Chris Cillizza. Slate’s Jack Shafer accused Brauchli of “spinelessness”; Posties criticize him for not showing up in the newsroom.
Raju Narisetti:7. Brought in by Brauchli to run the Web side, Narisetti was seen as the hatchet man tasked with cutting staff, but staffers say he’s shown care for their pride and their product.
Liz Spayd:5. Spayd is the keeper of the Post’s standards and culture—the only Post lifer among the top five. But she, too, rubber-stamped the salons and seems lost in the shuffle.
Len Downie:9. The Post’s retired editor looks pretty good in the rearview mirror. True, he may have stayed too long and neglected the Style section and the Web site, but he protected his scribes and likely would have killed the salon idea.
This article first appeared in the September 2009 issue of Washingtonian. For more articles from that issue, click here.
Downie Looks Good in New Post Ratings
Summer was a stormy season for Washington Post deciders. The Post’s leadership took heat for setting up off-the-record “salons” with reporters, to be paid for and attended by corporate sponsors. Merging Web and print newsrooms taxed all sides. Heading into the fall, how do Posties rate their leaders on a scale of 1 to 10?
Katharine Weymouth: 6. Good will toward the popular publisher slipped away a bit when she acknowledged signing off on the salons; her apologies rang hollow to some reporters and editors.
Marcus Brauchli: 4. Weymouth’s hand-picked editor took responsibility and lost cred for the salons; he also had to eat crow for allowing and then killing Mouthpiece Theater, a cheeky online video hosted by Dana Milbank and Chris Cillizza. Slate’s Jack Shafer accused Brauchli of “spinelessness”; Posties criticize him for not showing up in the newsroom.
Raju Narisetti: 7. Brought in by Brauchli to run the Web side, Narisetti was seen as the hatchet man tasked with cutting staff, but staffers say he’s shown care for their pride and their product.
Liz Spayd: 5. Spayd is the keeper of the Post’s standards and culture—the only Post lifer among the top five. But she, too, rubber-stamped the salons and seems lost in the shuffle.
Len Downie: 9. The Post’s retired editor looks pretty good in the rearview mirror. True, he may have stayed too long and neglected the Style section and the Web site, but he protected his scribes and likely would have killed the salon idea.
This article first appeared in the September 2009 issue of Washingtonian. For more articles from that issue, click here.
More>> Capital Comment Blog | News & Politics | Society Photos
Most Popular in News & Politics
Cheryl Hines Suddenly Has a Lot to Say About RFK Jr. and MAGA
Most Powerful Women in Washington 2025
Shutdown Hits Two-Week Mark, House Speaker Feels Threatened by Naked Cyclists, and Big Balls’ Attackers Get Probation
Washington DC’s 500 Most Influential People of 2025
Eduardo Peñalver Will Be Georgetown University’s 49th President
Washingtonian Magazine
October Issue: Most Powerful Women
View IssueSubscribe
Follow Us on Social
Follow Us on Social
Related
Want to Live in a DC Firehouse?
DC Punk Explored in Three New History Books
The Local Group Fighting to Keep Virginia’s Space Shuttle
Alexandria’s “Fancy Pigeon” Has a New Home
More from News & Politics
Washington Spirit Playoffs: Everything You Need to Know
Some Feds Are Driving for Uber as Shutdown Grinds On, Congressman Claims Swastika Was Impossible to See on Flag, and Ikea Will Leave Pentagon City
Brittany Pettersen on Being a New Mom While in Congress
Organizers Say More Than 100,000 Expected for DC’s No Kings Protest Saturday
Democracy Melted in Front of the Capitol Yesterday
Judge Halts Shutdown Layoffs—for Now; Virginia AG Candidates Will Debate Tonight; Flying Ferry to Be Tested on Potomac
Eduardo Peñalver Will Be Georgetown University’s 49th President
Cheryl Hines Suddenly Has a Lot to Say About RFK Jr. and MAGA