Veteran Washington Post reporter and editor Barbara Vobejda—a respected 25-year veteran—will soon became responsible for the newspaper’s front
page. She has her work cut out for her, judging from Sunday’s offering.
Of the four front-page articles, there was no news and little surprise. Not one story
came close to the “holy shit!” journalism that legendary editor Ben Bradlee pushed his troops to publish.
Less than a month away from a presidential election, there was no mention of the campaign.
The Post lead its Sunday spread with the first in a series about personal wealth of
congressmen and senators. Among the “revelations” we read:
Legislators employ “a diversity of investment strategies,” as do most Americans
who invest.
Congressmen and senators range from rich to deep in debt, like the rest of the nation.
Some increased their wealth during the Great Recession; some lost money.
The Post said it analyzed “thousands of financial disclosure forms and public records” to
determine that the 535 members of Congress are like the rest of us. Many inherited
money! Republicans used to be worth more, but Democrats are catching up! In some cases,
their wives work! Perhaps a smoking gun or a surprising fact will emerge in future
articles, but this first installment, with its confusing graphic, fell flat.
Eli Saslow is a gifted writer. His dispatches from the campaign trail and portraits of Americans
in dire straits are often well-crafted and insightful. But does a long feature about
a struggling pool salesman belong on the front page? Is anyone surprised that suburbanites
are cutting back on pools in the midst of a recession?
Barry Svrluga’s profile of Nationals manager Davey Johnson was both informative and intimate. It
actually did belong on the Sunday front, with the Nats’ first playoff game coming
up. But it could have used a hard news article above the fold to balance the sports
feature.
The fourth front-pager, about Salafist Islamic radicals emerging in Egypt and elsewhere,
was interesting but hardly groundbreaking. News that a Salafist has been accused of
taking part in the killing of US Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens in Libya last month was buried ten paragraphs into the piece.
The Post’s Sunday circulation numbers, which at one point topped 1 million, have been dropping
for the past decade. In May, the Audit Bureau of Circulations reported the number
at 719,301.
Many forces come to play in the drop in newspaper readership in cities coast to coast.
Digital media has cut into readers and profits. But journalism and story choice matter.
When the Post starts presenting a crisp array of front page articles that readers cannot resist,
they might begin to return.
Don’t Miss Another Big Story—Get Our Weekend Newsletter
Our most popular stories of the week, sent every Saturday.
Little News on the “Washington Post’s” Front Page
Judging from Sunday’s edition, new front-page editor Barbara Vobejda has her work cut out for her.
Veteran
Washington Post reporter and editor
Barbara Vobejda—a respected 25-year veteran—will soon became responsible for the newspaper’s front
page. She has her work cut out for her, judging from Sunday’s offering.
Of the four front-page articles, there was no news and little surprise. Not one story
came close to the “holy shit!” journalism that legendary editor
Ben Bradlee pushed his troops to publish.
Less than a month away from a presidential election, there was no mention of the campaign.
The Post lead its Sunday spread with the first in a series about personal wealth of
congressmen and senators. Among the “revelations” we read:
who invest.
The
Post said it analyzed “thousands of financial disclosure forms and public records” to
determine that the 535 members of Congress are like the rest of us. Many inherited
money! Republicans used to be worth more, but Democrats are catching up! In some cases,
their wives work! Perhaps a smoking gun or a surprising fact will emerge in future
articles, but this first installment, with its confusing graphic, fell flat.
Eli Saslow is a gifted writer. His dispatches from the campaign trail and portraits of Americans
in dire straits are often well-crafted and insightful. But does a long feature about
a struggling pool salesman belong on the front page? Is anyone surprised that suburbanites
are cutting back on pools in the midst of a recession?
Barry Svrluga’s profile of Nationals manager Davey Johnson was both informative and intimate. It
actually did belong on the Sunday front, with the Nats’ first playoff game coming
up. But it could have used a hard news article above the fold to balance the sports
feature.
The fourth front-pager, about Salafist Islamic radicals emerging in Egypt and elsewhere,
was interesting but hardly groundbreaking. News that a Salafist has been accused of
taking part in the killing of US Ambassador
J. Christopher Stevens in Libya last month was buried ten paragraphs into the piece.
The
Post’s Sunday circulation numbers, which at one point topped 1 million, have been dropping
for the past decade. In May, the Audit Bureau of Circulations reported the number
at 719,301.
Many forces come to play in the drop in newspaper readership in cities coast to coast.
Digital media has cut into readers and profits. But journalism and story choice matter.
When the
Post starts presenting a crisp array of front page articles that readers cannot resist,
they might begin to return.
Don’t Miss Another Big Story—Get Our Weekend Newsletter
Our most popular stories of the week, sent every Saturday.
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