KNIGHTFALL

Author:   Merritt
Publisher:   Amacom
ISBN:  

9780814408544


Pages:   256
Publication Date:   16 May 2005
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
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KNIGHTFALL


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Overview

"""The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution is clear: Congress shall make no law abridging freedom of the press. And yet a force seemingly even more powerful than the supreme law of the land threatens one of our nation’s most precious guarantors of freedom. For more than two centuries, American newspapers have collected, organized, and disseminated the information that makes democracy possible. Occasional opponents of a free press have not been able to cripple newspapers and despite dire predictions, neither have radio, television, or the Internet. But greed can kill American newspapers, thus eliminating the crucial synergy between journalism and democracy. The reality that newspapers must remain financially viable has always dictated compromises between the competing missions of profit and public service. But in recent years the essential balancing of those missions has been replaced by a single-minded pursuit of profit. Whether the chosen method is scaling back of content, cutting corners to control costs, or dismantling the traditional wall separating the news and business departments, the result is the same: the watering down of newspaper journalism, which is the core of all American journalism. Without fundamental change in newspapers’ corporate boardrooms, the flow of information that Americans need to govern themselves will dry up. In Knightfall, Davis “Buzz” Merritt, a 40-year newspaperman whose career runs parallel to the seismic shift in journalism’s landscape, examines one notable exemplar of this growing trend, Knight Ridder, America’s second-largest newspaper company with holdings including The Philadelphia Inquirer, The Miami Herald, the Detroit Free Press, and the Mercury News in San Jose. Merritt was a participant-observer in the 1974 marriage of two newspaper companies, a union that seemed made in heaven. Knight Newspapers’ longstanding tradition of excellence in journalism coupled with Ridder Publications’ business savvy should have created a unique company offering the best of both worlds. That it did not happen is a reflection of complex changes in American society and the realities of modern business pressures driven by Wall Street. There are no pure heroes or pure villains in this story; the players were doing what their training, background, and respective family histories urged them to do. But the story’s outcome is ominous for American democracy. Merritt’s personal accounts of the 30 years since the merger illustrate the degree to which what we know is being limited. Further, his portraits of key figures, analysis of societal changes, and dozens of interviews with others who were (and are) there reveal that not only is he on target, he is also not alone in his unsettling conclusions. A free press is a cornerstone of our democracy. The erosion of that foundation is a catastrophe in the making: the real possibility that the kind of journalism that gave rise to -- and preserves -- our democracy will disappear."""

Full Product Details

Author:   Merritt
Publisher:   Amacom
Imprint:   Amacom
Dimensions:   Width: 16.00cm , Height: 3.00cm , Length: 23.60cm
Weight:   0.520kg
ISBN:  

9780814408544


ISBN 10:   0814408540
Pages:   256
Publication Date:   16 May 2005
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
The supplier is currently out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out for you.

Table of Contents

"""Author's Note Introduction: Will Newspaper Journalism Survive? Part One: Morning 1: Why This Matters Newspapers and Coat Hangers Journalism and Democracy: Fully Interdependent How a Democracy Decides Journalism's Role in Public Judgment Opposites Attract Concerns and Conceits But How to Define Quality? Effect on Public Life 2: The Heritages The Ridder Path The Intersection The Knight Path Lee Hills and the Supremacy of the Newsroom Losing an Heir 3: Building Toward Merger Rebuilding a Newspaper Practicing Journalists Turning Points Finding Alvah Chapman Dependence and Independence The Deal Is Done 4: Wichita: A Marriage Made In…? """"Scorched Earth"""" Policy A Ride Around Town A Modest Start and a Modest Goal No Place at the Table Another One? Good Journalism with Good Journalists A Coda Part Two: Midday 5: Introducing Change From """"Separation of Power"""" to the """"Publisher System"""" 6: External Change: Boomers, Wall Street, and Technology Change One: Boomers or Bust Change Two: The Wall Street Syndrome Cyclical, Top to Bottom On Deaf Ears Change Three: Technology The Internet Market Fragmentation 7: Internal Change: Creeping Corporatism and Catastrophe Change Four: Leave Autonomy Alone Creeping Corporatism A Matter of Tone One Size Fits All Change Five: You Get What You Pay For, Maybe The Publishers' Revolt The Erosion of Newspaper Quality and MBOs Change Six: People and Purpose 8: Change Seven: Breaching the Wall Why a Wall? Cracks and Gaps Auto-mania Where's My Bazooka? A Coda 9: Change Eight: Lie, Cheat, Steal Post-Watergate Syndrome Lie Cheat Steal … And Trust """"Who Do I See About…? Tips for Coping Part Three: Evening 1: Doing the Journalism Batten: Exemplar of Great Journalism Three Mile Island PTL Kentucky Basketball Hurricane Andrew Margins of Excellence """"An Incredible and Spectacular Honor"""" A Coda 11: Saying Good-bye A Philadelphia Story A Columbia Story A Miami Story A San Jose Story 12: Wichita … Saying Good-bye Public Journalism From Collegiality to Confrontation """"No Matter What It Takes"""" We Didn't Mean That! 13: What Now? Migrating Faster Going Private Corporate Reform Talk Differently to the Street How Big Is Big Enough? Nonprofit Alternatives The Final Coda Notes Index About the Author"""

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Author Information

DAVIS “BUZZ” MERRITT (Wichita, KS) spent more than four decades with Knight Newspapers and Knight Ridder publishers.

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