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NICE GUY FINISHES, AT LAST

 

The tough truth that Tom Hennessy never told


ILLUSTRATION by JOE MCGARRY

Tom Hennessy all but retired as the Press-Telegram’s daily columnist Sunday, all but silencing the most-prominent voice in Long Beach journalism. That’s sad to consider, and it gets even sadder the longer you do. It’s true, though: The most-prominent voice in Long Beach journalism is Tom Hennessy.

It was 1980 when he arrived from Michigan, a nice guy with an infectious giggle, a swarm of mischievous hair and a Santa’s helper physique that completed the elfin package. I was a 24-year-old sportswriter at the Press-Telegram when Hennessy got there, and I witnessed, amazed, how quickly the new guy in town disarmed the neighbors with the face-value friendliness and newsletter writing style that accounts for the power of self-appointed block leaders everywhere.

It’s been 27 years, but there’s no you-shoulda-read-him-then about Tom Hennessy. He came in pretty much the way he went out Sunday in that big sendoff on the P-T’s front page—rhapsodizing about ugly dogs, World War II vets and sending kids to summer camp. I don’t recall whether the most-prominent voice in Long Beach journalism ever specifically went on the record with his feelings about cancer, but I’d bet he’s against it.

There may never be another Tom Hennessy at the Press-Telegram, and by that I mean that Long Beach’s daily paper is dying. The District has learned that ultimate authority over its news coverage has been shifted to Phillip Sanfield, the editor of the Daily Breeze—a newspaper in Torrance. Sanfield’s power now apparently overrides that of the P-T’s longtime executive editor, Rich Archbold, who at least gets to keep his title.

“I don’t want to spend much time talking with you about this, except to say that you’re not correct!” Sanfield snapped when asked about the arrangement in what, as he promised, turned out to be a very short telephone interview. “I’m working with the editors at the Press-Telegram, working with Rich [Archbold] and John [Futch], looking at how we can do things as a group, more efficiently, between our two papers. Okay? Thanks.”

Sanfield cut off a follow-up question by hanging up, but his denial was contradicted by several sources at the Press-Telegram.

“Sanfield has told us that, when push comes to shove, he has the authority to make the decisions,” said Joe Segura, one of the few veteran reporters—hell, one of the few reporters, period—on a staff that has become skeletal, not only in numbers but also in wages and benefits. “He has said it a number of times. He’s not too shy about talking to reporters who are not from The District.”

Sanfield’s new role at the P-T is the latest in a long series of consolidating moves by its corporate owner, MediaNews Group, Inc., the massive but over-leveraged outfit that operates newspapers across the country from its home base in Denver. Those tactics, which have been going on for awhile, are steadily bleeding Long Beach’s daily paper to death.

Tom Hennessy, the most-prominent journalist in the city, hasn’t mentioned a thing about any of it. Hennessy writes approximately 200 columns a year, and he is famous for rallying his readers to one cause or another, but not once has he used his podium to inform the Long Beach community that one of its most-vital pillars is disintegrating.

Of course, that’s Hennessy being same-as-he-ever-was, too. Although his high profile and wide influence make him the perfect person to explain the state and importance of journalism-under-siege to his public, when push comes to shove—to re-use a phrase—Hennessy has always been more loyal to the people who sign his paychecks.

As for his loyalty to the people in his profession? My clearest memory of that occurred in the early 1990s, when the Press-Telegram was owned by Knight-Ridder and was just beginning the downward slip that has become a landslide. The reporters’ union was stronger then, and among its tools in battles for journalistic quality—as well as wages and benefits—were byline boycotts and informational picket lines. But on the day when nearly all reporters had agreed to withhold their bylines from their stories in solidarity, Tom Hennessy’s name appeared on his column. He only rarely showed his face on the picket line, however, on one unforgettable occasion sending word to those risking their less-secure careers: “I’ll be with you in spirit.”

Contrast that with the series of courageous columns written by Steve Lopez of the Los Angeles Times as that crucial journalistic entity has been hammered by the forces of corporate journalism.

Not surprisingly, Hennessy fared just swimmingly in the Press-Telegram’s transition in corporate ownership while almost everybody else on the staff had to re-interview for their old jobs. Those who were rehired had to accept pay cuts of up to 50 percent. Conditions have gotten worse and worse. Staffing has been slashed, wages are so bad that some reporters can’t afford apartments and the resultant turnover in personnel prevents the paper from doing its best work.

If there are profits, they go to the corporation. Public documents reveal that MediaNews made a $16.7 million profit in 2006 when it sold the historic Press-Telegram office for $20 million—but not even one position was restored to the tiny news staff.

Further cuts appear to be on the horizon. Documents filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission reveal that huge payments will soon be due on the debt MediaNews has taken on as it continues to expand its newspaper empire.

What happens if Long Beach eventually loses the Press-Telegram? Basically, everything gets a little bit worse. Even in its battered condition, daily journalism makes everything in the city a little better. Everybody, too. But the most-prominent journalist in town never had what it took to tell that story. That’s sad to consider, and it gets sadder the longer you do. It’s true, though.

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COMMENTS

  1. 1

    I know the PT is useless when I read Long Beach news on the OC Register website: http://tinyurl.com/24wcqy

     
  2. 2

    Well said, although I don’t know what Tom could have done to rally what’s left of the readers. I do recall one episode in which he was recruited by editors to write a posthumous valentine for controversial developer Mike Choppin. The resulting piece cited the one-time IDM pyramider’s charitable and community activities. Tom got the assignment after Choppin’s reporter-produced obituary, which originally contained both the good and bad, had been hacked out of balance by a city editor.

     
  3. 3

    Interesting.

     
  4. 4

    I can confirm that the Daily Breeze editor is running the show at the P-T. His idea of “working as a group” means that the on-site P-T editors get to “suggest” via e-mail what stories to cover, play up, put on the front page, etc. The P-T is being turned into a poorly-staffed branch of the DB, and the only folks still hanging on are no-hopers or those who simply don’t care anymore. News editor David Weiner just walked after numerous disputes over just this kind of thing.

     
  5. 5

    Thanks for your response. If you or anyone else would like to talk to me personally, please write me at this e-mail address: Dave@TheDistrictWeekly.com. This is a difficult subject for me, personally, inasmuch as I owe my journalistic career to the Press-Telegram, where I started in July of 1972 at age 16 as a $2-an-hour copy boy in the Sports Department. But as I wrote, it is even a more troublesome subject for the City of Long Beach, which needs a daily newspaper–especially during an era when so much money and influence are being traded as the city “reinvents” itself. Passing attention from the Times, Register — and the Daily Breeze — is insufficient.

     
  6. 6

    The P-T suffers from union-itis. Let’s hope the Breeze’s non-unionized (and hence, innovative, motivated and high-quality) staff can turn it around.

     
  7. 7

    The PT has lost it’s readership because it is unwilling to qestion the city’s government and police department. It doesn’t report hard news, it just repackages stuff off of the AP feed. The LA Times and the Register both do a better job of covering LB. Heck, even the Beachcomber and LB Report manage to get in to the nitty-gritty from time to time. LB needed a real paper. It’s a good thing the District came along when it did.

     
  8. 8

    The PT is not suffering because of it’s union or internal politics, it’s mostly because of the continual staff cuts and resource redirection. The company that bought this paper (and now owns the Breeze) doesn’t invest in it’s “local voice,” just the opposite.
    The paper doesn’t benefit from any profit it ever generates (including the sale of its landmark building), it all ends up in Denver and Media News executives’ pockets.
    The few peons (aka reporters, photogs and production staff) that are hanging on are there because they care about the city and serving the readers. They’re still there attempting to resuscitate what’s left a formerly great paper.

     
  9. 9

    The PT is suffering because greater than 50% of the citizens of Long Beach can’t or won’t take the time to read the paper.

     
  10. 10

    Dear Editors,

    I read the District and think it is an excellent addition to the Long Beach scene. In the future I would like to invite you to be a guest on the Community TV program, People’s Tribune TV. While this article does a good job of documenting the corporate cost cutting and dumbing down of the PT, the piece seems to be a cruel attack on a guy who is recovering form a serious medical problem. Tom Hennessey is not perfect but he has most recently been the most vocal in fight for the rights of Iraq Veterans Against the War who were denied the right to march in the North Long Beach Veteran’s Day Parade.

    I also remember very clearly Tom picketing the Press Telegram during labor action because I was videoing at the time. I think this was not the time to kick a guy when he is down.

    Marshall Blesofsky
    Producer of People’s Tribune TV
    Long Beach and Signal Hill
    every Wed. 7-8 pm Charter Ch. 65, 65, 95
    MarshallBlesofsky@yahoo.com

     

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