UNC-Chapel Hill journalism professor Chris Roush writes for Slate.com that the Bancroft family needs to go back and revisit former family leader Clarence Barron‘s running of The Wall Street Journal because it’s a lot like how News Corp. CEO Rupert Murdoch has run his media empire. The Bancrofts have implied that Barron created this great legacy at the paper.
“The most famous of these cases were the two reporters who wrote the ‘Broad Street Gossip’ and ‘Abreast of the Market’ columns in the 1920s. In 1932, after Barron had died, Rep. Fiorello LaGuardia, D-N.Y., produced canceled checks written to the reporters by a Wall Street publicist. The stories based on the bribes had gone as far back as 1923—the heyday of Barron’s management. That’s about as close to the recent scandal at Murdoch’s New York Post, where a restaurant owner gave $1,000 to the editor of the “Page Six” gossip column, as you can get.
“To be sure, Barron improved the Journal. Today’s Journal bears no resemblance to Barron’s. But if the Bancrofts really want to preserve a legacy, then they need to acquaint themselves with the warts on theirs. History does repeat itself.”
Read more here. And yes, I just blogged about something I wrote on another web site.
The Yale Program on Stakeholder Innovation and Management announced the appointment of Alan Murray, departing chief…
The Advocate is looking for a savvy reporter to cover the Baton Rouge business scene…
MLex, a LexisNexis company, is an independent news organization for breaking news and forward-looking analysis…
The Austin Business Journal seeks a staff writer to cover economic development in one of…
A Russian court on Saturday placed Sergei Mingazov, a journalist for the Russian edition of…
Justin Nielsen of Investor's Business Daily writes about the newspaper's 40th anniversary. Nielsen writes, "When the…