John Koblin of The New York Observer writes Monday that The Wall Street Journal has a new book policy for its reporters where the paper will take a cut of the book’s proceeds if it is based on reporting while at The Journal.
“‘In some cases, the Journal seeks a share of the proceeds from a book that originates with Journal reporting,’ said Robert Christie, a spokesman for the paper, explaining the new policy. ‘In turn, the Journal supplies marketing and advertising support for the reporter’s book.’
“The new policy didn’t go over well with the newsroom.
“‘It’s completely ridiculous,’ said one unhappy reporter. ‘The reality is they don’t want you to write books. They don’t want to lose people—this is a deterrent.'”
Read more here.
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