Former reporter Allyson Byrd tells us why. It’s not pretty:
I took a pay cut when I moved back from Florida to Charleston, expecting to make up the difference quickly. Instead, I quit my newspaper job at 28, making less money than earned when I was 22.
I can’t imagine anyone outside of an affluent family pursuing a career with so little room for financial growth. And I wonder: Would that well-to-do reporter shake hands with the homeless person she interviews? Would she walk into a ghetto and knock on a door to speak with the mother of a shooting victim? Or would she just post some really profound tweets with fantastic hash tags?
Maybe that’s what people – editors and readers – put at a premium now. Maybe a newsroom full of fresh-from-the-dorm reporters who stay at their desks, rehashing press releases and working on Storify instead of actual stories, is what will keep newspapers relevant.
Hat tip to Yes! Weekly editor Brian Clarey via –you guessed it—Twitter.
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21
2013 At 12:24 pm, Lex Said:
And I hear the first thing Berkshire Hathaway did at the N&R was cut benefits some more. Meet the new boss …
21
2013 At 1:17 pm, Roch Said:
Hilarious!