The Deal from Hell: How Moguls and Wall Street Plundered Great American Newspapers
Autor James O'Sheaen Limba Engleză Hardback – 27 iun 2011
In
2000,
after
the
Tribune
Company
acquired
Times
Mirror
Corporation,
it
comprised
the
most
powerful
collection
of
newspapers
in
the
world.
How
then
did
Tribune
nosedive
into
bankruptcy
and
public
scandal?
InThe
Deal
From
Hell,
veteranTribuneandLos
Angeles
Timeseditor
James
O'Shea
takes
us
behind
the
scenes
of
the
decisions
that
led
to
disaster
in
boardrooms
and
newsrooms
from
coast
to
coast,
based
on
access
to
key
players,
court
testimony,
and
sworn
depositions.The
Deal
From
Hellis
a
riveting
narrative
that
chronicles
how
news
industry
executives
and
editors--convinced
they
were
acting
in
the
best
interests
of
their
publications--made
a
series
of
flawed
decisions
that
endangered
journalistic
credibility
and
drove
the
newspapers,
already
confronting
a
perfect
storm
of
political,
technological,
economic,
and
social
turmoil,
to
the
brink
of
extinction.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781586487911
ISBN-10: 1586487914
Pagini: 416
Ilustrații: none
Dimensiuni: 127 x 203 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.65 kg
Editura: PublicAffairs
Colecția PublicAffairs
ISBN-10: 1586487914
Pagini: 416
Ilustrații: none
Dimensiuni: 127 x 203 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.65 kg
Editura: PublicAffairs
Colecția PublicAffairs
Notă biografică
James
O'Shea,
once
managing
editor
ofThe
Chicago
Tribuneand
editor
of
theThe
Los
Angeles
Times,
was
most
recently
CEO
and
editor-in-chief
of
the
Chicago
News
Cooperative.
The
author
of
two
acclaimed
books,
O'Shea
was
a
Shorenstein
Fellow
at
the
Kennedy
School
of
Harvard
in
2009.
Recenzii
“James
O'Shea
occupied
a
privileged,
and
unusual,
seat
during
the
[newspaper]
implosion.
In
The
Deal
From
Hell:
How
Moguls
and
Wall
Street
Plundered
Great
American
Newspapers,
O'Shea
shares
what
he
saw
and
heard…
His
book
stands
out,
though,
because
of
its
unforgettable
details
about
what
happened
to
diminish
great
journalism
at
the
Chicago
Tribune
and
Los
Angeles
Times.
The
more
general
indictments
about
the
newspaper
industry
seem
like
weak
gruel
in
comparison.”
Los
Angeles
Times,June
28,
2011
“Compelling
reading…His
dramatic
telling
of
the
lead-up
to
the
Zell
deal
that
would
so
soon
sour
is
staggering…
In
the
end,
"The
Deal
From
Hell"
succeeds
on
the
force
of
the
story
and
the
power
of
the
case
that
O'Shea
builds
against
the
individuals
involved.”
NewCity(Chicago
alt
weekly),
feature,
June
29,
2011
“The
Deal
From
Hell”
is
a
candid
and
relatively
unrestrained
insider's
account
of
the
near-destruction
of
two
of
America's
great
newspapers.
Heroes
are
portrayed
and
so,
certainly
are
villains.
Except
the
heroes
are
all
gone
now,
and
more
than
a
few
of
the
villains
still
flourish.”
Cleveland
Plain
Deal,
July
6,
2011
“The Deal From Hell: How Moguls and Wall Street Plundered Great American Newspapers" is a detailed, inside look at how greed, incompetence and hubris gutted two of the nation's leading newspapers…It was, indeed, a deal from hell, and O'Shea gives us a clear look at the devils involved in it.
“The Deal From Hell: How Moguls and Wall Street Plundered Great American Newspapers" is a detailed, inside look at how greed, incompetence and hubris gutted two of the nation's leading newspapers…It was, indeed, a deal from hell, and O'Shea gives us a clear look at the devils involved in it.
TheWrap.com,
July
4,
2011
“The ‘Deal from Hell' gives us a serious and informed view of the destruction of an American journalistic institution (or two of them, in this case). O'Shea shares some fascinating inside stories based on his front-row seat as editor in chief and his long-time relationships with people who gave him interviews for the book.”
Publishing
Perspectives,
July
5,
2011“The ‘Deal from Hell' gives us a serious and informed view of the destruction of an American journalistic institution (or two of them, in this case). O'Shea shares some fascinating inside stories based on his front-row seat as editor in chief and his long-time relationships with people who gave him interviews for the book.”
“Mr. James O'Shea's beguiling admixture, the eyewitness-cum-memoirist, combined with his Pulitzer-laden editorial pedigree makes for jaw-dropping vignettes, hilarious asides and harrowing portraits of pinstriped idiocy. But isThe Deal from Hellimportant? Hell, yes. Every citizen in the republic — and every C-suite publishing executive — should hear what this book has to say, if only to discover how desperately besieged is our fount of Public Discourse.”
PittsburghPost-Gazette,
July
17,
2011
“The
Deal
From
Hell"
is
a
scrupulously
reported
account
of
how
hubris,
bad
judgment,
arrogance,
bad
timing
and,
yes,
greed
eviscerated
one
of
the
most
prestigious
media
companies
in
American
history…
In
a
class
with
the
best
books
that
document
the
Wall
Street
crisis
of
2008,
"Deal
From
Hell"
is
the
best
account
of
what
has
happened
to
newspapers
in
the
past
decade.”
Publishers
Weekly,
July
18,
2011
“While
recounting
how
business
interests
sought
an
improper
place
in
public
service
journalism,
O'Shea
works
in
fascinating
and
funny
anecdotes
that
make
for
an
excellent
read.
For
those
who
want
an
inside
look
at
what
makes
American
journalism
work
(and
not
work),
O'Shea
offers
a
unique
and
valuable
perspective.”
Irish
Voice,
July
21,
2011
“O'Shea's book is a fascinating fly-on-the-wall account of how powerful executives injured the newspaper industry.”
Tucson
Citizen,
August
2,
2011“O'Shea's book is a fascinating fly-on-the-wall account of how powerful executives injured the newspaper industry.”
“If you watched in dismay at the recent gutting of the Arizona Daily Star, this new book should be at the top of your summer reading list…How Wall Street bankers plundered great American newspapers to line their pockets is a story that will make most readers burn with rage. Based on exclusive interviews and testimony from bankruptcy proceedings, this narrative is filled with examples of backstabbing, double dealing, and outright insidious behavior or how big business is often conducted in modern America.”
Windy
City
TimesOctober
5,
2011
“There
are
plenty
of
villains
to
go
around
in
this
book,
a
must-read
for
journalists
and
j-students
who
are
going
into
debt
to
get
a
degree
for
an
industry
imploding
from
the
weight
of
some
really
stupid
mistakes.”
Brooklyn
Ink
Kirkus,
June
1,
2011
“Numerous books have covered endangered daily newspapers, but few relate the sad saga from the perspective of a top editor with investigative reporting experience… Given O'Shea's level of detail and candor, some journalism icons will almost surely lose respect within their field…A spirited, fascinating insider's account of a troubled realm.”
New Statesman, January 7, 2011
“This book is a passionate and heavily researched account of the case against the cyber-utopians.”
“Numerous books have covered endangered daily newspapers, but few relate the sad saga from the perspective of a top editor with investigative reporting experience… Given O'Shea's level of detail and candor, some journalism icons will almost surely lose respect within their field…A spirited, fascinating insider's account of a troubled realm.”
New Statesman, January 7, 2011
“This book is a passionate and heavily researched account of the case against the cyber-utopians.”
TheChicago
Reader,
Michael
Miner,
June
17,
2011
“The insider's tale O'Shea tells is that of an epic business disaster, placed in the context of the whole industry driving itself off a cliff…I'm 50 pages in and riveted. I expect to stay that way”
“The insider's tale O'Shea tells is that of an epic business disaster, placed in the context of the whole industry driving itself off a cliff…I'm 50 pages in and riveted. I expect to stay that way”
TheChicago
Sun-Times,
Michael
Sneed,
June
19,
2011
“Loaded with Tribune Tower mayhem and monkeyshines, bankruptcy testimony, sexual innuendo, triggered security alarms, and a hysterical Tribune terrace escapade involving former Tribune honcho Randy Michaels, the book's publication comes on the heels of a Tribune desperately trying to revamp itself and its image.”
“Loaded with Tribune Tower mayhem and monkeyshines, bankruptcy testimony, sexual innuendo, triggered security alarms, and a hysterical Tribune terrace escapade involving former Tribune honcho Randy Michaels, the book's publication comes on the heels of a Tribune desperately trying to revamp itself and its image.”
Time
Out
Chicago,
June
20,
2011
“Former Chicago Tribune managing editor Jim O'Shea's long-awaited book about what really went on inside Tribune Co..; does not disappoint. Blessed with an insider's perspective and a journalist's eye for detail, The Deal From Hell: How Moguls and Wall Street Plundered Great American Newspapers includes stunning new revelations about Zell's hand-picked CEO, Randy Michaels.”
“Former Chicago Tribune managing editor Jim O'Shea's long-awaited book about what really went on inside Tribune Co..; does not disappoint. Blessed with an insider's perspective and a journalist's eye for detail, The Deal From Hell: How Moguls and Wall Street Plundered Great American Newspapers includes stunning new revelations about Zell's hand-picked CEO, Randy Michaels.”
Library
Journal,
June
16,
2011
“Journalists and students of the practice will appreciate this detailed insider account of the forces that are remaking newspapers and the specifics of how the Tribune ended up bankrupt. O'Shea's narrative skills will engage readers in this compelling story.”
“Journalists and students of the practice will appreciate this detailed insider account of the forces that are remaking newspapers and the specifics of how the Tribune ended up bankrupt. O'Shea's narrative skills will engage readers in this compelling story.”
New
York
TimesSunday
Business
review,
June
26,
2011
“The
Deal
From
Hell'
is
chockablock
with
examples
of
what
happens
when
bean
counters
take
over
newspapers…
a
strong,
significant
book…
Mr.
O'Shea
offers
balanced
and
nuanced
writing
throughout,
not
an
easy
task,
since
his
sympathies
clearly
lie
within
the
Tribune
and
Los
Angeles
Times
newsrooms
and
not
with
the
executives
who
all
but
wrecked
them.”
USA
Today,June
27,
2011
New
York
Journal
of
Books,June
28,
2011
“James
O'Shea
has
written
an
important
book
for
anyone
concerned
about
the
future
of
journalism,
its
uncertain
relationship
to
modern
democratic
societies,
and
the
eternal
balance
between
freedom
and
responsibility—assuming
that
we
can
turn
off
our
iPods,
iPads,
and
Netbooks
long
enough
to
read
Deal
from
Hell
from
start
to
finish.”Crain's
Chicago
Business,June
15,
2011“Journalists will enjoy reading about the veteran newsman's early days in the business, and industry watchers get a behind-the-scenes look at Wall Street's role…. He takes the reader all over the world — to the newsrooms of the Los Angeles Times and the Chicago Tribune and on a private jet to meetings with correspondents in the Middle East. And he names names.”
Neiman
Reports,June
15,
2011
“The
plot
of
James
O'Shea's
book
reads
like
a
fast-paced
novel:
greedy
owners,
corporate
intrigue,
a
boorish
manager,
and
a
staff
revolt.
Yet
it's
a
true
story.”Financial
Times,
July
7,
2011“This woeful story has never had such a good unpacking as James O'Shea, a former editor at theChicago TribuneandLos Angeles Times, has given it inThe Deal From Hell… In an exhaustively reported book, O'Shea makes a compelling case that greed, mismanagement and a lack of foresight had as much to do with the destruction of American newspapers as did the rise of the web…The Deal From Hellis a well-reported book, and O'Shea is armed with compelling statistics and vivid, damning anecdotes to make his point…Ultimately this is a book for people who, like O'Shea, love newspapers.”
Wall
Street
Journal,
July
2,
2011
“The star-crossed merger is the right newspaper-decline story to tell, and Mr. O'Shea is arguably the eyewitness most qualified for the task.”
“The star-crossed merger is the right newspaper-decline story to tell, and Mr. O'Shea is arguably the eyewitness most qualified for the task.”