O’Shea Fires Back at Tribune, Industry

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The ousted editor of The Los Angeles Times on Monday offered a scathing critique of the newspaper industry and specifically his longtime employer, the Tribune Company, arguing that cost cuts, a lack of investment and an aversion to serious news was damaging the business, the New York Times rerpots.

The editor, James E. O’Shea, left after he refused to carry out another in a series of newsroom budget cuts sought by the publisher in Los Angeles, David D. Hiller , 15 months after Mr. Hiller fired the previous editor over the same kind of dispute.


The current showdown and Mr. O’Shea’s parting comments made for a remarkable statement by an editor who was seen as a Tribune loyalist and was sent to Los Angeles to calm a rebellious staff.


“I disagree completely with the way that this company allocates resources to its newsrooms, not just here but at Tribune newspapers all around the country,” Mr. O’Shea wrote in a memo to the newspaper’s staff, echoing farewell remarks he made Monday morning in the newsroom.


The chairman and chief executive who took control of Tribune a month ago, Samuel Zell, sided with Mr. Hiller. Mr. Zell had criticized the previous management’s cost-cutting and said that further reductions were not the road to prosperity. But he has also said that he was giving Tribune managers greater autonomy.


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