The Solomon Scandals A Washington newspaper novel by David Rothman

28Feb/100

Reporters vs. publishers and editors: On IQs, faulty edits, a Knopf editor and an unnamed columnist

Katharine Bouchage Weymouth The Solomon Scan­dals is a reporter’s novel, with edi­tors and the pub­lisher in the way of truth and decency.

If noth­ing else, an ide­o­log­i­cal chasm gapes in the news­pa­per busi­ness between edi­to­r­ial coolies and pub­lish­ers. Reporters tend to be far, far more lib­eral at many dailies than are the pub­lish­ers. So what to make of a new study say­ing that lib­er­als as a group are smarter? Time for reporters to take over and res­cue the indus­try? Should pub­lisher Katharine Wey­mouth (photo) at the Wash­ing­ton Post bring back Nicholas “Left at the Post” von Hoff­man as her replacement?

Out­side the news­pa­per busi­ness, I’ll note a  Gawker writer’s assault on Knopf or at least one of the edi­tors there who failed to edit her own copy. Exactly. Didn’t I tell you? Writ­ers are smarter.

Con­fes­sion: Under­neath I do have a soft spot for edi­tors and pub­lish­ers, or at least those at my old news­pa­per who tol­er­ated me. I sold my Web site partly because I lacked the resources for the copy edi­tors I wanted to hire, and I wouldn’t mind some here. The right edi­tor speak­ing up could have saved a cer­tain Wash­ing­ton columnist—I’ve men­tioned her name enough for the moment—from lots of pain, a point I’ve made here before. I was pleased to learn of sim­i­lar sen­ti­ments held by the Post’s Gene Wein­garten.

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3Nov/090

Fisticuff in the Washington Post’s newsroom: And here you thought ‘Scandals’ was only a NOVEL?

image Henry Allen, a Pulitzer Prize win­ner in his late 60s, punched the face of fea­ture writer Manuel Roig-Franzia—right there in the city room at the Wash­ing­ton Post.

Mar­cus Brauchli, the Post’s exec­u­tive edi­tor, is said to have sep­a­rated Allen, an ex-Marine, from Roig-Franzia. Enjoy not-quite-ringside reports from The Washingtonian’s Harry JaffeFishBowlDC’s Matt Dor­nic, the Politico’s Michael Calderone, the Wash­ing­ton City Paper’s Erik Wem­ple and the Post’s own Gene Wein­garten, as well as Huff­in­g­ton Post com­men­tary.

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