"You get what you pay for," was the opinion of one reader looking
at the first edition of the "new" San Francisco Examiner. The first
few editions of the newspaper had so many mistakes that a message on the
website www.mediagossip.com called it the "joke of the journalism profession." The
errors and other problems could have been overlooked if this were the Fang
family's first publishing venture. But the Fangs are experienced newspaper
publishers who have printed the San Francisco Independent three times a week
for a decade, and the award-winning Asian Week for about the same period.
Ted Fang knew for months that one day he would be running a San Francisco
daily, but it's apparent that he did little to recruit a quality staff that
would be committed to producing a paper that could equal or surpass any daily
in the Bay Area. Booker T. Washington had a saying, "Cast down your
buckets where you are." Fang should have looked to the extensive talent
right here in the Bay Area for reporters, editors, and multimedia artists
who would love to create a San Francisco paper that would be considered one
of the best papers in the country.
If Fang really wanted to publish a world class paper, he should have recruited
local writers like Bill Wong, Austin Long-Scott, Tim Redmond, Helen Zia,
Larry Bensky, Davey D, Emil Guillermo, Dennis Bernstein, Gary Webb, Lee Hubbard,
Marie Harrison, Wendell Harper, Jon Ross, Ishmael Reed, Africa expert Walter
Turner, and Van Jones. While some say that a line up like this is a journalistic
dream team, the fact is that all of these folks have written for newspapers
and would surely give more than a passing thought to helping build a world
class San Francisco newspaper. However, the "new" Examiner didn't
invite them. Furthermore, it is a non-union paper and does not pay the kind
of salaries that would attract top writers, editors, and columnists.
Currently, an average edition of the Examiner is heavy on wire stories from
the Associated Press, the Washington Post, and the London Independent, when
it could easily have formed alliances with the Spanish and Chinese language
media to get original coverage of Latin America and Asia. Graphically, the
paper is beginning to look more like the pre-Fang Examiner, but much of the
layout and type is hard on the eyes.
There have been numerous allegations that the Fang purchase of the Examiner
was nothing more than a sham deal to allow Hearst to purchase the Chronicle,
but Fang promised he was serious about publishing a newspaper that could
compete with the Chronicle and the region's other newspapers.
Is there hope for improvement at the San Francisco Examiner? Maybe. Since
the horrible editions of the first few weeks, the paper has brought in more
reporters, graphic artists, and editors with some daily newspaper experience,
and the Ex is beginning to look a little better. A spate of front page stories
covering the San Francisco housing crisis and responses by the newly elected
Board of Supervisors might indicate some attempt to atttract readers of a
progressive bent. But it's apparent that Fang is not willing to devote the
money and time necessary to produce a world class daily. And if one headline
could illustrate the state of the 2001 San Francisco Examiner, it would be "Great
City Forced to Read Swill."
* In the print edition of MediaFile, Ted Fang's name was incorrectly
published as James Fang. We regret the error. But hey, the Chronicle
didn't give us $20 plus million a year for copy editors and such. |