Visit Your Local PBS Station PBS Home PBS Home Programs A-Z TV Schedules Support PBS Shop PBS Search PBS

Media Watch
Online NewsHour Online Focus
TRIBUNE INTERACTIVE LAYOFFS


October 12, 2000

An Online NewsHour Report

The Tribune Company yesterday laid off 34 employees from its Interactive department, including 20 at news site LATimes.com, the online home of the Los Angeles Times.

NewsHour Links

Online Special
Media Watch

Sept. 19, 2000:
Pseudo.com goes under.

Sept. 7, 2000:
APBnews.com finds a buyer.

July 17, 2000:
A look at newsroom convergence.

June 8, 2000:
Several Internet news sites cut back on staffing.

March 21, 2000: Tribune Co. buys Times-Mirror.

Nov. 28, 1997:
The Chicago Tribune launches its Web site.

Browse the NewsHour's coverage of the media

 

 

Outside Links

LATimes.com

The Tribune company

 

The cuts hit the editorial, marketing and sales staffs at LATimes.com. Fourteen other employees at Tribune Interactive offices in Chicago also got pink slips as part of a 12 percent cut in the company's Internet operations.

Tribune spokesman John Lynday told the Associated Press the cuts are necessary to help the online division "focus its resources on revenue-driving initiatives ... and accelerate its progress toward profitability."

Lynday also said 46 positions previously open will not be filled.

The Chicago-based Tribune Co. finalized its purchase of Times Mirror, publisher of the Los Angeles Times and the Baltimore Sun, in mid-June.

The company's interactive branch is also behind ChicagoTribune.com and ChicagoSports.com.

The layoffs at the Tribune are only the latest blow to the realm of online news.

Streaming media site Pseudo.com went under last month after a strong presence at the Republican National Convention failed to generate the capital investment necessary for the site to continue.

Legal news site APBnews.com struggled throughout the summer after finding its coffers empty, despite its award-winning in-depth reports on crime.

Over the summer Salon.com and the Web sites for NBC and CBS also tightened their belts. In June, Salon cut its staff by 10 percent and its budget by 20, while CBS laid off nearly a quarter of its Internet staff. NBC Interactive laid off 20 percent of its staff in August, pink-slipping 170 employees.

 


    REGIONS | TOPICS | RECENT PROGRAMS | ABOUT US | FEEDBACK |SUBSCRIPTIONS / FEEDS:
POD|RSS
SEARCH
Funded, in part, by:ChevronPacific LifeVestasCorporation for Public Broadcasting
            Support the kind of journalism done by the NewsHour...Become a member of your local PBS station.
PBS Online Privacy Policy

Copyright ©1996- MacNeil/Lehrer Productions. All Rights Reserved.